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Jesse Kennedy Scores First OSCAAR Super Late Model Victory at Barrie Speedway

While it marked the first time in four years that the OSCAAR Super Late Models had raced at Barrie Speedway, it also marked the first time ever that Jesse Kennedy found feature victory lane.

“We struggled all day with a tight car,” Kennedy says. “We threw everything, but the kitchen sink at it to get it to turn. It was obviously better. I honestly didn’t think I had much for Brandon at the end. I got a good start on the outside and… we just kind of pulled it off.”

In the first heat, it’d start off with Mike Hillier running into mechanical problems, making contact with the wall and collecting Rudy Oppersma. The second caution would then come out when rookie Rob Poole would spin Mike Beyore in turn two, and that’d be followed up with a third caution when Poole spun Kyle Passer in turn four. Shawn Chenoworth would go on to take the win in his first start of the year, followed by Tony Tiemersma, Beyore, Poole, Oppersma and Kyle Passer.

In the second heat, Jim Bowman would go for a single-car spin. Four-time series champion Glenn Watson would take the win, followed by his nephew Brandon Watson, Ian Bourque, Todd Campball, George Wilson and Bowman.

In the third heat while battling for the lead, Rob Clarke and Charlie Gallant would go for the spin. Jeff Dunford would assume the lead and go on to take the win. Jesse Kennedy finished second, followed by Gary Passer and Quinn Misener.

Tony Tiemersma would take the win in the fourth heat, followed by Chenoworth, Beyore, Poole, Oppersma and Kyle Passer.

Brandon Watson would win the fifth heat, followed by Glenn Watson, Bourque, Wilson, Campball and Bowman.

On the first lap of the last heat, Clarke would go for a spin, collecting Gallant while Dunford had mechanical problems. Kennedy went on to win, followed by Gallant, Gary Passer and Msener.

Virtue of his qualifying effort, Brandon Watson would start on pole, followed by Jesse Kennedy, Shawn Chenoworth, Tony Tiemersma and Glenn Watson.

There’d be a caution right away on the start of the race as Tiemersma would go for a spin after getting hit from behind by Mike Beyore as Watson did not get a good start. Chenoworth would have to make a pit stop, virtue of getting damage on the start from G. Watson. This would set the running order with B. Watson first, followed by Kennedy, G. Watson, Beyore and Ian Bourque.

The second caution would come out on lap two as when Chenoworth was pulling off pit road, Jim Bowman would make contact with him and go for a spin. By this point, G. Watson had passed Kennedy for second while Bourque passed Beyore for fourth.

On the restart, the Watsons would battle side-by-side for the lead with G. Watson clearing B. Watson on lap five. On the same lap, a caution came out for Kyle Passer spinning in turn one, setting the Watsons back up side-by-side. On the restart, B. Watson would manage to around G. Watson.

The fourth caution came out when Tiemersma would go for another spin while trying to get around the lapped car of Kyle Passer. By this point, Charlie Gallant had gotten by Beyore for fifth.

The fifth caution came out when Bowman went for another spin. Then on the restart, there’d be another caution when Rudy Oppersma pushed Beyore into the inside wall on the backstretch.

With 35 laps to go, the seventh caution would come out when Rob Clarke sent Gallant for a spin. This would allow George Wilson to crack the top five while Kennedy made the pass for second G. Watson behind B. Watson while Bourque ran fourth.

At the halfway mark on lap 25, Wilson passed Bourque for fourth while rookie Rob Poole was up to sixth. Wilson would continue his climb by passing G. Wilson for third on lap 28.

On lap 32, Jeff Dunford would bring out the eighth caution with a flat tire. There’d be more mechanical problems as Rob Poole would break a rear end on lap 39, ending his night and bringing out the ninth caution to clean up the oil. By this point, it was still B. Watson over Kennedy while G. Watson had made his way back by Wilson for third with Bourque in fifth. Tiemersma had also made his way back up to sixth after his early problems.

With 10 laps to go, Kennedy would make the pass on B. Watson after getting a good run on the outside on the restart.

