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Team Lowe’s Racing – Jimmie Johnson – Homestead Miami Speedway Preview

JIMMIE JOHNSON

2010 STARTS: 35 WINS: 6 TOP 5: 16 TOP 10: 22

CURRENT DRIVER POINT STANDING: 2ND POINTS BEHIND LEADER: 15

FINISH IN PHOENIX: 5TH NOVEMBER 2009 FINISH AT HOMESTEAD: 5TH

NOTES

Lowe’s Racing crew chief Chad Knaus will be a guest on Tuesday’s NASCAR Teleconference at 2 p.m. ET. Please visit www.nascarmedia.com for dial-in information.

RACE NOTES

Homestead-Miami Speedway

• Johnson has made nine Sprint Cup Series starts at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he has earned three top-five and six top-10 finishes.

• The 1.5-mile track is one of only four venues on which the Sprint Cup Series competes that Johnson hasn’t visited Victory Lane. (Michigan, Chicago, Watkins Glen, Homestead)

• Johnson has completed 94.1% (2265 of 2408) of competition laps at the venue and has led 71.

• He has an average start and finish of 19.3 and 12.7.

Chassis

• Johnson will pilot chassis No. 580 in Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series race. He last drove that car to a third-place result at Auto Club Speedway in October.

• Johnson drove back up chassis No. 558 from a first-place starting spot to Victory Lane at Dover International Speedway in September.

JIMMIE JOHNSON QUOTES

DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING FROM 2004 OR 2005 TO HELP YOU THIS SEASON?: “In both instances, kind of different routes to get to this same opinion, it’s not over until the last lap at Homestead. Clearly the 97 (Kurt Busch) losing his wheel mid-race at Homestead led us to believe that it was maybe our day and that things were going to work out. The green-white-checkered run to the finish at the end, I don’t think the green-white-checkered was in play at that time and he was the car behind me when it counts – the 97 and he wins the championship. That one proved to me that it’s not over until the last lap. At Homestead, with the 20 (Tony Stewart) car, we blow a tire and wreck and the 20 needed to finish like in the top-25 or something if we did things right. We had a great evening going and the 20 ran terrible. I still kick myself today for not coming to pit road, not getting the tire off the car because I felt like I had a problem and it was slowing down my pace and maybe we could have recovered from going down a lap and put more pressure on the 20 and come back and finish like we needed to, but we didn’t. I know that if we stay in the game till the last lap at Homestead, we will have a chance. That’s my mindset off of those two examples.”

WHAT DO YOU SAY TO PEOPLE WHO QUESTION YOUR PERFORMANCE AT HOMESTEAD? “I’m not sure why that’s even relevant. If you look at points accumulated over the course of the Chase, I think that will speak volumes as to what type of Chase took place. I know we’ve been competitive, but not as dominant as we wanted to all year long. We’ve got to go down there and race for it; there’s no doubt about it. I continue to hear that the No. 48 hasn’t had to race for it before and we’ve raced for it all Chase long.

“Maybe at Homestead we’ve been able to protect, but we certainly know that’s not the case this year and I love where we are. I love putting pressure on these guys and in fact I’m glad we cut their lead in half.”

I KNOW YOU DON’T LIKE TO TALK ABOUT YOURSELF IN THESE TERMS, DO YOU THINK YOUR GREATNESS CAN BE SOLIDIFIED WITH A COME FROM BEHIND CHAMPIONSHIP? “You know, it would probably be received better than the ones in the past, with the runaway show we’ve had on a couple of them. I don’t care how I win it. However we win it, that’s cool (laughter). I would love to come back and win from behind and eliminate that stat because that seems to be the only thing that everyone talks about right now.

“When I look at the way we started the Chase, I’m more frustrated at what we did then, in the fact we didn’t capitalize at Loudon. Last week we missed a pit call late in the race. Everybody behind us had tires on. We ended up ninth. When you go back through the season, look at little things, we’ve left points on the table. That’s unlike us from years past. That’s the part we’re fighting right now.”

SPRINT CUP SERIES CAREER NOTES

Career Wins

• Johnson has 53 wins in his Sprint Cup Series career, his most recent coming at Dover International Speedway on Sept. 26, 2010.

