TNT to provide “All-Access” pass to 2013 NASCAR Summer Series

Today’s race at Dover International Speedway (green flag approximately 1:15pm on FOX) marks the end to Fox’s race coverage for the season. TNT will take over coverage starting June 9th at Pocono Raceway. TNT will be offering all-access coverage throughout the six-week NASCAR Summer Series by featuring behind-the-scenes look at a select driver and their team (one per week).

TNT will follow a driver and their team over the course of the entire week as they travel and prepare for the upcoming race, with coverage beginning when the driver leaves the previous track and continuing throughout the network’s next NASCAR Summer Series telecast. Featured drivers will include Denny Hamlin (#11- Pocono), Brad Keselowski (#2 -Michigan), Juan Pablo Montoya (#42-Sonoma) and Kurt Busch (#78- Kentucky), among others.

Additionally, TNT will televise a special feature each week highlighting a select driver away from the track. During the Pocono telecast, TNT will focus the spotlight on Dale Earnhardt, Jr. TNT’s Ralph Sheheen and Earnhardt will talk racing and life outside of NASCAR while visiting with Earnhardt at his “Whisky River” property including his “Car Graveyard.”

The all-access pieces will air weekly during the pre-race Countdown to Green Presented by Kelley Blue Book show.

The network will return with its commentator crew with analysts Kyle Petty, Wally Dallenbach and Larry McReynolds joining play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander for each race. Alexander will also host the network’s 60-minute Countdown to Green presented by Kelley Blue Book pre-race show with Petty, Dallenbach and McReynolds. In addition, veteran reporters Sheheen, Marty Snider, Matt Yocum and Chris Neville will patrol pit road to bring viewers comprehensive coverage and access prior to and during each race.

Day 2 – Feeling the Draft at Daytona International Speedway

 

Credit: Chris Trotman/Getty Images for NASCAR

During single-car runs in the morning session, Richard Childress Racing’s Jeff Burton in the No. 31 Chevrolet topped the speed charts with a lap speed of 194.805 mph. Rounding out the top five were teammate Kevin Harvick (193.557), Matt Kenseth (193.121), Paul Menard (192.963) and Greg Biffle (192.719).

But since the first day of testing, drivers wanted to try drafting in a larger pack at Daytona International Speedway with the Gen 6 car, instead of in two-car tandums.

And they got their wish, but not without trouble.

But of course… everyone knows the saying…”It’s Daytona”, and it doesn’t matter what time of the year it is. It always happens – you know… “The Big One” – that is.  Friday’s second session opened with a multi-car pack working on drafting around the 2.5-mile superspeedway. About an hour into the afternoon test session, a multi-car incident on the backstretch sent several cars to the garage. Among the drivers involved in the incident were Marcos Ambrose, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jamie McMurray, Brad Keselowski, Jeff Gordon, Greg Biffle, Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, Regan Smith and Kasey Kahne.  The official count was that 12 cars out of the 18 on track were involved in some way or another.

Kasey Kahne’s Chevy SS after the wreck during the drafting session at Daytona International Speedway. Photo by Karen Pistone/Racingal.com

SO WHAT HAPPENED?
“We were just out there running around, said Dale Earnhardt, Jr. “I felt like Marcus (Ambrose) was backing up to me in (turns) one and two to get a run down the back.  I was just going to give him a push down the back straightaway and see if he could get the lead.  I was trying to eventually get the lead myself.  We got off the back straightaway and were just kind of pushing him along there and our cars sort of just didn’t match up very well.  I got him hooked into the fence.  I pushed Martin (Truex) a little bit in his Toyota and they matched up good.  The bumpers were good, didn’t have any problem with any of the cars.  That is the first time I pushed a Ford.  The roll bar of the front of my car is just at the right place where his car sets right up on top of that.  I sort of had him going down the back straightaway like a forklift.  It was a big mess and tore up a lot of cars down here trying to work on their stuff.  Definitely the drafting is not like it used to be.  You can’t really tandem certain cars; certain cars don’t match up well.  Our bumpers on the Chevy’s have a little bit of a point. It makes it a little bit of a challenge to get into guys and kind of help them.  We definitely weren’t doing that in the corner at all because it was pretty hairy trying to do it on the straightaways.”

Jeff Gordon was asked if he was surprised that the wreck had happened:

Jeff Gordon speaks to the media following the incident that took out 12 of 18 cars during the afternoon drafting session. Photo by Karen Pistone/Racingal.com

“I’m not surprised at all.  We see it every year, maybe not quite this big, but you get down here in packs.  It’s important to be in those packs and learn what you can learn, especially with a new car.  I think you can kind of weigh into both sides of it.  You know when the cars are starting to push and move around a lot more that the chances are getting higher that something is going to happen.  There are some rookies out there as well.  I saw some things happen a couple of laps before that.  You just ride it out and hope you can make it through it.  Unfortunately, we didn’t in this case.”

Some teams had packed up and called it a weekend late afternoon on Friday and headed back to their shops with damaged cars. Out of 35 teams, 21 remained to test Saturday afternoon.

AFTERNOON TESTING SESSIONS

In the afternoon session, which included drafting sessions, speeds reached 199 mph with 2011 Daytona 500 champion Trevor Bayne leading the speed charts with a lap of 199.650 mph.

With The Sprint Unlimited (Feb. 16 on SPEED, Motor Racing Network Radio and SiriusXM Satellite Radio) and the Daytona 500 (Feb. 24 on FOX, Motor Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM Satellite Radio) a little more than a month away, Greg Biffle is readying himself for what he believes will be a “fun” and “exciting” Speedweeks.