“Earlier with (Glenn) Watson, I kind of let him go. I said ‘maybe he can do something with Brandon’,” Kennedy says. “He kept backing up to us so I said ‘guess we have to go’. So I was saving some tires for that last ten-lap heat there.”

He would go on to lead the final 10 laps to win his first ever OSCAAR feature. B. Watson finished second to go with his win at Sunset with Wilson third after being disqualified at Sunset.

“After that last restart, our car kind of faded away. We must have had some marbles or some speedy-dry on our tires. It just got really loose,” B. Watson says. “I couldn’t get that car to turn off the corner one bit.”

G. Watson and Tiemersma rounded out the top five.

“The car was really tight so it was a tough night for us,” G. Watson says.

Bourque finished sixth, followed by Gallant, Todd Campball and Dunford.

Gary McLean pulls the OSCAAR Modified hat trick at Barrie Speedway

[media-credit id=4 align=”alignright” width=”266″][/media-credit]In the second ever event for the OSCAAR Modifieds, Gary McLean made it clear that he is going to be the one to beat this year as he scored his second straight feature win, pulling off the first series hat trick.

 

The night didn’t start without incident as there’d be a wreck in the first heat with Adam Adams spinning Larry Mackenzie and Dave Terry spinning behind them. In the end, Gary McLean would come home with the win, followed by John Gruntz, Chris Burrows, Mackenzie and Rob Fennema.

In the second heat, there’d be another incident as Bill Burrows would spin, collecting Tim Burke while Dave Burrows spun after, trying to avoid them. It’d be a McLean sweep of the opening heats as Brent McLean would take the win, followed by Steve Smith, Matt Barton, Dave Burrows, Brandon Crumbie and Bill Burrows.

In the third heat, there’d be problems right off the bat as Chris Burrows would run into mechanical problems. Then on lap three, Dean Scott would get into the turn four wall. Gary McLean would get his second win of the night, followed by Mackenzie, Terry, Gruntz, Adams and Fennema.

In the fourth and final heat, there’d be one incident as Smith would spin while racing with Brent McLean. Barton would go on for the win, followed by Brent McLean, Burke, Smith, Dave Burrows, Crumbie and Bill Burrows.

 

In the feature, Gary McLean would start on the pole virtue of his pair of heat wins, followed by Brent McLean, Larry Mackenzie, Steve Smith, Dave Burrows and Matt Barton.

There’d be trouble right away as Dave Burrows would run into problems and while trying to get to pit road, he caused a chain reaction collision that collected John Gruntz, Chris Burrows, Brandon Crumbie, Adam Adams and Bill Burrows. They’d be all be able to continue, now at the back of the field.

The second caution would come out on lap 10 for the lap down car of Rob Fennema making contact with Smith, collecting Brent McLean. At this point a third of the way through, Gary McLean led, followed by Barton and Mackenzie. Gruntz and Crumbie had made their way back to fourth and fifth after their lap one incident. There’d be a lengthy red flag at this point due to a medical emergency in the pits, pausing the race for 45 minutes. With the problem cleared, the race started back up.

The rest of the race wouldn’t go problem free as with eight laps to go, Burke would spin Terry and Terry would get hit hard by Bill Burrows. Both drivers would be okay, but unable to continue for the rest of the event. At this point, Gary McLean still led over Barton while Crumbie and Gruntz had both made their way around Mackenzie.

Gary McLean would lead the final eight laps on the way to the first ever hat trick in OSCAAR Modified history and his second straight feature win. Crumbie would finish second after having to change the transmission in practice and after being involved in the first lap incident for his second straight top five. Gruntz would finish third for his second straight top 10 finish. Smith and Burke rounded out the top five.

Barton fell back to sixth, followed by Mackenzie, Adams, Dave Burrows and Chris Burrows.

 

The next race for the OSCAAR Modifieds is June 30th at Sunset Speedway in Innisfil, Ontario.

Al Inglis and Dwayne Baker win Wahta Springs Late Model features at Barrie Speedway

On Saturday night at Barrie Speedway, it marked the sixth night for the Wahta Springs Late Models with their 10th and 11th features of the season. The drivers were looking for the best finishes possible as they try to improve their ranking in the NASCAR Whelen All American Series standings. Coming into the night, two drivers – Dwayne Baker and Keith McLeod – sat within the top 100 with Baker sitting the highest at 69th.

