Home Blog Page 4932

NASCAR’s “Golden Boy” Fred Lorenzen

Photo Credit: NASCAR via Getty Images

Fred Lorenzen was one of NASCAR’s first superstars. His aggressive style on the track gained him the admiration and respect of his fellow competitors. Off the track, his blonde good looks and charisma made him a favorite among fans.

His biggest following, however, may have been the youngsters who stood in line for his autograph. Lorenzen never turned them away. Each one would get an autograph personalized with their name and signed “Fred Lorenzen #28.”

“The fans are what make you run,” he once said. “They were my heroes. “

He was the consummate professional and used any tool available to gain an advantage out on the track. This included studying the weather, tire wear and gas mileage data.

Richard Petty once said, “Fred Lorenzen was total concentration; before, during and after a race.”

Lorenzen put it this way.

It’s just something I wanted to do,” he said. “When you decide you want to do something, you put your mind to it and you can do it. You’ve gotta really want it, though. I gave up everything to go racing.”

His dedication and record setting career will be honored on January 30, 2015 when he is inducted into the 2015 class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Lorenzen’s family shared their excitement on his Facebook page with the following statement.

“On behalf of the whole Lorenzen Family, we want to thank all of the fans for their support of voting daily and endlessly showing their loyalty for Fast Freddie. To all of our friends, both in the NASCAR Family and beyond for the great honor. A special thank you to the people who helped along the way…this day is also yours. There were many happy tears today. What an unbelievable honor. To be a part of history and a part of such an elite group is epic. Thank you to all!

“Today is surely a “Golden Day” for the Golden Boy. May we raise a glass and wave the checkered flag and toast to the NHOF 2015 Class. What a victory!”

Lorenzen was born in 1934 in Elmhurst, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. His love of racing began at an early age. As a child, he used to sit in his backyard under a tent listening to radio broadcasts of the Southern 500. It was here that he found his heroes and he told himself, “Someday I’m going to race there.”

His passion for the sport continued to grow and he began building his own go-karts and racing them through his neighborhood. He had at least one close call with the law when he was 12 but “Fast Freddie” outran the police in his homemade go-kart. They soon caught up to him at his home and confiscated the go-kart but that first “win” added fuel to his racing dream.

Lorenzen built his first car at the age of 13 and never looked back. After graduating from high school, he began racing modifieds and late models. His NASCAR debut was in 1956 at Langhorne Speedway where he finished a disappointing 26th due to a broken fuel pump. He continued to hone his skills drag racing and won the National Gas Eliminators at the age of 18. A few years later, he moved on to stock car racing. Lorenzen won the USAC (United States Auto Club) Championship in 1958 and 1959.

His big break came in 1960 when he received a phone call that would propel him into the big leagues. The call was from Ralph Moody asking Lorenzen if he would like to drive for his team which was backed by Ford Motor Company. This wasn’t the first time Moody had approached him, but this time Lorenzen had the good sense to say yes to the offer.

Lorenzen teamed up with Holman-Moody to drive full time in the NASCAR Grand National Division (currently Sprint Cup), driving the now famous white and blue No. 28 Ford. Ralph Moody would soon become not only his car owner but a good friend as well.

During his first season, the rookie faced off against veteran driver Curtis Turner and won the Rebel 300 at Darlington Raceway. In turn two on the final lap, at 130 miles an hour, Lorenzen faked high then dove low. While Turner was frantically trying to run him into the guardrail, Lorenzen passed him on the inside, taking the lead and the victory away from Turner.

After the race he would forever be known as “Fearless Freddie.” It was one of Lorenzen’s favorite victories.

“That race was extra special because the track is so very, very special and because I was able to beat Curtis Turner,” he said. “You’ve got to remember that for a kid like me, names like Curtis Turner, Joe Weatherly and Fireball Roberts were hero stuff.”

The next year he entered only 16 of the 62 races on the 1964 schedule. Lorenzen won eight of those races, five consecutively. In all, he finished in the top 13 in four different seasons while running a partial schedule.

In 1965, he won two of the sport’s biggest events, the Daytona 500 and the World 600.