“The cars are stuck less and they are looser,” said Greg Biffle. “That is good for racing. It is good for the fans. It will make it more exciting and make pit strategy come into play. If you put tires on, you will be able to go faster. I think all of that is good. This is going to be a heck of a race. I like that the cars were sliding around and hard to drive. It will make it a fun race.”

During Day 2′s media availability, NASCAR’s 10-time Most Popular Driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. talked about his anticipation for the upcoming 2013 season.

“I feel like that the sport is in a good healthy place,” said Dale Earnhardt Jr. “We have a good opportunity to grow. With this car we have a chance to do something great and really make a big impact … I think the racing is as exciting as it has been in a long time.  You look at some of these old races and look back at some of the events that we had in the ’80s and the ’90s … it always is changing and it always will, but I think we have improved it.”

Matt Kenseth, the 2012 Daytona 500 champion, has been fast throughout Preseason Thunder with his new ride for 2013 season – the No. 20 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.

After spending his entire career with Roush Fenway Racing, the 40-year-old driver is joining Joe Gibbs Racing and will be teammates with Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch.
He will look to become the first driver to repeat as Daytona 500 champion since Sterling Marlin accomplished that feat in 1994-95.

Preseason Thunder will conclude today.

 

Driver updates for NASCAR Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series in 2013

So what has been happening in the Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series during the off season? Where exactly are the drivers at now? Are drivers staying with their same team?

I’ll bring you up-to-date:


(REMINDER: NNS being cut back from a 43 car field to 40 in 2013)

TRAVIS PASTRANA
Travis Pastrana will make the move to full-time NASCAR racing in 2013, driving Roush Fenway’s historic No. 60 Ford Mustang in all 33 events on the NASCAR Nationwide Series schedule. Pastrana will team up with veteran NASCAR crew chief Chad Norris and will be partnered with a variety of sponsors during the season.

The No. 60 will be one of two full-time RFR Nationwide Series entries in 2013, with Pastrana being paired with Roush Fenway teammate and 2010 Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne in the No. 6 Ford Mustang.

DANICA PATRICK
Danica Patrick will drive for Turner Motorsports in her 10-race commitment to this year’s Nationwide Series schedule. She will begin her partial campaign in NASCAR’s Nationwide series on Feb. 23 at Daytona International Speedway in conjunction with her first full Sprint Cup season with Stewart-Haas Racing the same weekend. Richard Childress Racing vice president of competition Mike Dillon had discussed the possibility of Patrick driving his team’s #33 Chevy, but the team had already re-signed three-time Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart for the season opener at Daytona. Patrick’s Turner Motorsports car would be sponsored by GoDaddy.com, sources said. Her schedule is expected to include events at Talladega and Watkins Glen.

JR MOTORSPORTS
(Kasey Kahne, Brad Sweet, Regan Smith & Dale Earnhardt, Jr.)
JR Motorsports will field cars for Kasey Kahne and Brad Sweet for the 2013 Nationwide Series season. Great Clips has moved its sponsorship from Turner Motorsports to JRM to support the Nationwide Series effort. Kahne and Sweet will split time in the No. 5 Chevrolet for 27 races. Regan Smith will compete full time for a NNS championship in the No. 7, and Earnhardt Jr. will carry his No. 88 in a limited schedule. Earnhardt’s only announced races are Feb. 23 at Daytona International Speedway and March 9 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, both in the #88 TaxSlayer.com Chevy.

PARKER KLIGERMAN
Kyle Busch Motorsports posted a YouTube video announcing Parker Kligerman was joining the team to drive the the No. 77 Toyota Camry in the NASCAR Nationwide Series for the 2013 season. Eric Phillips has been promoted to the position of crew chief for the team. Since joining KBM for its inaugural Truck Series season in 2010, Phillips has guided the #18 team to 17 victories, 8 poles, 2,243 laps led, 38 top-five and 54 top-10 finishes across 72 starts. Kyle Busch will run partial season in team’s No. 54 car in addition to Kligerman’s full season in the No. 77.

 

JAMES BUESCHER

Turner Motorsports (TMS) today announced that NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Champion, James Buescher will return to the seat of the No.31 Chevrolet Silverado competing in a full 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) schedule . Much like the 2012 season, Buescher will also continue to hone his skills running select NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) events in 2013. Buescher will aim to become the first back-to-back NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Champion. Buescher will drive a minimum of fifteen races for new Turner Motorsports sponsor, Rheem Manufacturing Company. In addition, 2012 Champion crew chief, Michael Shelton will return to his previous role serving as Crew Chief for Buescher and the No. 31 Rheem Chevy Silverado in 2013.

JUSTIN LOFTON
Justin Lofton (voted as “Comeback Driver of the Year” in 2012 for the NCWTS) has decided to scale back his NASCAR schedule in 2013, instead focusing his title aspirations towards the newly-formed Stadium Super Trucks Series organized by Robby Gordon. Lofton cited the lack of sponsorship and funding as the primary reasons he couldn’t return full-time in 2013 but believes success in off-road can catapult him back towards NASCAR. Lofton hasn’t finalized his 2013 NASCAR schedule yet but expects to run at least 10 Truck Series races on tracks longer than a mile.

The Stadium Super Truck Series is 10-race rally-style series that will contest events on temporary circuits constructed on some of the largest stadium venues in the United States. Rallies will be contested at University of Phoenix Stadium, Soldier Field, Cowboys Stadium and the Metro Dome just to name a few.

JOEY COULTER
Kyle Busch Motorsports announced that veteran crew chief Harold Holly has joined the organization with Joey Coulter in his quest for the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship. Coulter will pilot the team’s No. 18 Tundra, while team owner Kyle Busch will run a partial schedule in the team’s second entry, the No. 51 Tundra.