However, with other tracks in the U.S having more races under their belt, once they get to 18 features and just count the top ones, both drivers have a shot at making improvements.  In nine features so far, Baker has six features wins, eight top fives and nine top 10s. However, one of them was DQ’d by the track, though is not noted in NASCAR’s standings.  Meanwhile, McLeod has one win, eight top fives and nine top 10s in nine features.

Meanwhile, on the track standings coming into the night, McLeod sat in the lead, eight points ahead of Ron Quesnelle and Baker.

 

[media-credit id=4 align=”alignright” width=”266″][/media-credit]The starting order for the first feature of the night was set based on the finishing order from the feature the previous week, putting Dave Lewis on the pole. Lewis finished 12th the week before while Dwayne Baker went on to the victory. Randy Bull started second, followed by Thayne Hallyburton, Gord Shepherd and Al Inglis.

The first caution would come out on lap our when Ron Lethbridge spun. At this point, Lewis still led while Thayne Hallyburton had made his way past Bull for second. Inglis, meanwhile, had made his way up to third, followed by Keith McLeod with Bull now fifth.

At the midway point, Baker had worked his way up to fifth after starting ninth while Inglis has passed Hallyburton for second. A battle then ensured between him and Thayne Hallyburton for position and on lap 19 of the 30 lap feature, Baker would send Hallyburton for the spin. As a result, both Hallyburton and Baker would be sent to the back of the field while Lewis now led over Inglis. Shepherd, meanwhile, ran solidly in third followed by defending track champion Ron Quesnelle and McLeod.

On the restart, Inglis would stay alongside Lewis as they battled for the lead. They’d battle side-by-side all the way till a caution with five laps to go for Bull spinning while trying to pass McLeod. Track officials would deem McLeod involved, putting him to the rear of the field. Baker and Hallyburton had both worked their way through the field after their incident, now running fourth and fifth, behind Lewis, Inglis and Shepherd.

On the final restart, Inglis would be able to get around Lewis and go on to win his second feature of the season.

Inglis would say after the race that he had to work hard at it, but it was a lot of fun. It was also noted in victory lane that one of the big differences was Inglis discovered a problem that they were having with the left front shock and was able to fix it so they could get the handling better.

Lewis would finish second for his second top five and best finish of the season while Shepherd would finish third for his eighth top five of 2012. Baker would come home fourth with Hallyburton in fifth. Glenn Lloyd finished sixth, followed by Roy Manary, Quesnelle, Mike Langley and Bull.

 

[media-credit id=4 align=”alignleft” width=”266″][/media-credit]After having issues in the first feature, Shawn Murray would start pole in the second feature with Keith McLeod to his outside. Randy Bull would start third, followed by Ron Quesnelle and Roy Manary. Murray would only lead the two opening laps, before he was passed by McLeod for the lead on lap three.

The first caution would come out on the same lap, three, as Ron Lethbridge got into the turn four wall. By the third lap, Quesnelle had passed Bull for third while Gord Shepherd had made his way up to fifth after starting eighth.

Shepherd would also make his way around Bull and engage himself in a battle for third with Quesnelle. The battle wouldn’t end well as Shepherd would send Quesnelle for a spin on lap 11. This would allow Bull to make his way back up to third, while Al Inglis now ran fourth with Dwayne Baker fifth.

Inglis would make his way past both Bull and Murray to move up to the second position, behind McLeod. They’d engage in a battle for first as Inglis looked for his second straight win. However, it wouldn’t be meant to be as contact between the two on lap 24 would send McLeod for the spin. Both cars would be put the rear as being involved, handing the lead to Baker, who had also gotten by both Bull and Murray. Murray moved his way past Bull to run second with Bull third, followed by Thayne Hallyburton and Shepherd, who was making his climb back up through the field.