One of his most memorable races came in 1966 at Atlanta Motor Speedway when he drove a rather unique car nicknamed “The Yellow Banana.” There was a Ford boycott for much of the season and NASCAR looked the other way when it came time to inspect this unusual car. Attendance was down and they were desperate to put fans in the empty seats.

The car was owned and prepared by Junior Johnson. The front of the car was sloped downward, the roofline and windshield were lowered and the tail end was kicked up. Even though it obviously didn’t come close to fitting NASCAR specifications, they allowed Lorenzen to compete.

He crashed while leading the race on lap 139.

A crew member was heard to say, “No wonder, I ain’t never seen anybody who could drive a banana at 150 miles an hour.”

After the race, he was told to never bring the car back again.

During his brief career, Lorenzen found continued success, setting new records along the way and earning another moniker, “The Elmhurst Express.” When the win was on the line, Lorenzen didn’t stop for anyone.

His career total of 158 starts includes 26 wins and 32 poles, but no championships.

The partial schedules probably explain the lack of championship trophies. One can only imagine what he might have accomplished if he had competed full-time. Some think he may have given Richard Petty a run for his money.

But Lorenzen doesn’t seem to have any regrets.

“I didn’t really want to (run a full schedule),” Lorenzen said. “It’s too much traveling. I get tired of traveling. You’re gone all the time. These guys that are doing it right now, I don’t see how they do it. You’re never home.”

At the time, Lorenzen was not getting paid to win championships. He was getting paid to win the most prestigious events with the biggest payoffs. The larger races got the best news coverage which translated into more car sales.

While he may not have won any Cup championships during his career, Lorenzen owned the record books.

1)    Between 1962 and 1964 he became the first driver to win the same 500 mile race three years in a row (The Atlanta 500).

2)    In 1963, he became the first driver in NASCAR history to win over $100,000 in a single season. What makes it even more remarkable is that he only competed in 29 of the 61 races on the schedule and finished third in the points standings.

3)    In 1964 Lorenzen set a record winning five consecutive starts. The record was broken by Richard Petty who won 10 in 1967.

4)    In 1966, he became the first driver in NASCAR history to win races at all five of the south’s original superspeedways.

5)    Before his first retirement in 1967, Lorenzen became the sports all-time superspeedway winner with 12 wins.

6)    He was the first driver to win at Martinsville Speedway four consecutive times. Fred Lorenzen was also the very first recipient of the coveted Martinsville Grandfather Clock on September 27, 1964.

In 1967, at the age of 33, Lorenzen retired while at the pinnacle of his career. He said he had accomplished all that he had set out to do and was burned out.

“I hated the traveling,” he said, “that’s why I quit. It wasn’t fun anymore.”

There’s no question that the death of his friend and teammate Fireball Roberts in 1964, also took its toll on Lorenzen.

After Roberts’ death, Lorenzen said, “He was a god to me. When Fireball died, it turned my whole racing career around. He was like Santa Claus was to all the little kids. I thought Christmas had been taken away. His passing changed my whole meaning of racing. When I was a kid, back in Illinois, I listened on the radio to Fireball Roberts driving in the Southern 500. I can’t tell you how much his death hurt me.”

Lorenzen returned to racing for a short stint in 1970-72. He couldn’t recapture his glory days but managed 11 top-five finishes and two poles.

In 1972 Lorenzen retired for the final time and began a successful career in real estate.

In recent years, his health has deteriorated and he suffers from dementia. But Lorenzen still has vivid memories of his days racing and loves to hear from his fans.

His family is proud of all that he has accomplished, but Amanda and her brother Chris don’t need trophies to tell them how special he is.

His daughter Amanda says, “Growing up we played pool and ran around in his trophy room. We knew Dad had won on all the speedways and was a real success in stock car racing in his time. However, he was just our Dad, our Dad the hero.”

She encourages fans to continue to show their support by sending cards and letters to her Dad at the address below.

Oakbrook Healthcare Center

Attn: Fred Lorenzen #332

2013 Midwest Road

Oak Brook, IL 60523

Lorenzen was asked how he wanted to be remembered.