• The El Cajon, Calif.-native is currently 10th on NASCAR’s all-time wins list, one victory behind Lee Petty.

• He is second in total wins among active drivers, behind Jeff Gordon (82).

• Johnson needed only 296 starts to hit the 50 mark. Only three drivers have reached 50 victories quicker – Gordon (232), Darrell Waltrip (278) and David Pearson (293).

• Johnson has won at least three Cup races a season since he posted his first victory in 2002. He is the only driver in the modern era to win at least three races in each of his first eight full-time seasons.

• Johnson has won Sprint Cup Series races at all but four (Michigan, Chicago, Watkins Glen, Homestead) of the 22 tracks on which the series competes.

• Johnson was the first driver to win three of the first five races in The Chase.

• Johnson’s 10 wins in 2007 was the highest number recorded in a single season since Jeff Gordon posted 13 victories in 1998.

• The four-consecutive wins scored by the No. 48 team in the 2007 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup ties a modern-era NASCAR record.

Career Poles

• Johnson has collected 25 poles in his Sprint Cup career.

• The championship driver has earned at least one pole a year since his first full-time season in 2002.

• He had a career-high six poles in 2008.

• Johnson’s most recent pole position was at Dover International Speedway on Sept. 24, 2010.

Career Starts

• In 35 2010 starts, Johnson has collected six wins, 16 top five and 22 top-10 finishes.

• Johnson has finished in the top five in the Sprint Cup Series point standings each year since his first full season in 2002.

• Johnson is the only driver to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup every year since the format was adopted in 2004.

• In 326 Sprint Cup Series starts, Johnson has posted 1333 top-five and 202 top-10 finishes.

• He has a top-five finish at every track on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series circuit.

• Johnson has led a total of 10,995 laps (of 93,961) in his Sprint Cup career, covering over 125,856 miles.

• He has finished on the lead lap 252 times.

Fourth Turn A Fan’s Perspective Winner takes all but who should win?

[media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]“A champion is as a champion does in all things. The way he walks. The way he talks. The way he presents himself. The way he treats those that can not advance his cause. Every champion knows that the only true defeat is a victory without honor.” – R.C. Liggett

Today we saw a very distinct and defining view of the three championship contenders. They are three very different competitors and very different personalities. But which one will truly represent our sport with the class and dignity of a true champion?

Until the race concludes in Homestead next week, Jimmie Johnson is the series champion. He is a four time series champion. He has represented our sport with class and graciousness for four years. There are many who say his time is up. Let someone else win. However, Jimmie Johnson is not willing to just step aside.

Jimmie has handled the pressure with the same grace that he has handled wearing super man’s cape. He has gone out and raced his way back into contention. Granted his crew has faded late in the year and has seemed to struggle throughout the year.

Through the challenges of mind games from Mike Ford and Denny Hamlin, challenges on the track, and struggles in the pits, Johnson has kept his cool. Today was no different. He managed his fuel mileage with coaching from Chad Knaus and made it work. His composure kept him in the championship run. Had he panicked or refused to listen to Chad, he would have been out of the running. The true display of trust and confidence came when on the next to the last lap, Chad said, “Let the 29 go if you have to but stay smooth.” With the 29 closing fast in his mirror, Jimmie Johnson did just that. It was that consistent smooth rhythm that kept him ahead of the 29 and within striking distance of the 11 come Miami.

The points leader is Denny Hamlin. He leads both Johnson and Harvick by a total of 46 points. In 1991, Rusty Wallace was quoted as saying there is a difference between cocky and confident. Anyone can talk the talk but the man that gets the job done, well that is confidence.”

Denny Hamlin has backed up all of his predictions as though he were reading from a script. He and crew chief have played head games with the best. Everything from choosing the pit stall in front of the champions, to talking trash in the media. Up until today, it appeared that maybe it was working.

But fuel mileage threw a monkey wrench into Hamlin’s cake walk. Hamlin stated that his fuel mileage had been excellent all year and he didn’t understand why it was so bad today. He didn’t know whether his crew chief was being conservative or whether he really couldn’t make it. This translates to It wasn’t my fault it was the crews fault that we didn’t have enough to make it.

