Kyle Busch Snatches Daytona Victory After Photo Finish
The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series 2014 season began with an astounding photo finish between Timothy Peters and Kyle Busch. Tonight the trophy will be given to ‘Rowdy’ who made an outside pass on Peters to snatch the win by only 0.017 hundredths of a second.
The victory marks Busch’s first career win in the NCWTS at Daytona International Speedway after finishing second three times prior to tonight and the excitement was obvious in victory lane.
“I didn’t think I would be able to make that move (the outside pass on Peters).” Busch commented to Fox Sports 1 in victory lane.
Busch, who isn’t eligible for points in the CWTS, will attempt to complete the sweep by winning in the CWTS, NNS and NSCS all in the same weekend, which would be an amazing feat at Daytona.
Timothy Peters finished second after stealing the lead within five laps to go before being dethroned by Busch in the tri-oval. Johnny Sauter captured the final podium finish after riding top five the entire event.
The pivotal factor in tonight’s event came with 27 laps to go when the ‘big one’ occurred in the turn’s one and two. Mason Mingus, Parker Kligerman, Darrell Wallace Jr, Caleb Holman, Sean Corr, Brian Ickler and Joey Coulter were involved in the catastrophic incident. Luckily, none of the drivers were injured – showing how much safety has improved.
Busch’s victory marks his third career at Daytona – one in ARCA, one in NNS, and tonight’s race. The NCWTS and Busch will return to the racetrack next month at Martinsville Speedway.
NASCAR BTS: Jim Beichner Embracing New Role as Team Penske Athletic Director
With an eye to increasing that ever important fitness level for drivers and crew alike, Team Penske recently announced the hiring of Jim Beichner as their new Athletic Director. And Beichner could not be more excited as he embraces his new role in the sport.
“It’s a completely new role for me,” Beichner said. “While I’m just learning about the responsibilities, what I can say is that I work with great people.”
“I work for Roger Penske and the Team Penske so it’s an exciting, great new opportunity for me.”
Beichner has certainly had quite the journey to his new position, from race fan as a youngster to wrestling coach as an adult and throughout much of his career.
“I’m originally from western New York,” Beichner said. “I grew up on a couple hundred acre farm just outside of Jamestown, New York, where Lucille Ball was born and raised.”
“I was a race fan and my family was involved with all kinds of different forms of racing, from stock cars, motorcycles and whatever has an engine attached to it,” Beichner continued. “So, I grew up around the sport.”
While Beichner was a race fan, he fell in love with another sport, wrestling, which he has been involved in throughout his life. And while he loved the world of coaching, he augmented his skills in the administrative area at Clarion University, where he earned a degree in Business Administration and Marketing, as well as the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Buffalo where he coached.
“While at the University of Buffalo, I took on as many administrative duties as I could,” Beichner said. “I was Director of Compliance at the University of Buffalo and then got involved with student housing and some other administrative activities.”
“So, the University of Buffalo afforded me opportunities to not just be a coach, of which I’m very appreciative,” Beichner continued. “I knew that I wasn’t going to retire a coach. Somewhere down the line I wanted to be a manger of people and I’m very fortunate that Roger Penske and his group picked me to do this.”
Beichner did not have an inside track on the position. In fact, he saw the job posting like so many other regular job-seekers.
“I saw the job posting and the more I read it, it sounded like me is the best way I can explain it,” Beichner said. “As I read the posting, I said to myself, ‘Jim, that sounds like you.’ All the things that they were looking for in an AD just spoke to me.”
In his new AD role, Beichner is responsible for supervising the pit crews, including the coaches, the strength coach, others in the shop that work with the pit crew.
“So, I’m the manager of people and I feel like that’s one of my strengths,” Beichner said. “I can cross boundaries and relate to just about anybody. Also, I’m a fair and honest person and that’s what they get from me.”
While Beichner is thrilled with his new role and the people with whom he works, Beichner is also excited about the facilities in which he and his staff have the privilege to work.
“I can tell you, our facility is beautiful,” Beichner said. “We have state-of-the art equipment so I couldn’t ask for a better place to be than working.”
While Beichner has been used to training Division I wrestlers who have a certain mentality that they will do whatever they need to get the job done, he readily admits that those he is training at Team Penske demonstrate the same attitude and commitment.
“I see, hear and feel the same dedication with my pit crew members here at Team Penske,” Beichner said. “I’m very impressed with the fact that as a new person coming in with new ideas, which I’ve shared with the coaches, and everybody has bought in and is working hard.”
“I’m very impressed with their attitude,” Beichner continued. “It’s really a great crew to work with. Our coaches are top notch and our athletes are top notch.”
“Our administration is great and through the changes that we are doing, they have bonded in a way that I had hoped they would respond.”
While Team Penske is involved with NASCAR, they are also involved in other forms of motorsports including the IndyCar Series. Given that, Beichner may be called upon to expand his work from just focusing on the world of stock car racing to open wheel racing as well.
“I do what my bosses ask me to do,” Beichner said. “When they ask me to get involved in Indy, as far as their pit crews are concerned, then I get involved.”
“Whatever they want or need me to do, I’m the kind of person that is a company guy,” Beichner continued. ‘Nothing is out of bounds for me. If they ask me to do whatever, I will do that thing that they are asking me to do so I can achieve our goals and help them achieve their goals.”
All of the new changes and challenges excite Beichner but what he is most excited about is getting to the race track to see the fruits of his labors. And he intends to be at the Daytona 500 to kick off the race season in celebration of his new responsibilities.
“I’m really excited about race days,” Beichner said. “That’s probably what everybody would be excited about.”