“As a good driver,” Lorenzen said. “If you want to be the best and be good, you’ve got to put everything else aside and go for it. Anybody can go to the top if they want to bad enough. If you want it bad enough, you’ve gotta give everything else up and go for it.”

Achievements:

1978 – Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame

1991 – Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame

1998 – Named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers.

2001 – Inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America.

2003 – Inducted into the Talladega Walk of Fame

2014 – Named as an Inductee of the 2015 class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame

Special Thanks to Fred Lorenzen’s children, Amanda and Chris.

Josh Hayes Wins a Rain-Soaked Race Two at Road America

Photo Credit: Nick Livers

Monster Energy Graves Yamaha’s Josh Hayes won a rain-soaked AMA Pro Superbike Race Two at Road America on Sunday.

The 53-mile race consisted of two distinct segments—the conventional first half, comparable to much of the prior racing over the weekend, and the second half, a somewhat confusing dash in the rain.

Much like Saturday’s Race One, Hayes got off to a strong start, taking the lead, with Yoshimura Suzuki Factory Racing’s Martin Cardenas and Hayes’ Monster Energy Graves Yamaha teammate Cameron Beaubier following closely behind, never letting the gap from first to third grow to more than a half-second.

Unlike Saturday’s race, which Superbike rookie Beaubier eventually took control of, Cardenas was Hayes’ primary challenger throughout the opening laps. On Lap five, Beaubier lost his bike and stuck it in the gravel outside Turn One.

Beaubier’s wreck marked the beginning of the second race within the race. Rain began to slowly pick up, and officials waved the red flag with seven laps to go.

After the red flag, officials declared a wet race, advising riders that certain parts of the four-mile track were still being rained on.

This posed the question of whether to use slicks or wet tires, to which most teams responded by using slicks due to dryness around much of the track.

When racing continued, Hayes built a comfortable lead in the first lap after the restart.

With a couple laps to go, the onset of a sudden downpour scrambled the leaderboard, though Hayes managed to stay up front and keep his bike upright despite several slips. Officials chose not to immediately red flag the race again because of the previous announcement to riders that wet tires were an option.

Hayes slipped around corners until approaching the front stretch, by which time several riders had crashed behind him due to standing water all over the track. When he crossed the finish line, the red flag waved again and the race was called.

Cardenas saw the worst change in luck, dropping to seventh in the unmanageable sheets of rain.

ADR Motorsports/Sic/Motul Fly Racing’s David Anthony finished in the second spot, propelling the Australian rider to fourth in the points. Cardenas’ Yoshimura Suzuki teammate Roger Hayden improved on his Saturday finish by one position, taking third. The final Yoshimura Suzuki rider, Chris Clark, finished in fourth, followed by KTM/HMC’s Chris Fillmore in fifth.

Hayes’ win and Beaubier’s early wreck allowed Hayes to tie Beaubier for the points lead at 89 points.

AMA Pro SuperBike Road America Race One Results

1. Josh Hayes (Yamaha)

2. David Anthony (Suzuki)

3. Roger Hayden (Suzuki)

4. Chris Clark (Suzuki)

5. Chris Fillmore (KTM)

6. Larry Pegram (EBR)

7. Martin Cardenas (Suzuki)

8. Bernat Martinez (Yamaha)

9. Trent Gibson (Kawasaki)

10. Francois Dumas (BMW)

11. Frankie Babuska (Suzuki)

12. Jason Farrell (Kawasaki)

13. Cameron Beaubier (Yamaha)

14. Chris Ulrich (Honda)

15. Cory West (EBR)

The Final Word – Dover is over and now to Pocono where Jimmie has not won for an entire year!

Photo Credit: Sean Gardner/NASCAR via Getty Images

Even a ball player could appreciate Jimmie Johnson’s average at Dover, having gone 9 for 25 for a sweet .360 average. Sunday, Johnson led much of the way to lock down his second of the season. Brad Keselowski, who has a win, finished second while Matt Kenseth, who does not, was third. That fact should not be cause to worry at the moment, as Kenseth still has more points than anyone, even without a victory to his credit. If this keeps up, he might not need one.