JOHN WES TOWNLEY
Red Horse Racing (Voted as NCWTS “Top Team” of 2012) has signed John Wes Townley (formerly Parker Kligerman’s seat) to join the team in 2013. Veteran crew chief Mike Beam will join John Wes Townley at Red Horse Racing on the #7 Toyota Tundra.

TODD BODINE
Currently without a sponsor in place for Red Horse Racing to run a third truck in 2013, Bodine is once again scrambling for sponsorship. Bodine confirmed that the Red Horse team has laid off personnel. Bodine struggled in the series in 2012 with eight DNF’s, one win, and five top-five finishes out of 22 events. He ended up a career-low 14th in the final standings.

BRENDAN GAUGHAN
Brendan Gaughan will reunite with crew chief Shane Wilson to run a full season and compete for the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship in Richard Childress Racing’s #62 South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet Silverado.

RON HORNADAY / BRENNAN NEWBERRY
Joe Denette Motorsports merged with NTS Motorsports to create a three-truck stable for the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season. The team will field three full-time NCWTS entries under the NTS Motorsports banner with Ron Hornaday back behind the wheel of the No. 9 Chevrolet Silverado & Brennan Newberry continuing in the No. 14 Chevrolet Silverado. The team will also field the No. 24 entry full-time with a full driver lineup to be announced at a future date. However, NSCS driver Kevin Harvick will pilot the machine in both Martinsville Speedway events in April and October.

You are now up-to-date. Looking forward to the 2013 racing season. HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

 

Sources:
Team Press Releases (Red Horse Racing, Turner Motorsports, JR Motorsports); ESPN

 

Daytona Preseason Thunder Fan Fest tickets on-sale Monday


Preseason Thunder Fan Fest Tickets Go On-Sale Monday, December 10th

Tickets to the 2013 DAYTONA Preseason Thunder Fan Fest, as well as autograph session reservations for select drivers, will be available starting at 9 a.m. on Monday, December 10. To order your tickets and reserve your autograph session wristband, call us at 1-800-PITSHOP or go online starting at 9 a.m. Monday morning. Tickets are $20 and a limited number of wristbands are available per driver, with one autograph session wristband for each Preseason Thunder Fan Fest ticket purchased.

Thursday, Jan. 10, 5:30-7:30pm
Advance Reserved Autograph Session Drivers:
Greg Biffle
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Jeff Gordon
Kevin Harvick
Jimmie Johnson
Kasey Kahne
Jamie McMurray
Tony Stewart
Martin Truex Jr.

Additional Drivers (wristbands available day of event):
Kurt Busch
Jeff Burton
Mark Martin
Juan Pablo Montoya

Thursday, Jan. 10, 7:30-9:30pm
Advance Reserved Autograph Session Drivers:

Clint Bowyer
Matt Kenseth
Brad Keselowski
Ryan Newman
Danica Patrick

Additional Drivers (wristbands available day of event):
Marcos Ambrose
Aric Almirola
Kyle Busch
Carl Edwards
David Gilliland
Bobby Labonte
Joey Logano
Casey Mears
Paul Menard
David Ragan
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

DIS PR

Jeff Gordon surprised, honored at Myers Brothers Luncheon

Credit: Jeff Bottari / Getty Images for NASCAR

Jeff Gordon was named the 2012 recipient of the National Motorsports Press Association’s Myers Brothers Award during Thursday’s traditional NASCAR/NMPA Myers Brothers Award luncheon at the Encore in Las Vegas.

Named for NASCAR racing pioneers Billy and Bob Myers, the award recognizes individuals and groups which have provided outstanding contributions to the sport of stock car racing. Past recipients are a virtual who’s-who of the industry – drivers, owners, track operators, sponsors and members of the media – and include nearly every current member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

Gordon’s accomplishments are two-fold: his on-track success, which includes four NASCAR Sprint Cup championships and 87 victories; and his charitable activities when not competing.

NASCAR Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Office Brian France congratulated 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup champions Brad Keselowski and Roger Penske and the Miller Lite organization. France also commented on the youth movement in the NASCAR Nationwide and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and first-time events due to take place in both national series in 2013.

Also announced at Thursday’s luncheon was the NASCAR NMPA Most Popular Driver Award, given to Dale Earnhardt Jr. for the 10th consecutive year. This now ties him with Bill Elliott as the only other drivers to be presented the award 10 straight years. Elliott, however, remains the all-time leader with 16 overall.

Thousands of fans lined The Strip – Las Vegas Boulevard – as the top 12 drivers celebrated the conclusion of the 2012 season with the Fourth Annual Victory Lap. Engines rumbled and smoke from burnouts filled the air during the popular event which started and ended at Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino.

Additional events Wednesday included the NASCAR After The Lap Sponsored by Ford and Coca-Cola, a “tell-all” driver-fan interaction that’s quickly become one of the most sought after off-track tickets. Day Three of Champion’s Week ended with the presentation of the “Stewie Awards,” three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart’s sometimes irreverent take on the 2012 season.

Here is the complete list of Thursday’s award winners from the NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers Awards Luncheon:

Myers Brothers Award: Jeff Gordon

NASCAR NMPA Most Popular Driver Award: Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Buddy Shuman Award: Ken Squier

NASCAR Marketing Achievement Award: Mars Inc.