Hamlin’s frustration was illustrated by his in car camera when he threw his gloves. Hit the instrument panel, slammed the steering wheel and threw a bottle of water at a crew member who had handed him the bottle of cold water when he got out of the car. When he did his post race TV interview with Dr. Jerry Punch he didn’t even look at him. He didn’t look at the camera. And basically he pouted through the interview.

His behavior, based on our definition that we started with, would say that Denny is not quite ready to be a champion of our sport. “A true champion knows that the only true defeat is a victory without honor.” Denny didn’t win. He had the strongest and best car. But circumstances did not play out in his favor. But he lost with honor. He did not lose with dignity.

Kevin Harvick and his Gil Martin lead Shell Chevrolet over came a huge obstacle. A pit road mistake found Harvick returning to pit road to place a missing lug nut. Harvick, who is famous for his temper and berating his crew over mistakes, kept silent. He would state later that he said nothing because his crew had been so good the last few races and things happen.

It was that missing lug nut that kept Harvick in the running. By returning to pit road and then stopping for 2 tires Harvick had 10 laps more fuel than his competitors. He came up through the field methodically. He kept the fenders on the car. He kept the car pointed towards the start finish line and he kept his foot on the floor. Again, as with Johnson smooth and steady wins the war. Although he didn’t catch and pass the 48, he did cement himself into the final race for the championship next week.

Harvick’s temper is legendary. His aggressiveness is well documented on and off the track. As is his sense of humor and his relationship with the fans. Harvick is quick study. He is a great driver and he has a great sense of what it means to lead the sport and he has an experienced car owner to help him climb those ropes and learn the road of a champion.

Jimmie Johnson summed up the race in Miami best when he called it a “one race winner takes all shootout.” But this is no ordinary winner takes all race. This is the Sprint Cup Championship. This is a half a million bucks to win the race and then somewhere in the neighborhood of 6 million dollars to win the championship plus the champion’s purse share next year. This winner takes all defines the term. And if history holds true and the personalities we have seen to date from the three contenders stay true to form, it fits Harvick’s style the best.

Aggressive, hard charging, not afraid to bend the sheet metal, and gutsy enough to keep charging with a less than perfect car describe Kevin Harvick’s driving style and season to a T. But will he win?

Jimmie Johnson has not won 4 championships being a quitter. He knows the odds. He has faced them in the past though not recently. And he has one of the very best in the business sitting on that pit box every week. They say it’s easier to find a job when you have a job and Jimmie Johnson has a job. He is the Sprint Cup Champion taking it away from him may not be nearly as easy as the points might make it look.

Winning this championship will take not only bravado. It will take skill. It will take patience. It will take calculation. And most of all it will take a cool head. Those are all traits that we have not seen as of yet from Denny Hamlin. Although he has a 3 point lead going into Miami that is like having a stop stick to stop a train. That train I believe is Jimmie Johnson.

Next week is not here yet and while it may be anyone’s game, experience and grace under pressure will most likely ultimately prevail. The head games have started, Denny Hamlin and Mike Ford started them, but I believe that Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus will finish them at the head table in Vegas.

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Congratulations to Carl Edwards on his sweep of the weekend at Phoenix in the Nationwide Series and the Cup series. Hard fought and well deserved wins. Welcome back to Victory Lane Carl. You were missed. It was a very very thing classy to share your victory celebration with the fans. Congratulations to Todd Bodine on clinching the Camping World Truck Series Championship. Congratulations to Clint Bowyer on his Camping World Truck Series win.

That said, to all the competitors in all the series thanks for giving us everything you have to give, you are our heroes. Most importantly, thanks to all the families who shared their loved ones with us so we could cheer our favorite driver and favorite teams. You are the true heroes of the sport and we are forever in your debt.

Kyle Busch May Have Lost His Cool in Texas But His Fans Found a Renewed Vigor

He’s the antithesis of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in every way and his fans are well aware and don’t care. Because that’s what they like about him and when the time comes they can be just as large in numbers and can get their point across.