Tony Stewart needs a win to make the Chase, but a seventh place result was as good as it got. Kevin Harvick has two wins, but a flat as they came to green after a caution removed him from the lead and contention. Kurt Busch, who has a win and precious little else, was one back of Harvick, in 18th. As for Danica Patrick, if 25th is a decent day, she was better than decent by two positions.

Some teams you expect to be better, some not. Not much is expected from the BK Racing trio of Cole Whitt (27th), Ryan Truex (32nd), and Alex Bowman (40th) and we were not surprised. We thought Roush would be running better, but Carl Edwards (14th) was as good as it got for those boys as circumstances left Greg Biffle (38th) and Ricky Stenhouse Jr (41st) all torn up. Hendrick may have won, but Penske had the better average with Keselowski and Joey Logano both in the Top Ten.

When is all clear not all clear? Ask Clint Bowyer or, better yet, ask Kyle Busch. Seeking the weekend Dover three-peat, Busch was charging to the outside of Bowyer, but that is not what his spotter told him. It was clear to us that Rowdy was looking to the outside, only to wind up squeezed into the fence and out of the race. He had definite evil intentions aimed at his rival, but the guy he really should have wanted was high up in the grandstands. Oops.

When is debris not really debris? It is not if you run over a chunk of concrete and reduce it in size by blasting it to chunks and dust. Ask Jamie McMurray, who was the beneficiary of the gift of masonry Ryan Newman kicked up just in front of him from the newly formed pothole. McMurray clobbered it but good to split his splitter and send him fence-ward. Interestingly enough, he was 16th at the time, yet finished 13th.

While I shall miss FOX, I believe TNT’s coverage of NASCAR is the superior. Should we discover Pocono to be boring, yet we continue to watch primarily due to the entertainment provided by the announcers, then we have found folks who know how to do their job.

Why don’t the New York Yankees play three of four games a month against minor league teams on national television? The reason is that would be stupid, but enough about Kyle Busch.

As long as there are less than 16 race winners, wins lock you into the Chase while being the best in points will still get you there. Welcome to a world where Kurt Busch can lead Matt Kenseth in the standings, where a single victory trumps having more points than anybody else. That means that by this time next week, anyone from the top 36 could find themselves in the Chase by simply winning this Sunday at Pocono. Nothing to it.

 

SWEET SIXTEEN
1 Jimmie Johnson – 2 WINS – 436 Points
2 Joey Logano – 2 WINS – 414
3 Kevin Harvick – 2 WINS – 373
4 Jeff Gordon -1 WIN – 461
5 Carl Edwards -1 WIN – 438
6 Dale Earnhardt, Jr. – 1 WIN – 429
7 Kyle Busch – 1 WIN – 411
8 Brad Keselowski – 1 WIN – 404
9 Denny Hamlin – 1 WIN – 379
10 Kurt Busch – 1 WIN – 241
11 Matt Kenseth – 463 POINTS
12 Kyle Larson – 377
13 Ryan Newman – 374
14 Brian Vickers – 366
15 Paul Menard – 362
16 Austin Dillon – 358

CONTENDERS AND PRETENDERS

17 Greg Biffle – 357
18 Clint Bowyer – 350
19 Kasey Kahne – 349
20 Aric Almirola – 344
21 A.J. Allmendinger – 337
22 Tony Stewart – 336
23 Marcos Ambrose – 331
24 Jamie McMurray – 317
25 Casey Mears – 301
26 Martin Truex, Jr. – 289
27 Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. – 261
28 Danica Patrick – 239
29 Justin Allgaier – 223
30 Michael Annett – 188

PARTICIPANTS
31 Cole Whitt – 181
32 David Gilliland – 175
33 Reed Sorenson – 165
34 David Ragan – 158
35 Alex Bowman – 156
36 Josh Wise – 149

 

Jimmie Johnson Stole the Monster Mile Show to Make it Two in a Row

For the ninth time, Jimmie Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Lowe’s/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet stole the show at the Monster Mile, making it two race wins in a row and virtually guaranteeing himself a place in the Chase for the tenth consecutive year.