3M Lap Leader Award: Jimmie Johnson

American Ethanol Green Flag Restart Award: Jimmie Johnson

Coors Light Pole Award: Jimmie Johnson

DIRECTV Crew Chief of the Year Award: Matt Puccia, crew chief for Greg Biffle No. 16

Freescale Wide Open Award: Matt Kenseth

Goodyear Tires Award (Champion): Brad Keselowski

MAHLE Clevite Engine Builder of the Year Award: Shane Parsnow, Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Team

Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award: Michael Waltrip Racing No. 56 Team

Mobil 1 Driver of the Year Award: Denny Hamlin

MOOG Steering & Suspension Problem Solver of the Year Award: Steve Addington, crew chief for Tony Stewart No. 14

Sunoco Diamond Performance Award (Champion): Brad Keselowski

Sunoco Rookie of the Year Award: Stephen Leicht

USG Improving the Finish Award: Tony Stewart

Champion Sponsor Award: Miller Lite

Champion Crew Chief: Paul Wolfe

Here is Friday’s final event – the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards – at a glance:

Friday, Nov. 30

· 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards: The postseason, black tie event will begin at 5 p.m. PT at Wynn Las Vegas, where the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion driver and owner will be crowned and the top 10 drivers in the final standings will be honored. The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards, the culmination of Champion’s Week, will feature red carpet arrivals, celebrity guests, music and entertainment. Hosted by “America’s Got Talent” judge Howie Mandel, the show will feature performances by Train, Lifehouse, Natasha Bedingfield, Phillip Phillips and entertainers from The Beatles LOVE. SPEED, Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio will provide live coverage of the event. Prior to the awards, NASCAR.COM will live stream a Miss Sprint Cup chat with Brad Keselowski.

Source: NASCAR Media

Dale Earnhardt Jr. comments on concussion, missing Charlotte and Kansas races

(FULL TRANSCRIPT BELOW)

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
BANK OF AMERICA 500
CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
OCTOBER 11, 2012

DALE EARNHARDT JR., NO. 88 AMP ENERGY/NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET met with media to discuss the fact that he will not be competing at this weekend’s race at Charlotte Motor Speedway nor at next week’s race at Kansas Speedway after being diagnosed with a concussion following the Oct. 7 race at Talladega Superspeedway. Also included in the discussion: Rick Hendrick, Owner of Hendrick Motorspots, Steve Letarte, Crew Chief, and Dr. Jerry Petty, neurosurgeon.

Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I guess I’ll just start out with where this all kind of began. We had a test at Kansas about five weeks ago, and we blew a right front tire going into Turn 1, and I remember everything about that accident and everything after that accident, but I knew that I didn’t feel ‑‑ you know your body, and you know how your mind works, and I knew something was just not quite right.

But I decided to just try to push through and work through it. I’d had concussions before and knew exactly kind of what I was dealing with.

I felt pretty good after a week or two and definitely 80, 90 percent by the time the Chase started, and by the time we got to Talladega I felt 100 percent, felt really good.

And then the accident at the end of that race, I was hit in the left rear quarter panel, and it was sort of an odd kind of a collision where the car spun around really quick and just sort of disoriented me, and I knew that I had sort of regressed and had a bit of a setback and knew ‑‑ again, you know how your body is and you know when something is not quite right, and I knew as soon as it happened that I had reinjured myself, for lack of a better way to describe it.

It didn’t feel ‑‑ it was not even half of the impact that I had at Kansas, but it was enough to cause me some concern.

So I went a couple days wondering how my body would react and sort of waiting for it to process what was happening. About Wednesday I was still having some headaches, just that was really the only symptoms that I was having was the headaches. So I took it upon myself to ‑‑ I contacted my sister, and we talked about seeing a neurosurgeon, and we ended up getting steered toward Dr. Petty. Met with him, ran through a couple tests, everything was checking out, and did an MRI, everything looked good there. But I was really honest with him about how I felt and honest with him about the whole process from Kansas all the way on.

He spent the night thinking about what we discussed and everything that we did on Wednesday and couldn’t clear me to race this weekend. I trust his opinion. That’s why I went to see him. He’s been a good friend of mine for a long time and has helped me through a lot of injuries before, so I believe when he tells me I don’t need to be in the car and I need to take a couple weeks off that that’s what I need to do.

That’s pretty much the extent of it. I got a lot of support from my team. I’m excited about their opportunities the next couple weeks with Regan, and just looking forward to getting this cleared up and getting back in the car as soon as I can so I can get back to work with my team and getting back to competing on Sundays.

Q. Dale, did you see anyone for the Kansas ‑‑ the issues you had at Kansas, and if you knew immediately that something was off on Sunday, why did you wait until Wednesday?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: No, I didn’t see anybody at Kansas. I was ‑‑ I regret not seeing somebody after that happened. I was stubborn, and I’d had concussions before and knew what I was ‑‑ thought I knew what I was dealing with and felt like that I was capable of doing my job.

I had called Steve. We talked about how I was feeling, and I told him that I really ‑‑ I felt pretty good, but I really wouldn’t know if I would be able to compete until I got into the car. When you have a concussion, the symptoms can be really mild, and then they’ll typically go away after a couple days and you feel perfectly normal. But then when you get in a car and you go around the track at a high rate of speed, you start to understand that some things just aren’t quite where they need to be and some reactions just aren’t as sharp.

You really can’t get a measurement of that until you’re in the car. You can’t even ‑‑ there’s just no way of knowing until you can drive. I wasn’t willing to ‑‑ with the Chase coming up, I didn’t know how difficult ‑‑ if I was to volunteer myself to medical attention and be removed from the car, I didn’t know how difficult it would be to get back in. But I was honest with Steve and told Steve, I said, when we get to Atlanta and if I don’t feel good, I’m going to be honest with you and tell you that we need to have something as a backup plan for me to get out of the car. I wasn’t going to drive the car if I felt like I was going to deal my crew chief and my team a shorthand that weekend.

That’s kind of the same reason I waited until Wednesday. The shot at Kansas was ‑‑ I think we got the data, but it was around 40 G’s, and the shot at Talladega was only around 20 G’s. It wasn’t really that big of a wreck, and the fact that I felt the way I did was what concerned me after the accident at Talladega because it wasn’t that hard of a hit.