On the restart, Murray would suffer heartbreak in his quest for his first feature win as he’d have a mechanical failure while Mike Langley got into the wall. This moved Bull up to second behind Baker, followed by Hallyburton, Shepherd and Dave Lewis.

Baker would lead the final six laps for his sixth feature win of the season. Shepherd finished second for his ninth top five of 2012 while Bull finished third for his second top five of 2012. Hallyburton and Lewis rounded out the top five. Quesnelle finished sixth, followed by Inglis, Lethbridge, McLeod and Manary.

“I don’t know if I’m slowing down or those guys are catching up a bit, but I had to work for it,” Baker said.

When asked if he had expected to be this successful this season making his return to Barrie, Baker said he didn’t and that it was all due to how good the car was.

 

The Wahta Springs Late Models return to action once again next weekend at Barrie Speedway as they will run two features on Saturday June 23 as regularly scheduled, and two features on Saturday June 24 to make up for the rain out on June 2nd.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. Flies To Victory Lane at Michigan, Ending 143 Race Winless Streak

[media-credit name=”Dan Sanger” align=”alignright” width=”175″][/media-credit]After going 143 races without a win, Dale Earnhardt Jr. led 93 laps on his way to winning the Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speedway. It marked the 19th career win for the driver of the No. 88 Diet Mtn. Dew/The Dark Knight Rises/National Guard Chevrolet.

“This is incredible,” Earnhardt said. “I just didn’t know when it would happen. I knew it was going to happen, just didn’t know when.”

With the win, Earnhardt Jr. continues to stand as the only driver to finish in the top-10 in every race this season with 12 top-10s this year. It matches his top-10 total from all of last season. This win also marks Earnhardt Jr.’s first win with Steve LeTarte since the partnership began in 2011.

“This proves to us that our strategy is correct,” crew chief Steve LeTarte said. “You bring fast enough race cars, you don’t have to get out of your comfort zone too far and you don’t have to get super crazy with your pit strategy.  We say it all the time, you just need to put in hard work, hard work every Sunday and this helps us understand that we are not crazy; that our goals and what we have been trying to do has been working.”

When Keselowski pitted with 30 laps to go, handing the lead back over to Earnhardt Jr., who would lead the rest of the way.

Tony Stewart finished second for his seventh top-10 finish of 2012.

“We had a fast car all week until the happy hour session last night, and you know, we just couldn’t get ahold of the racetrack,” Stewart says. “But I’m really proud of Steve Addington and our engineers.  They did a great job overnight and we started the day pretty much toward the front and never really lost that track position all day.  We had a pretty good car that we could pass with.  It was hard to pass, but it wasn’t impossible.  But like I say, I was really, really proud of our guys.”

Matt Kenseth would finish third for his 17th top 10 in 26 starts at Michigan. Kenseth still leads the points, now four points ahead of Earnhardt Jr.

“We were fortunate to qualify good and the first couple restarts were not great but finally got our way to the front,” Kenseth says. “We had a good fuel-only stop will and led a few laps, got behind in the pits, got behind that one time taking more fuel I guess than everybody else and resurfaced seventh and hard for me to get going on the bottom.  As soon as we pitted under the green, the next stop, we caught a yellow, so we got a lap down. So from there, it was a battle back but we got the car pretty good at the end and we were able to make a pretty good charge and salvage a pretty good day out of it.”

Greg Biffle finished fourth with Johnson fifth, who made his way back up to top five after starting last due to an engine change. Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports team found some engine wear issues after the additional practice on Saturday night.

During practice on Thursday and Friday, the left side tires were blistering. As a result, NASCAR made the decision to bring in new left side tires, while giving the teams an extra practice session on Saturday evening.  Newman also changed his motor after this session, finishing 15th despite running in the top 10 in the middle of the race.

Meanwhile, other drivers ran into engine problems during the race including Josh Wise, Trevor Bayne and Kyle Busch. It marked the third straight engine issue for Busch.

As a whole, Joe Gibbs Racing did not have a good day.

On a lap 124 restart, Joey Logano would wreck when he tried to avoid David Gilliland. Gilliland got into the wall and when Logano tried to avoid hitting him, he got loose and spun back across the track into the wall, collecting Gilliland and Kasey Kahne.