“It was an awesome race car,” Johnson said. “The first run I wasn’t sure we were really going to have the normal Dover magic here. Once the track ‘rubbered’ in our car came to life and it was so good.”

“It’s amazing that we can stay on top of things here with the different generation car, different rules, different tires,” Johnson continued. “This place just fits my style and Chad Knaus’ style.”

“I don’t even know where to begin,” Chad Knaus, winning crew chief, said. “We came in here with high expectations and things went really well for us right out of the gate. We were pretty optimistic at that point. Qualifying went well and we were excited to get into the event today.”

“At that point, we tried to manage the race and it turned out to be a pretty good day.”

Both Brad Keselowski, who started from the pole, and Matt Kenseth, who remains winless for the season, attempted to hang with the six-time champ, but finished second and third instead.

“We just had an up and down day,” the driver of the No. 2 Miller Lite Ford said. “We started up front and went to the back early in the race.”

“Then we took back off and had some strong runs,” Keselowski continued. “We were probably going to get a crack at Jimmie and then that last caution came out. We drove back up to second with the help of the restart and we were pretty even with Jimmie but it was just a matter of being out front.”

“It was a solid day for us,” the third place finishing driver of the No. 20 Dollar General Toyota said. “I did a poor job qualifying and so good adjustments and pit stops moved us forward. There was just that one group of cars that we couldn’t quite run with. We just need to be a little bit faster.”

Kenseth, who looked like he had a shot to win, actually struggled on the final restart with six laps to go, spinning his tires and then getting into the wall.

“The 48 spun them and I spun them a little bit,” Kenseth said. “I just need to do a better job and let the rear tires quit screaming so I could get going. And then Clint (Bowyer) hit me I guess trying to give me a push there.”

In addition to being a factor in the final restart with Matt Kenseth, Clint Bowyer was a factor in another incident early in the race with Kyle Busch, who looked strong as he tried to achieve the sweep of the race weekend after winning both the Truck and Nationwide races.

Bowyer and Busch tangled on Lap 126, putting Busch out of the race. Bowyer went on to salvage a good finish, bringing home his No. 15 Cherry 5-Hour Energy Special Ops Warrior Foundation Toyota home in the fourth position.

“I hated to be in that position with the 18,” Bowyer said. “I thought I was clear, obviously I wasn’t. Ruined his day.”

One of the other major incidents of the race involved AJ Allmendinger, Greg Biffle and Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., the latter of whom sustained hard hits on Lap 135.

“Inside of the car I didn’t really know what happened,” the driver of the No. 16 3M Ford Fusion said. “I just knew that the 47 got into us pretty hard and turned us into the fence. After watching the replay I see what happened.”

“They were racing hard back there and he stuck it into a hole that maybe there wasn’t room for,” Biffle continued. “There definitely wasn’t room come three-quarters of the way around the corner I guess and he slid off the bottom and got his right-rear caught by the 17 and up into us. It was a chain reaction. This place is tight and fast and when you get racing that hard back there on a restart stuff like that is going to happen.”

“We were really loose,” Ricky Stenhouse Jr. said. “The 47 jumped to the inside of us there and I tried to stay out of his way and he got me. We met right-rear to left-front and it got him sideways and everything else happened after that.”

“Our Nationwide Insurance Ford was really, really loose all race long and we were trying to hang on with it,” the driver of the No. 17 Nationwide Ford Fusion said. “We didn’t want it to end that way and we got our teammate caught up in it and tore up a lot of cars.”

“That is now what we wanted to do. It is a tough end to our day,” Stenhouse Jr. continued. “It is a bummer.”

In one of the more bizarre incidents and for just the third time in the last few years, once in April 2004 at Martinsville and once in 2010 at the Daytona 500, the red flag was displayed after a piece of concrete dislodged from the race track and hit Jamie McMurray’s car.

The red flag lasted six minutes and 39 seconds and while McMurray could not work on his car during that time, repairs were made when the red flag was lifted and the driver of the No. 1 Cessna Chevrolet got the ‘lucky dog’ break, soldiering on to a respectable 13th place finish.