I wanted to process how I felt over a couple days. I went to the doctor Tuesday, actually.

Anyways, we ‑‑ you know, I just wanted to process what was happening, and I knew having them two concussions back‑to‑back was not a good thing. So I needed to go see somebody regardless of whether I wanted to get out of the car or not. Just for my own well‑being, I couldn’t ‑‑ if I didn’t need to go get in a race car and get hit again, I needed somebody to tell me that because I was going to have a hard time making that decision for myself. I feel perfectly fine, but I don’t want to keep getting hit in the head.

Q. Because you drove your car away at Talladega, you weren’t required to go to the care center. We’ve come a long way from where drivers would lie and not say that they have concussions or Ricky Rudd taped his eyes open. What do you feel about concussions in general, and do you think you wouldn’t have made the decision yourself to have it checked out because you were able to drive your car away at Talladega?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I just felt like that once ‑‑ if you have more than one in a small period of time, you need to take that quite seriously. That’s how ‑‑ I mean, I had ‑‑ the one in Kansas was really bad, and then to get shaken up so quickly over something to kind of trivial. That accident was ‑‑ I’ve been through tons of last lap wrecks at Daytona and Talladega, and that one shook me up, and I just thought maybe I should take this seriously.

Q. Dr. Petty, Dale has been saying he kind of knows what he’s dealing with as far as concussions. What is he dealing with and what does he need to do to be cleared to race?

DR. PETTY: So far what we’ve done is Dale ‑‑ the first thing he had was an impact test, which is a test that we’ve been using more and more with drivers. His exam was entirely normal except that his main thing ‑‑ we were seeing him for symptoms. He had very few signs at that time. In other words, his neurological exam was normal.

We wanted to get an MRI scan, and we did an MRI that following morning, a special MRI. I think we had to wait a while to get it because we wanted to get a special method they have of looking for previous injuries and so forth. That was entirely normal. The whole ‑‑ that was very encouraging.

Then we talked to Dale, and he ‑‑ I couldn’t give you a better history than he just did. He had no amnesia on either side of either of the incidents, which is very important, and I think that there’s every reason to expect ‑‑ what we’ll do now is we want him to have four or five days after he has no headache, and then we’ll give him some sort of test like to get his pulse rate up, see if we can provoke a headache, and then if we can’t, we’ll let him go out and drive a lap or two and see how that goes, and if that goes well, we’ll probably clear him to race.

Q. For Mr. Hendrick, you’ve been racing a long time and you’ve done it with a whole lot of different men. What level of courage does it take for someone to take it upon themselves at the highest level, when all of them talk all the time about how terrified they are that somebody is going to take their wheels, for him to walk in and admit that he had this pain?

RICK HENDRICK: Well, I think that’s one thing everybody admires about Dale is how honest and up front he is. He cares a lot about the team, his fans, and the sport in general. But when he knew that there was something not right, he went to see Dr. Petty here, and I admire him. I think a lot of guys would try to play hurt, but when the doctor tells you if you get hit again like right away, it could be catastrophic, so I think this deal has worked out extremely well as it could. I mean, we were so happy yesterday that the MRI was completely normal, no damage. We don’t have a problem there.

And for these two guys to have the kind of year they’ve had, to lead the points and get in the Chase, we’ve got a lot of years left to race, I always want to be on the side of safety, and I applaud Dale for raising his hand and going in there and getting checked out.

Q. For Dale, you said you’ve had other concussions in the past. We know there was the one in 2002. Have there been others in between then and now, and have there been other instances where you haven’t gotten it checked out and you’ve just known that the symptoms were going to clear and you’re going to be okay once you get back in the car?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, I can’t really recall precisely every run I’ve had. Me and Dr. Petty were trying to count them the other day. But those were really mild and you were fine in 48 hours. For whatever the reason the wreck at Kansas was just really severe and really surprised me how tough it was to get past that.

I thought I was in the clear, but just that little accident at Talladega, I started having headaches and stuff immediately after the wreck, and then into the next day and into Tuesday, and I thought, man, this is pretty soon after the other accident in Kansas. I should probably take this really seriously and seek some professional opinions on this.

Typically they only last 24 to 48 hours and go away, and sometimes you don’t even ‑‑ sometimes to be honest you don’t even really know you have a mild concussion.

Q. Concussions have been in the news quite a bit lately, particularly with the NFL. In light of that how much of a concern is this for your long‑term health, and did that kind of play into it at all?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I think that you just ‑‑ I don’t think that it played into it a whole lot. When something happens to your body, I want to live a healthy life so I’m going to make sure that I’m doing the right thing, and that’s all I felt like I was doing here.

I think if I give myself time to get healed up, I can race for as long as I want to race, and that’s my objective.

RICK HENDRICK: I think the real good news is it has come to light with the NFL and Dr. Petty handles NFL guys with the Panthers, too, and there’s another doctor here, too, with him, and there’s some things they can do to help it along and protect him, and he was explaining all that. So the good news is it’s ‑‑ this is kind of preventative maintenance not to take a chance and there’s no damage.

But I think when you find out that you’re okay, but if you were right away to have another one, it could be a big problem, then I think guys are going to have to pay attention to it, just like the NFL, just like I heard on SportsCenter talking this morning about two or three different people they were waiting to get cleared to play this weekend.

So as Dr. Petty said, he can’t drive until these things happen. I think it’s good that it’s ‑‑ all the safety stuff we have in the cars today, this probably was a lot of ‑‑ I can remember in my career broken legs, broken arms, guys sitting out for different stuff, and we don’t have that. I remember Terry Labonte having to sit out when he had that inner ear problem, and I think the good news is the cars are so safe, the medical field is so advanced, and if we do what they tell us, we shouldn’t have any trouble.