Kyle Busch and his fans have perfected the art of being outspoken. Last weekend in Texas it was hard to tell which of the two were tossing out more harsh words.

It all started on Saturday when Carl Edwards beat Busch in the Nationwide Series race on a late restart that appeared to have jumped the restart. In a post race interview Busch started blasted Edwards and NASCAR and threw out a few words that started with the letter ‘F.’

The following day it became much, much worse.

His No.18 M&M’s Toyota could have been a contender for the race win, even after spinning on lap 159 since he had kept it off the wall and didn’t have any damage. But NASCAR deemed Busch to be speeding on pit road to avoid going a lap down. He was called back to pit road to serve a one lap penalty.

That didn’t sit well with the driver and he began to let NASCAR know exactly how he felt about them. That included more four letter words, plenty of ‘F’ bombs and even a one fingered salute. In response, NASCAR called Busch back down pit road to this time serve a two lap penalty for what they deemed ‘unsportsmanlike behavior’ a term commonly used in football.

Upon hearing that their driver might be facing further penalties their frustration surfaced. To them Busch was just showing his emotion, something that he’s very good at and NASCAR can’t fine a driver for being emotional.

Others didn’t agree that he should have been penalized in the race and since he was, there was no need to further penalize him. The most common defense for Busch was that NASCAR had opened the door when they initiated the ‘Boys have at it’ policy before the year began.

The policy doesn’t cover NASCAR officials and Busch stepped over the line.

On the Tuesday following the race, penalty day, Busch was handed a fine from NASCAR for his behavior. He paid the $25,000 and apologized and acknowledged his probation until the end of December.

Busch may have moved on but his fans certainly haven’t.

Following the penalty they took to the social networking site Twitter to send NASCAR their thoughts. Most of them, as you can imagine weren’t pretty. Then there were others who decided to take a different route.

Black sheep.

That’s what his fans were feeling like and how they interpreted the situation and as such they have changed their Twitter aviator to a black sheep. A black sheep is someone that’s regarded as a disgrace to a certain group and to his fans NASCAR put Busch in that position.

One such fan, Hank Kershell, who goes by @HankKershell on Twitter, from Arlington, TX, nearly exploded as much as Busch did. Kershell is now boycotting the last two races of the Sprint Cup Series season but will continue to support the driver that he’s been a fan of since 2004.

“Back when it was just me, his mom and dad and Grandma,” he said with a laugh. “Well, just about.”

For Kershell he doesn’t like when Busch tries to reign in his emotion, even though it can land him in trouble like it did at Texas. When that emotion is reigned in, he says, it’ll start to diminish how much Busch wins. As long as Busch gives it 100% every time, no matter where he ends up, it’ll still be exciting to watch.

Texas though, “Kyle had an emotional meltdown during the race and I was OK with the fine,” he said. “I would have had a problem with further points penalties.”

The black sheep comes from what Kershell says is penalizing a driver that does a lot for the sport and gets little in return.

“I finally got tired of everyone always trying to treat Kyle like a little child when no one is bring in more new fans to the sport,” he said. “Although I agree with the penalty, their [NASCAR] statement afterwards was pretty condescending as well. No one watching really cares if some official gets flipped off – especially since the official never saw it. Kyle gets flipped off more than anyone in America; many fans are far more childish with less class than Kyle. And there are little kids around them when they do it.”

Many other NASCAR fans around the globe may not meet his passion or conviction by traveling this past, but the sport does have some of the best fans in the world. For now though, Kershell isn’t alone in his black sheep support.

Brandie Merrill, @Kbm18 on Twitter, from Logantown, Pa has been a Busch fan since his rookie season, and she too has changed her aviator to a black sheep. What drew her to Busch was the fact that all he wants to do is win races but also acknowledges that sometimes his actions aren’t appropriate.

“We are all human and we all make mistakes,” said Merrill. “And we all get through them and go on and that’s what I love about Kyle – he’s human and he doesn’t try to be someone that’s he’s not.

“He was already hot under the collar from the last restart on Saturday in the Nationwide Series race when Carl Edwards jumped the restart and NASCAR didn’t do anything about it … I wouldn’t blame him one bit, I say he had all the right to be mad like he was.”