“I want to see our guys compete at the highest level and I want to see them do great,” Beichner continued. “I believe they are prepared very well and each one of those guys has a good reason to feel excited about race days. I’m excited about getting to those tracks and being out there and watching our guys perform.”
Although Beichner has had quite a career in sports, from wrestling to NASCAR, he admits that he is simply in awe of his new opportunity with Team Penske.
“You’re working for Roger Penske, a legend in motorsports,” Beichner said. “Where else would you rather be if you are a fan of racing than with Roger Penske and Team Penske?”
“I don’t know what else to say,” Beichner continued. “This is where I’d rather be to help them ultimately to achieve their goals.”
“I’m excited to see our Team Penske drivers, Keselowski, Logano and Blaney, out there as a team and I hope we help them achieve more victories than they already have,” Beichner said. “That’s what I’m excited about ultimately is to see those guys win races.”
‘I can’t speak highly enough of Team Penske, Roger Penske and this organization,” Beichner said. “And I can’t tell you how excited I am to have this opportunity.”
Dylan Kwasniewski wins pole for DRIVE4COPD 300 at Daytona
For NASCAR to allow him to run the Nationwide Series race at Daytona, 18-year-old Dylan Kwasniewski had to run the ARCA Racing Series Lucas Oil 250 to get NASCAR’s approval. Not problem as Kwasniewski won the pole and finished solidly inside the top 15.
On the heels of that, Kwasniewski put his No. 31 Rockstar/FOE Chevrolet on the pole for the DRIVE4COPD 300 at Daytona in his first ever Nationwide Series start. The 2013 K&N Pro Series East Champion will run the full Nationwide Series schedule this year as he battles for the Rookie of the Year crown against Ty Dillon and Chase Elliott.
“If you’d told me I’d have the pole for the Daytona race, I’d have said you were crazy,” Kwasniewski said afterwards. “For lack of a better word, I have no idea how to say what the feeling is for this. … It’s crazy. … It’s an extraordinary feeling.”
The Nationwide Series qualifying session marked the first round of NASCAR’s new group segment qualifying format. However, due to rain, NASCAR was only able to complete the first 25 minute segment so therefore the field will be set by those speeds.
Kwasniewski will be joined at the front of the field by his Turner-Scott Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson and Danica Patrick, as they qualified second and third behind them. The TSM cars all headed out together and were able to post the quick time mid-way though the session.
Kwasniewski credited Patrick for their fast time, stating that, “She picked her way (though) perfectly and got all us a great lap.”
Both Larson and Patrick shared their thoughts on the new format, saying that it was wild and exciting.
“The new qualifying was really wild, especially since it was on a super speedway. But it was a lot of fun,” Larson commented. “I definitely think the car owners are happy we aren’t doing two more sessions.”
There will be some times when it will be a total disaster,” Patrick added. “Like when we go to short tracks. Can’t even imagine. If NASCAR wanted to make it interesting for the fans, they’ve done that.”
The three Turner-Scott Motorsports were followed by the three Joe Gibbs Racing drivers: Kyle Busch, Elliott Sadler and Matt Kenseth. Jamie Dick turned in an impressive seventh, followed by Jeff Green, Johnny Sauter and David Starr.
Notably, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular Dale Earnhardt Jr. was 16th, followed by Brad Keselowski in 17th. Rookies Ty Dillon and Chase Elliott qualified 23rd and 26th, respectively.
One car would find trouble during qualifying as rookie Ryan Reed made heavy contact with the wall. He will go to a back-up, though made the field virtue of having Travis Pastana’s owners points from last year.
Failing to make the field was Clay Greenfield, Carlos Contreras, Carl Long, Matt DiBenedetto, Matt Carter, Willie Allen, Chris Buescher, Tanner Berryhill and David Ragan. Chris Buescher is scheduled to run the full NASCAR Nationwide Series this year for Roush-Fenway Racing and go for the Rookie of the Year Award.
Lucas Oil Can-Am Midgets release 2014 Schedule
Earlier this month at the 2014 Canadian Motorsports Expo, the Lucas Oil Can-Am Midgets released their 2014 schedule.
These three-quarter midgets only weighing 890 lbs with the driver are light-weight and fast, no matter the venue they attend, producing lots of side-by-side racing.
The Cam-Am Midgets will kick off their season with a trip to the tight confines of Flamboro Speedway on May 10th. Then the following weekend, they’ll head to Sunset Speedway for a Sunday event on the 3/8 high-banked oval.
On June 14th, they will head to Peterborough Speedway, before going back to Flamboro on the 21st.
They will start July off with a trip to Grand Bend Speedway, a 1/4 mile with only 12 degrees of banking in the corners, on the 5th. They’ll make a return visit to Sunset on the 12th, before heading to the tight Barrie Speedway on the 19th. They’ll finish off July with a trip back to Flamboro on the 26th.
The month of August will kick off with a double-header at Sauble Speedway on the 2nd and the 3rd, before once again hitting Flamboro on the 9th. On August 16th, they will join the ISMA Super Modifieds at Sunset Speedway for a special show. They’ll then finish August off with a trip to Grand Bend on the 23rd and Sauble on the 30th.
The championship will be awarded at the final event of the season, which takes place at Flamboro Speedway on September 20th. Last year saw Mack DeMan pick up his first career championship.
DeMan started racing go-karts at the age of seven in the Waterloo Regional Kart Club, winning races and championships. From there, he graduated to the Can-Am Midget ranks and currently races the No. 40 Lucas Oil sponsored Can-Am Midget for car owner Andy Mackereth.
After finishing third in points in 2012, DeMan came out last year, strong all season and was able to take home the championship.
“Each year you learn more about set-up and how to run well on track,” he commented earlier this month. “Lots of talent is coming up ranks we’ll have our work cut out next year.”