Q. For Dr. Petty, it seems like a lot of people when we talk about concussions make it seem to be a cut‑and‑dry thing, but in this instance, Dale Jr. talked about the tests being normal, and a lot of it seems to be him telling you the symptoms that he’s experiencing. I was just wondering in your dealing with athletes, is it mostly listening to them tell you the effects of after an incident, or is it a combination generally of test results and them telling you what’s going on?

DR. PETTY: It’s a combination in some regard. If an MRI scan or a CT scan is abnormal, then it’s no longer a concussion, it’s a hemorrhage or a contusion. By definition it’s not a concussion.

So some of the testing that’s done like the impact tests that Dale had, those are tests that we can follow, and if he should have an injury again in the future, we can use that as a baseline. What we’d want to make sure is that baseline doesn’t start to fall off and even fall off without being tested.

The period of ‑‑ what he has is really called a diffuse axonal injury, and it’s something that does not show on scans, and we don’t have test that will show that other than symptoms and signs. Sometimes there will be some residual signs left over, but Dale had none of those. He had no ‑‑ his eyes did what they were supposed to do; his balance tests and so forth are perfect.

The biggest ‑‑ the one test, the one symptom that is more important than all the tests is headache, and as long as there’s any headache, the brain is not healed, and until that’s healed and had some time to rest and then you provoke it again and can’t make it happen again, then that’s ‑‑ then you feel like you’re on the road to recovery.

Q. When you look at Eric McClure, his concussion, you look at your concussions, Brad Keselowski broke his ankle, are the cars not as safe as they need to be right now?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Oh, the cars are fine. There’s just some things that you can’t control. I don’t know that you can have a race car that’s completely 100 percent safe. But there’s been so much ‑‑ so many advances in the last 10 or 12 years that have made this sport incredibly safe. So I have no worries about that.

Q. Dale or Rick, was there any consideration of having you possibly set out the rest of the season as opposed to just Charlotte and Kansas at any point in time?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: No, not really. I would love to race this weekend, and I feel perfectly normal and feel like I could compete if I were allowed to compete this weekend. But I think that the basis of this whole deal is that I’ve had two concussions in the last four to five weeks, and you can’t layer concussions. It gets extremely dangerous.

So I really don’t want to ‑‑ I think that we could easily have chosen to do that, but I’d like to get back in the car and compete as soon as I can, as soon as the doctors feel like I’m able to do that.

Q. Dale, what’s your situation going to be like in the next two weeks? Are you going to be keeping the same role as a driver and working with Regan any since he’s taking over the car? What’s your role going to be like? Is it going to change any?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Well, I really don’t know. I probably need to rest and relax as much as I can, allow my brain to take a break and get some healing done. You know, Regan doesn’t need any tutoring or anything like that. He’s ready to go. He’s going to do a great job. I’m excited for his opportunity. He’s a really good guy, been a good friend of mine for a long time.

Under the circumstances I think this is a really, really neat opportunity for him, and I think that Steve and the guys will enjoy working with him.

Q. Considering the incredible season you were having, did it make it even more difficult to make this decision the first time, the second time, and is it just frustrating because of how well you and Stevie were working together?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: It’s frustrating. I really didn’t get to make the decision. I left it in the hands of the Docs, and I’m going to do what they tell me to do. But it’s frustrating; I just enjoy driving cars week in and week out. I enjoy being at the racetrack with Steve, so I’m going to really miss that.

Q. I know in the NFL if you have a concussion they make you sit out six or seven days before you go back in. NASCAR drivers have kind of hid this fact like Dale did after the Kansas incident. Does there need to be more stringent rules that would prevent drivers from being on the track with concussions?

DR. PETTY: We’ve patterned our rules after the NFL to a degree. We would do the same procedure about giving them five or six days without a headache and then doing provocative tests.

I don’t think that, so far as I know, they’re not allowed to go back any earlier than some of the NFL guys are allowed to go back.

Q. Dale, one question for you: I know you said you have to rest up a little bit, but will you come to the race this weekend to support the team? And for Steve Letarte, what have you had to do to the car to prepare for Regan Smith to race this weekend?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Yeah, I don’t have any plans of being here this weekend. I think that I’d be more of a distraction to the team and their efforts in the race. I think they’ve got a good opportunity to have a good run this weekend, and I feel like that ‑‑ to minimize the distraction would help them out.

STEVE LETARTE: As far as preparing for the car for Regan, there’s not a whole lot to do. He’s been at the shop early this morning just to sit in his seat versus Jimmie’s. We have a lot of options at the company, and he found the one that fits him the best, so we’ll probably change the seat, the pedals, just adjust things to his driving style. He’ll probably have to get on the race track to really fine‑tune everything like he really wants it. They’re reasonably close to the same size, so it shouldn’t be much of a problem at all.

Q. This is for Steve: When this happened at the tire test, it sounds like there wasn’t a lot of medical staff or he didn’t go to a care center. Is that standard for these tire tests; and is that something that you think should be changed? How does that usually work?

STEVE LETARTE: Well, there was a medical staff there, and he was seen in the ambulance after his accident. I think he was seen there.

As far as the care center and what should be standard, I kind of leave that to the experts above me. I stick with crew chiefing and race cars. I don’t know if I’m really the guy that can answer that question.

I think injuries are complicated, and I think every situation can be different. We test all over the country, whether it’s a tire test or whether we’re by ourselves at a straight‑line test or Nashville, any type of cars on track there’s a risk of injury. I don’t know if there’s any real ‑‑ I wish it would be a cut‑and‑dry answer, but I don’t really think there is a cut and dry answer.