The official being flipped off came from the fact that he was an easy target, says Merrill, since he had to stand in front of the car. That didn’t put Busch in the right though, she said. The additional fine was a different story.

“Maybe NASCAR shouldn’t have made it that high but they did,” said Merrill.

The reason for Merrill’s black sheep was a little different than Kershell’s.

“I changed my aviator to the black sheep in support of Kyle because of the weekend that NASCAR hanged him. I had always thought of Kyle, not only by all the haters, but NASCAR at times as the black sheep,” she said.

NASCAR doesn’t want Busch to keep winning and breaking the records that he is her theory.

“I have a couple of followers that are on the same mission as I am by displaying the black sheep,” said Merrill. “They said that they will change it when Kyle wins his next Cup race. As for me, I haven’t decided yet, I’ll support it as long as I think I should.”

The frustration is still evident in Busch fans even a week after the incident. Their Twitter pages continue to light up and the army of black sheep continues to grow. Appears that sometimes it takes more than a bag of M&M’s to deal with the aftermath of a bad day at the races.

My Money’s on Johnson

[media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Before today’s Kobalt Tools 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup race, I had just about made up my mind that Denny Hamlin was going to win the Sprint Cup championship. They had momentum and the psychological edge. About Lap 250, I still believed that. Hamlin was leading, as he had all day, and only Carl Edwards seemed to have anything for him. When Edwards passed Hamlin at Lap 266, I thought Hamlin was going to finish first or second and gain lots of points and then came that dreaded problem at flat tracks—gas mileage.

We all struggle with gas mileage whatever we drive. Some of us live with SUV’s and pickup trucks that get minimal mileage. Some of us drive hybrids or small cars that get better, but you can bet we all watch it. And it’s only a few tracks where it’s a problem. Phoenix was one of those tracks today. Usually you can bet on a late caution so the drivers and crews can get fuel and tires for a final run, but not today. With only five cautions in the whole race, that wasn’t going to happen, so people gambled. Among the drivers who gambled were winner Carl Edwards, Jimmie Johnson, and others. Johnson, who was second in the championship struggle, was short on gas, but Harvick, the guy in third place, had the good fortune of having a lug nut missing on his car. The pit stop to correct that allowed him to get enough fuel to comfortably finish the race. Not so for a dominant Denny Hamlin.

Just when it looked like Hamlin was going to gain needed points on both Johnson and Hamlin, no caution flag was in sight. Though Hamlin led 190 of the 312 laps, he finished 12th and lost 18 valuable points to Johnson. Johnson took a tremendous gamble, but credit crew chief Chad Knaus for rolling the dice. What could have been a disaster turned into a win in the points battle. I do not expect anything less next week at Homestead. I guess when you’ve won that many in a row, you can gamble. And when you know that you are that good, why not take the chance.

This is why I believe that Johnson will win his fifth championship at Ford Championship weekend in Homestead. When you have four trophies, why not gamble for five? You’ve been there so you don’t sweat the small stuff. Hamlin’s crew will sulk on what happened this week and make mistakes just like they did today. What would have happened if Hamlin, with a very fast car, had pitted at Lap 235? We’ll never know, but you can bet it’s eating at Hamlin, the Gibbs racing team, and crew chief Mike Ford right now. How much of hangover on this lost opportunity will carry over into next week? I’ll bet it will be on their minds for a long time. Strange things happen in this sport, but my money’s on the No. 48, and that’s a shame. It doesn’t do NASCAR any good to have the same song every year. It should be an exciting weekend.

Of course you have to admire what Carl Edwards did this weekend. He won the pole for the Sprint Cup race, qualified second for the Nationwide race, race circles around everyone in Sprint Cup practice, and won the Sprint Cup race. If there ever was a sign that the boys at Roush-Fenway had finally figured things out, this weekend was it. Whatever the problem was is probably solved. And next week they head for Homestead where the Roush Fords have dominated for years. Seeing Jack Roush, who cheated death twice in the last few years, celebrating, was a wonderful sight, but that doesn’t help Denny, Jimmie and Kevin. They are in a fight for a championship while the Fords are only looking for a win. And that’s a large part of the problem with today’s format.