Robin Pemberton, NASCAR’s vice president for competition, addressed the media after the race, advising that NASCAR was not aware of the concrete hole prior to the race and then addressed it immediately after the issue occurred with materials that are utilized regularly for repair work.

“We do a track walk after every race and in the morning and at the time, that had been a previous patch, but our staff did not see anything wrong with it,” Pemberton said. “The hole was two or three inches deep and six or eight inches by ten inches, so it was pretty substantial.”

“Our team has equipment and product at every facility in case there is a need for it. It’s an epoxy type filler that we use and is the same material we use whether it be asphalt or concrete.”

Many of the drivers praised NASCAR’s handling of the concrete repair, including Brad Keselowski.

“I think NASCAR did a good job or whoever fixed it did a good job of repairing it,” Keselowski said. “It’s hard to come back up there at the end and it was definitely an issue when it happened. You knew it was going to get worse if it wasn’t repaired and a small hole was going to turn into a big hole. I give NASCAR credit to realize that, stop, and fix it.”

Kyle Larson, behind the wheel of the No. 42 Cottonelle Chevrolet, was the highest finishing rookie yet again. With the third place finish of Matt Kenseth and the 15th place finish by the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet Jeff Gordon, Kenseth gained the points lead over Gordon and is now in P1 by two points.

The full race results are as follows:

2014 NSCS FedEx 400 Race Results

Fin Str Car Driver Team Lap Pts BPts Status TLd LLd
1 4 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet 400 48 5 Running 7 272
2 1 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford 400 43 1 Running 1 1
3 21 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota 400 42 1 Running 5 17
4 10 15 Clint Bowyer Cherry5-hrEnergySpecialOpsWarriorFnd Toyota 400 41 1 Running 2 5
5 7 11 Denny Hamlin Autism Speaks/FedEx Freight Toyota 400 39 Running
6 16 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet 400 38 Running
7 20 14 Tony Stewart Code 3/Mobil 1 Chevrolet 400 37 Running
8 3 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford 400 36 Running
9 13 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet 400 35 Running
10 15 27 Paul Menard Pittsburgh Paints/Menards Chevrolet 400 34 Running
11 5 42 Kyle Larson # Cottonelle Chevrolet 400 33 Running
12 25 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford 400 32 Running
13 19 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna Chevrolet 400 31 Running
14 29 99 Carl Edwards Subway Ford 400 30 Running
15 6 24 Jeff Gordon Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet 400 29 Running
16 27 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford 400 28 Running
17 8 4 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Chevrolet 399 28 1 Running 2 24
18 24 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet 399 26 Running
19 17 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance Chevrolet 399 25 Running
20 23 3 Austin Dillon # American Ethanol Chevrolet 398 24 Running
21 11 47 AJ Allmendinger Scott Products Chevrolet 397 23 Running
22 18 66 Brett Moffitt Land Castle Title Toyota 396 22 Running
23 28 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet 396 21 Running
24 38 36 Reed Sorenson Click It or Ticket Chevrolet 396 20 Running
25 22 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet 395 19 Running
26 30 51 Justin Allgaier # AccuDoc Solutions Chevrolet 395 18 Running
27 31 26 Cole Whitt # Burger King Toyota 394 17 Running
28 33 98 Josh Wise iRacing.com/Reddit.com Chevrolet 390 16 Running
29 32 38 David Gilliland The Pete Store Ford 388 15 Running
30 43 32 Blake Koch(i) supportmilitary.org Ford 388 0 Running
31 14 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet 387 13 Running
32 41 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota 387 12 Running
33 42 77 Dave Blaney Ford 383 11 Running
34 36 40 Landon Cassill(i) Newtown Building Supplies Chevrolet 382 0 Running
35 39 7 Michael Annett # Pilot Flying J Chevrolet 378 9 Running
36 34 34 David Ragan Dockside Logistics Ford 350 8 Running
37 40 33 David Stremme Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet 297 7 Overheating
38 12 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford 292 6 Running
39 37 44 JJ Yeley(i) Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet 232 0 Engine
40 35 23 Alex Bowman # Dr.Pepper Toyota 208 4 Accident
41 26 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Nationwide Ford 131 3 Accident
42 2 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Peanut Butter Toyota 125 3 1 Accident 1 81
43 9 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota 73 1 Engine

 

Johnson Two-for-Two and Nine at Dover

Credit: Rainier Ehrhardt/Getty Images

Jimmie Johnson pulled away from Brad Keselowski on the final restart with four laps remaining and won Sunday’s FedEx 400 Benefiting Autism Speaks at Dover International Speedway.