Q. Rick, can you give us a precise as best you can remember timeline on when the decision was made yesterday, what time of day, when did you contact Regan? Kind of give us not a minute by minute but maybe an hour by hour progress of how all this came about?

RICK HENDRICK: Let’s see. Dale went in to have the ‑‑ I talked to Dr. Petty Tuesday night. He had ‑‑ Dale had an examination Tuesday. Wednesday he had an MRI. I went down with Stevie and Kelly to his office and saw the MRI, and it was normal. At that point Dr. Petty had already said to me in the morning, that morning that he was not going to clear Dale to drive.

But we were wanting to know if there was any damage or injury. Then because Kelly has been working with Regan and junior, I called James Finch last night about 10:00 and asked him could we use Regan. He agreed, and that’s ‑‑ told Stevie last night at 8:00. So this morning he called Regan and we told him we’d had it cleared with James, and that’s where we are right now.

Q. I was there when you went into the corner. Can you just talk about that track and the rebanking of it, and is it safe, and what should we look for next weekend?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I think it’ll be a great race. I think they did an awesome job on the track. I had a lot of fun when we were testing up there until the accident. I think they did a good job in Turn 1 and 2, sort of changing the banking of the track, and 3 and 4 seems relatively the same as it was before. But I really think it’s going to be a great racetrack. It was a good track beforehand, but I think they improved it.

Q. You’re not blaming the track?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Absolutely not.

Q. Just going back to the Regan Smith decision, I’m sure you had other choices. Why Regan, and what might be the future for him in your organization?

RICK HENDRICK: Well, I think we’ve been talking about running him in the Nationwide car for a championship. He’s a good driver, and again, Dale likes him, and we’re familiar with him. So that was just ‑‑ we knew he was going to be in James’ car. And that was just ‑‑ it just seemed to fit. They’re about the same size.

STEVE LETARTE: I don’t really know if I’m the guy ‑‑ Mr. Hendrick makes those decisions, but I agree that Regan is a great guy with a great attitude. Seems to be a remarkable talent. He’s part of the Chevrolet family, which obviously helps when he comes and drives our car. We were just looking for someone that could come in and do a great job, and we feel he can, and the fact that Dale believes in him so much really made the decision that much easier.

Q. What are your emotions right now? We’ve seen drivers on the verge of tears when they’ve had to give up their cars in mid‑race and some very emotional feelings. How are you coping with that?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: I’m really going to feel pretty odd not being in the car. I’m anxious, real, real anxious just to get back into the car and get back to ‑‑ I think you learn not to take things for granted, and I just hate that this has caused such a fuss.

Q. Dr. Petty, when it comes to concussions, are you more susceptible to them going forward when you get one?

DR. PETTY: Yes.

Q. And secondly, how much of diagnosing all this hinges on individual admission?

DR. PETTY: 90 percent of a concussion probably depends on individual information. The headache ‑‑ people around you might notice that you’re different. By and large it’s a patient’s ‑‑ the history that the patient gives is the thing that tells you that they’ve had a concussion. A concussion can be seeing stars. A concussion can be just being addled for a minute. Any time the brain is not doing what it’s supposed to be doing after an acceleration or deceleration, that’s a concussion.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. out next two races, Regan Smith to drive No. 88 Hendrick Chevy

Dale Earnhardt Jr. (center), driver of the No. 88 Diet Mountain Dew Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports team owner Rick Hendrick (left) and crew chief Steve Letarte (right) speaks to the media at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Oct. 11 in Charlotte, N.C. Earnhardt will miss two races after suffering a concussion from an accident in Talladega last week. Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS STATEMENT

CONCORD, N.C. (Oct. 11, 2012) Dale Earnhardt Jr. will not compete in the upcoming NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events at Charlotte Motor Speedway and Kansas Speedway after being diagnosed with a concussion following the Oct. 7 race at Talladega, Ala.

Earnhardt, driver of the No. 88 Chevrolets for Hendrick Motorsports, was diagnosed Wednesday afternoon in Charlotte. Regan Smith will be the team’s substitute driver at Charlotte and Kansas. 

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. suffered a concussion in the “big one” at the end of Sunday’s race at Talladega, which involved 25 cars. Earnhardt is 11th in the Chase for the Sprint Cup standings, but missing the next two races will eliminate him from championship contention.

In a news conference Thursday morning, Earnhardt said he did not feel right after crashing during a tire test at Kansas Speedway back on Aug. 29. “The wreck at Kansas was really severe and it surprised me,” Earnhardt said saying that he now regrets not seeing a doctor after the Kansas crash.

*NOTE: Regan Smith was scheduled to drive Phoenix Racing’s No. 51 car this weekend. AJ Allmendinger is expected to drive the car now, team officials said.

NASCAR driver appearances / autograph sessions – TALLADEGA SUPERSPEEDWAY

Friday, October 5
James Buescher
3:15pm local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Joey Coulter & Tim George Jr.
1:00pm local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Ron Hornaday Jr.
1:30pm local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Brad Keselowski
7:00pm local time
Montana’s Bar and Grill located
75023 Highway 77
Lincoln, AL

Justin Lofton, Cale Gale & Max Gresham
1:45pm local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Drivers
2:15 – 3:00pm local time
Signing autographs for fans at Talladega Superspeedway. The session is free and open to all fans with a Friday race ticket. Fans will need to pick up wristbands before the session at the main Guest Services Office located at the O.V. Hill South Grandstand Section L. Each fan that has a wristband will be guaranteed a spot in the autograph line. The autograph session will be held on the Concourse Area behind the O.V. Hill South Grandstand Sections D & E.