I’m not saying that Hamlin, Harvick, and Johnson were trying to win on Sunday. They were, but so much emphasis is placed on the championship that it was hardly mentioned throughout the race broadcast that there was a race outside of the championship struggle. The whole emphasis was on the three drivers who had a chance to win a championship that who would have thought that Greg Biffle pulled off another top five finish or that Ryan Newman, who had won at Phoenix earlier in the year, was second. In fact, we didn’t get that information until Jimmie and Chad were interviewed. As I’ve said many times, in my youth, it was more about who won on Sunday than who won the championship. I guess it’s the lust of the ownership of the series to make NASCAR more like the stick and ball sports where the championship (they think) is all that matters. With this “closest Chase in history” propaganda we’re going to hear all week, we’ll get the same kind of broadcast next week where guys like Biffle and Newman will do great things, but only be afterthoughts. David Pearson won his last championship in 1969 and no one remembers that, but can remember his magic in the No. 21 for a lot of years. Now, so much emphasis is placed on the championship that no one will remember that Carl Edwards broke a 70-race losing streak Sunday. It doesn’t matter. All that matters is who is the champion, something that has been artificially created to compete with sports that cannot be competed with. It boggles my mind.

So, my money’s on Johnson. Hamlin’s team will make mistakes and Harvick will be his steady self. Knaus will pull a rabbit out of his hat and win the almighty championship by a point. When 2011 comes around, many will try to dethrone the magical No. 48 team, but will fail as usual, but until folks realize that it’s the winner who should get the spoils, it won’t make any difference. I’m glad great drivers like Biffle, Bowyer, Stewart, McMurray, and Edwards won races during these last ten events. It’s as if they didn’t even show up in the media’s eyes. I guess there’s always next year. Where we will repeat the same mistake again as ratings fall and attendance goes in the dumpster. And we will wonder why.

HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: Phoenix Edition

During the previous NASCAR weekend at the Phoenix International Raceway we watched Sunoco Race Fuels create a new level of drama in the Chase standings. We watched a driver redeem himself by sweeping the Phoenix victory lane and then swinging a very large hammer. We also shared a very emotional moment with “The Onion.” With those thoughts in mind let’s begin with:

HOORAH for the state of the Chase. The Sprint Cup Series left Phoenix with the closest championship numbers in the Chase history heading into the final race of the year. Denny Hamlin’s points lead was shortened to 15 points over Jimmie Johnson while Kevin Harvick also picked up points on Hamlin and is 46 points from the top.

WAZZUP with Hamlin’s fuel mileage issues? Saying that he wasn’t told he needed to conserve fuel, Hamlin had to come down pit road, with 14 laps remaining, for fuel and two tires. He exited pit road in 19th one lap down. It could have been much worse. Race leader, and eventual winner, Carl Edwards was in fuel mileage status and that allowed Hamlin to make quick work of passing him to get his lap back. He also managed to pick up an additional seven positions to minimize the points damage.

WAZZUP with the in car camera shots of Hamlin punching his steering wheel and dash board after the race. He had every reason to be disappointed, and even angry, with a 12th place finish. He was a dominant factor all during the race and his 190 laps led allowed him to pick an extra ten bonus points. But the last thing he needed was a right hand injury when he’s so close to winning his first NASCAR championship.

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HOORAH to crew chief Chad Knaus for calmly guiding his driver through the process of saving fuel. It led to a fifth place finish and the points gain on Hamlin’s lead. Knaus told Jimmie Johnson to turn off his in car fans, stay off the brake pedal and run the lap times that he told him to. The pay off turned out to be huge in light of Hamlin’s fuel issues.

This week’s HOORAH for making chicken salad out of chicken do do belongs to Chase contender Kevin Harvick. Harvick pitted on lap 224 only to return to pit road a lap later for a penalty because a lug nut on the left rear tire was missing. He fell from fifth to 18th on the leader board. A caution flag came out on lap 235 and, with virtually nothing to lose, crew chief Gil Martin called Harvick in for gas and tires. It loomed large at the end of the race where Harvick’s sixth place finish also allowed him to gain points on Hamlin’s lead.