Johnson led 272 laps en route to his ninth win at Dover and his second straight win of the season.

“It was an awesome race car. The first run I wasn’t sure we were really going to have the normal Dover magic here. Once the track ‘rubbered’ in our car came to life and it was so good. It’s amazing that we can stay on top of things here with the different generation car, different rules, different tires,” Johnson said.

Keselowski finished second, Matt Kenseth finished third, Clint Bowyer fourth and Denny Hamlin finished fifth.

“The car was really strong the second half of the race. My guys made great adjustments on it and we drove up to second there. We were pretty equal to Jimmie there but never got a crack at him. I would have liked a shot,” Keselowski said.

“We had a good top-five car. I did an awful job on that last restart. Just got spinning the tires too much and the best car won. We just need to be a little bit better,” Kenseth said of his final restart.

A pothole in the race track red flagged the race for a little over 20 minutes for repairs. A chunk of concrete took out the front splitter of Jamie McMurray’s car. The crew was able to make repairs and McMurray finished 13th.

“Initially I thought I’d blown a tire out. When I hit it, it actually pushed the car to the right and I got into the fence a little bit. And as I slowed down, I couldn’t figure out first off, why I didn’t hit the fence harder, and then what happened. I didn’t see anything. It just hit the front end and ripped the splitter off and it pushed the car to the right. So, I’m not real sure,” McMurray said.

Polesitter Kyle Busch hit the wall after some contact from Clint Bowyer on lap 125. His hopes of doing the entire weekend sweep ended early in the garage.

“I hated to be in that situation with the 18 (Kyle Busch). It’s one of those deals where I thought I was clear obviously and wasn’t and ruined his day and certainly didn’t help mine,” Bowyer said.

Busch also led the first 81 laps and became the 15th driver in NASCAR history to lead 10,000 career laps in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series competition.

Jeff Gordon finished 15th and Kenseth takes the series points lead by two points.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series heads to Pocono Raceway next Sunday for the Pocono 400.

UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS
NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
FEDEX 400 BENEFITING AUTISM SPEAKS,
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
JUNE 1, 2014
=========================================
Pos. No. Driver Make
=========================================
1 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet
2 2 Brad Keselowski Ford
3 20 Matt Kenseth Toyota
4 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota
5 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota
6 78 Martin Truex Jr Chevrolet
7 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet
8 22 Joey Logano Ford
9 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr Chevrolet
10 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet
11 42 Kyle Larson Chevrolet
12 43 Aric Almirola Ford
13 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet
14 99 Carl Edwards Ford
15 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet
16 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford
17 4 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
18 41 Kurt Busch Chevrolet
19 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet
20 3 Austin Dillon Chevrolet
21 47 AJ Allmendinger Chevrolet
22 66 Brett Moffitt Toyota
23 10 Danica Patrick Chevrolet
24 36 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet
25 13 Casey Mears Chevrolet
26 51 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet
27 26 Cole Whitt Toyota
28 98 Josh Wise Chevrolet
29 38 David Gilliland Ford
30 32 Blake Koch Ford
31 31 Ryan Newman Chevrolet
32 83 Ryan Truex Toyota
33 77 Dave Blaney Ford
34 40 Landon Cassill Chevrolet
35 7 Michael Annett Chevrolet
36 34 David Ragan Ford
37 33 David Stremme Chevrolet
38 16 Greg Biffle Ford
39 44 J.J. Yeley Chevrolet
40 23 Alex Bowman Toyota
41 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr Ford
42 18 Kyle Busch Toyota
43 55 Brian Vickers Toyota