Saturday, October 6
Ty Dillon
12:00pm local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Timothy Peters, Todd Bodine & Parker Kligerman
1:00pm local time
Honda Generators display located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Sunday, October 7
Bobby and Donnie Allison
9:30 – 10:30am local time
Signing autographs for fans with Talladega Superspeedway Allison Grandstand tickets. They wil be located in the grandstands bearing their name. The autograph session is only available to Allison Grandstand customers; kids 12 and under sit free in the Allison Grandstands with a paid adult.
 
Jeff Burton
8:40am local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
10:00 am local time
Sprint Experience at Talladega Superspeedway. The Sprint Experience display is located outside of the Frontstretch, behind the Anniston Grandstand.

Dale Earnhardt Jr., Clint Bowyer plus SPEED analysts Kyle Petty, Rutledge Wood, Kenny Wallace and Matt Clark
Time TBD
Appearing in the Talladega Experience hospitality area at Talladega Superspeedway. The Talladega Experience gives fans access to specialty food and beverage tents, as well as exclusive appearances and Q & A’s from motorsport personalities and entertainers. Also included with the Talladega Experience package is a Pre-Race Pit Pass, Suite/Hospitality parking pass, an event souvenir and access to the track for Driver Introductions prior to the race. Price for the package is $139 per person (plus cost of race ticket). For more information, see the Talladega Superspeedway website.

#31 Over-the-Wall Pit Crew
9:00am local time
Q&A session at the Team Chevy stage located in the fan midway at Talladega Superspeedway

Round 4: Stewart vs Earnhardt Jr., Gordon vs Kahne for “Drive for the Cover”

Coming out of Round 3, Dale Earnhardt Jr. defeated his JR Motorsports teammate (and employee) Danica Patrick to face Stewart in Round 4.

Kasey Kahne squeezed by Mark Martin to face Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon, who got by Ryan Newman in Round 3. Below are the head-to-head matchups for the semifinals:

Dale Earnhardt Jr. vs. Tony Stewart
Jeff Gordon vs. Kasey Kahne

Voting for Round 4 of the “Drive for the Cover” campaign begins today with three weeks remaining in the campaign to select the driver who will adorn the cover of NASCAR The Game: Inside Line.

Fourth round closes (2 drivers)on June 30th.

JULY 15 – Final Round Closes (Champion)

Visit www.nascarthegame.com/vote to participate in the “Drive for the Cover” campaign.

No. 88 team heads to Sonoma pumped up, ready for road course challenge

I just knew it would happen!

Dale Earnhardt Jr. won a race! FINALLY!

2011 Infineon - June NSCS Practice Dale Earnhardt Jr - Photo credit: Todd Warshaw/Getty Images for NASCAR

I was just seven races too early, is all. I thought for sure Junior was going to take Talladega – after all, he does race well on restrictor plate tracks. But wouldn’t you know, almost four years to the day of his last win, he places Michigan in his pocket and ends his 143-race winless streak.

A teleconference was held today with Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick and the No. 88 crew chief Steve Letarte. The question was asked to Rick Hendrick if Junior’s win will help build the momentum from here on out. Hendrick replied, “Oh, absolutely! Seeing him run up front every week, seeing him win a race, seeing him running for the championship, that’s going to just build the sport, the TV ratings, fans in the seats.”

Hendrick also noted that they were bombarded yesterday with emails and different blogs to their sites about Junior Nation having Christmas early this year. ”It’s fun because they’ve waited. They’re loyal fans. He cares about them,” continued Hendrick, “It’s good for the sport. It’s good for him. I think it helps everybody.”

We all witnessed the absence of owner Rick Hendrick during Junior’s big win and got to talk to the boss man via cell phone in Victory Lane. But where exactly was Hendrick during Junior’s victory?  Hendrick explains: “I was hating myself because I was in Michigan.  I was sitting at the airport in the rain, waiting to get in the helicopter,” said Hendrick, “In one way I’m glad I wasn’t there because nobody got to put the camera on me and see how nervous I was those last 20 laps. I had a big meeting in Atlanta Monday morning and I had to have the pilots back at 6:30.  It was a 7:00 deal in Atlanta, I had to make it, so I had to leave and come home, said Hendrick.  And we all want to know what he told Junior: “I told him I knew we was going to get it done, I’m so proud of you. Enjoy it. The world is proud of you. Take a deep breath and have some fun.”

Now that Junior Nation has taken their deep breath, now what?

Dale Earnhardt Jr. is currently second in points, only -4 behind points leader Matt Kenseth. NASCAR Sprint Cup heads to Sonoma – a place where Junior has yet to win. And just a reminder – as of June 1, 2012, the track is known as just simply “Sonoma” and will no longer be called Infineon Raceway. Why? Sponsorship has ended. The 10-year naming-rights with Infineon Technologies ends in June. Under the terms of their contract, the name Infineon will be removed from signs, brochures and any other materials identifying the raceway.

Junior obviously wants a road course victory, but has yet to finish in the top 10 at the 1.99-mile road course but has a pair of top-five finishes at Watkins Glen International, the other road course on the schedule. Accident damage and overheating steered Junior to a 41st-place finish at Sonoma in 2011.

Added Steve Letarte, “Sonoma is a place we look forward to improve. We felt we had an okay car there last year, got caught up in an accident. Those things are going to happen. That hurts our stats at Sonoma because it was just an accident. We look forward to going out there, having a good time. I don’t think the win could have come at a better time. We’re going to go out there and enjoy ourselves. We are pretty confident that if we go out there and have fun with it, we can get a car that drives very good.”

“There’s a lot of opportunities there with restarts, fuel strategies,” Letarte added. “There’s a lot of opportunities to have a good run there and we’re looking forward to it,”

Hendrick concluded, “Oh, yeah, we had one good year, a couple of not good years, but now I think we have the foundation and the base to show the Junior Nation and the NASCAR community what Dale Jr. can do and what he’s all about.