“We were just restarting there on the outside of the 14 (Stewart) behind the 17 (Kenseth),” Logano said. “There was a slower car up there and I just tried to get around him and got loose or tagged. But we’re not going to let that get us down. We’ve been on a roll lately.”

Then on lap 134, Denny Hamlin would go for a spin, tearing the car apart. When he came down pit road, something underneath the car caught fire, bursting him into flames. He would get out uninjured with the help of Biffle’s and Newman’s team.

“Defiantly got to thank all the crew guys that got me out,” Hamlin said. “Just a tough day. Thought we could run three or four, but just a tough day.”

Next weekend, the Sprint Cup series hits the Sonoma Raceway road course.

 

Unofficial Race Results
Quicken Loans 400, Michigan Int’l Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=15
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 17 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 48
2 8 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 43
3 6 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 42
4 3 16 Greg Biffle Ford 41
5 10 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 39
6 28 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 39
7 13 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 38
8 21 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 37
9 1 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 36
10 2 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 34
11 42 99 Carl Edwards Ford 33
12 16 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 32
13 25 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 32
14 19 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 31
15 5 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 29
16 31 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 28
17 15 43 Aric Almirola Ford 27
18 32 83 Landon Cassill Toyota 26
19 20 22 AJ Allmendinger Dodge 25
20 24 13 Casey Mears Ford 24
21 33 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 24
22 18 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 22
23 38 34 David Ragan Ford 21
24 22 33 Austin Dillon Chevrolet 0
25 36 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 20
26 39 93 Travis Kvapil Toyota 18
27 35 38 David Gilliland Ford 18
28 12 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 16
29 14 55 Mark Martin Toyota 16
30 26 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 14
31 40 32 Ken Schrader Ford 13
32 34 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 12
33 4 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 11
34 11 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 10
35 9 20 Joey Logano Toyota 9
36 41 10 Tony Raines Chevrolet 8
37 43 249 J.J. Yeley Toyota 8
38 27 98 Michael McDowell Ford 6
39 29 119 Mike Bliss Toyota 0
40 37 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
41 23 23 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 3
42 30 26 Josh Wise * Ford 2
43 7 21 Trevor Bayne Ford 0

 

Lap by Lap: Quicken Loans 400 won by Dale Earnhardt Jr.

[media-credit name=”Dan Sanger” align=”alignright” width=”394″][/media-credit]Dale Earnhardt Jr. led the final 30 laps on his way to ending his 143 race winless streak.

 

Green flag

Lap 1: Marcos Ambrose pulls out to the early lead

Lap 2 Ambrose leads Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, Kevin Harvick as Kurt Busch spins on the backstretch

Restart lap 5 – Biffle tries to make the move on Ambrose, though Ambrose pulls off with the lead down the back

Lap 6 Biffle to the lead

Lap 7 Bayne with motor problems

Lap 8 Biffle leads Ambrose, Logano, Kahne, Kenseth, Harvick, Almirola, Stewart and Mark Martin

Caution lap 10 Josh Wise blew up

Restart lap 16 as Biffle keeps Ambrose behind him

Lap 20 Biffle leads Ambrose, Logano, Kenseth, Almirola, Kahne, Stewart, Harvick, Martin and Bowyer

Caution lap 26 – competition caution due to new left side tires, new pavement and rain……Leaders come down pit road…..Ambrose leads Kenseth, Logano, Martin, Kyle Busch and Harvick off pit road

Restart lap 31 and Ambrose pulls out to the early lead

Lap 34 Kenseth to the lead

Lap 37 Kenseth leads Ambrose, Martin, Biffle, Stewart, Logano, Bowyer, Busch, Allmendinger, Almirola

Lap 43 Keselowski passes Almirola

Lap 49 Ambrose passes Kenseth in traffic for the lead

Lap 50 competition caution….leaders pit…..Biffle leads them off pit road

Restart lap 56

Lap 59 Biffle leads Ambrose, Martin, Earnhardt Jr., Keselowski, Montoya, Kenseth, Hamlin, Bowyer and Stewart

Lap 69 Ambrose and Earnhardt Jr. both pass Biffle to move up to first and second; Earnhardt Jr. passes Ambrose for the lead

Lap 72 Earnhardt Jr. leads Ambrose, Biffle, Martin, Keselowski, Montoya, Stewart

Lap 78 Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. both make pit stops

Lap 81 A.J. Allmendinger pits as there’s a caution for debris – foam from the safer barrier…..leaders hit pit road…..Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Bowyer and Gordon off pit road

Restart lap 87 as Stewart passes Earnhardt Jr. on the restart

Lap 89 Stewart leads Earnhardt Jr., Bowyer, Gordon, Biffle, Ambrose, Newman, Logano, Martin and Menard

Lap 90 Newman and Logano pass Ambrose

Lap 91 Martin, Keselowski, Menard and Montoya pass Ambrose

Lap 92 Stewart leads Earnhardt Jr., Bowyer, Gordon, Biffle, Newman, Logano, Martin, Keselowski and Menard

Lap 101 Kyle Busch pulled behind the wall with a motor problem.

Lap 102 Stewart leads Earnhardt Jr., Bowyer, Gordon, Biffle, Newman, Logano, Martin, Keselowski and Montoya

Lap 105 Earnhardt Jr passes Stewart for the lead

Lap 114 Montoya and Kenseth pass Keselowski as Keselowski pits

Lap 115 Logano and Newman pit

Lap 119 Kenseth, Johnson, Earnhardt Jr., Biffle, Ambrose, and Kahne pit, along with a bunch of others. Montoya takes the lead

Lap 120 Gordon and Truex pit

Caution lap 121 Kurt Busch spins…….Montoya pits while Gordon and Earnhardt Jr. stay out

Restart lap 126 Earnhardt Jr. takes the lead from Gordon around the outside through turn two…….Logano tried to avoid Gilliland (who got in the wall) and then got loose, turing back into the wall, collecting Gilliland and Kahne.

Restart lap 133 as Earnhardt Jr. keeps the lead through turns one and two.

Caution lap 134 Denny Hamlin goes for a spin and then catches fire on pit road after he got touched by Ryan Newman

Restart lap 141 and Earnhardt Jr. pulls them around turn one

Lap 144 Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Gordon, Bowyer, Biffle, Kenseth, Montoya, Johnson, Edwards, Ambrose

Lap 146 Mark Martin passes Ambrose for 10th; Biffle passes Bowyer

Lap 147 Johnson passes Montoya

Lap 149 Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Gordon, Biffle, Bowyer, Kenseth, Johnson, Montoya, Edwards, Martin

Lap 156 Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Gordon, Biffle, Bowyer, Kenseth, Johnson, Edwards, Martin and Montoya

Lap 159 Kenseth passes Bowyer

Lap 160 Biffle passes Gordon

Lap 162 Johnson hits pit road as Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Biffle, Gordon, Kenseth, Bowyer, Edwards, Martin, Montoya and Ambrose

Lap 163 Earnhardt Jr. and Stewart pit, handing the lead over to Biffle. Gordon, Edwards, Truex and Harvick also pitted.

Lap 164 Ambrose and Newman pit.

Lap 165 Biffle and Montoya pit, handing the lead over to Bowyer.

Lap 166 Dillon and Bowyer pit, handing the lead over to McMurray.

Lap 167 McMurray pits, handing the lead over to Keselowski over Burton and Earnhardt Jr.

30 to go Keselowski and Burton pit, handing the lead to Earnhardt Jr.

24 to go Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Biffle, Johnson, Kenseth, Gordon, Martin, Bowyer, Montoya

18 to go Earnhardt Jr. leads Stewart, Biffle, Johnson, Kenseth, Gordon, Martin, Bowyer, Montoya, Ambrose

15 to go Johnson and Kenseth pass Biffle

9 to go Kenseth passes Johnson

7 to go Biffle passes Johnson

5 to go Bowyer, Montoya and Ambrose pass Martin

Dale Earnhardt Jr. wins followed by Tony Stewart, Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle and Jimmie Johnson