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HOORAH to Carl Edwards for a Phoenix weekend that was simply astounding. The Roush Fenway Racing Ford driver did a double back flip after winning both the NASCAR Nationwide and Sprint Cup events. He also became only the third driver, in the history of NASCAR at the PIR, to sweep the weekend.

Saturday’s win in the Wypall 200 was a dominant performance by Edwards. He led 153 of the 200 laps for his second, consecutive, series win and his fourth win of the season. His margin of victory, over runner up Kevin Harvick, was a whopping 5.2 seconds.

Edwards led 93 laps of Sunday’s Sprint Cup race and won the Kobalt Tools 500 to complete the Phoenix sweep. After his second traditional back flip of the weekend, Edwards ran up into the grandstands much to the surprise and delight of the fans. He had every reason in the world to be happy. Edwards’ win snapped a 70 race win less streak that stretched back to nearly two years. Swinging that giant Kobalt Tools hammer in victory lane had to feel like sweet redemption for Edwards.

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WAZZUP with the fuel mileage issues with Juan Pablo Montoya’s Chevrolet? In the waning laps of the Sprint Cup race Montoya was riding second poised for a possible win if race leader Carl Edwards had to pit for a splash of fuel. He was told over the radio that he was good on gas and even had enough for at least an additional lap past the scheduled distance. Imagine every one’s surprise when the car ran out of fuel on the white flag lap. A sure fire second place finished spiraled downward to a disappointing 16th place finish.

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WAZZUP with the pit road troubles with driver Kasey Kahne and his Red Bull Racing Toyota team? On the first round of pit stops Kahne missed his pit stall and had to take an extra lap around the track in order to return to pit road.

That was nothing compared to what happened during the next pit stop. With pit road service complete the car came off of the jack, Kahne sped out of his pit stall only to discover that the handle of the gas can was stuck on the car’s spoiler. That leads to a HOORAH to Sunoco Race Fuels whose company logo got a lot of television during that slow lap around the track so Kahne could come back to pit road to have the gas can removed.

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HOORAH to Todd “The Onion” Bodine for wrapping up his second NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship last Friday night in Phoenix. Bodine and company won the title a week before the season officially ends. Another HOORAH goes out to team owners the Germain Brothers who funded this Toyota operation out of their pockets when a race sponsor was always available.

HOORAH to Sprint Cup driver Clint Bowyer who, driving the #2 truck for Kevin Harvick Inc, made his first series start since 2007 and won Friday night’s Lucas Oil 150.

WAZZUP with more harsh racing luck for Ron Hornaday Jr. His Kevin Harvick Inc Chevrolet Truck was collected by Austin Dillon and the four time series champion was sent crashing into the wall. This incident marked Hornaday’s sixth crash related DNF this year. You can bet he can’t wait until this season ends next week.

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The final WAZZUP of the week goes to Jamie McMurray and that accidental car wash he tried to do on Jimmie Johnson’s Chevrolet during Sunday’s Cup race. The two cars were racing together when all of a sudden an errant water bottle came flying out of McMurray’s driver’s window. The bottle landed of top of the Johnson car and sprayed water all over his windshield. It turned out to be a case of no harm no foul but it’s the last thing a driver, in the midst of trying to win five consecutive championships, wants to see in the middle of a race.

The final HOORAH of the week goes to Stewart Haas Racing for the special paint job on Ryan Newman’s #39 Chevrolet. In honor of the recently observed Veterans Day, Newman’s U.S. Army sponsored car was decorated with the pictures of over 500 veterans. The total affect was stunning and it was a highly unique way of thanking the men and women of our Armed Forces for their service.

David Ragan – Homestead-Miami Advance

David Ragan – NSCS ADVANCE

Team:          No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion

Crew Chief:  Drew Blickensderfer

Chassis:      Primary: RK-711 Last ran Texas – finished eighth   

                   Backup: RK-620 Last ran Vegas – finished 23rd

Ragan, NSCS at Homestead-Miami Speedway:

Date        Event                              S          F       Laps           Led       Status           Money       

11-22-09  Ford 400                          41        34     266/267      0          Running         $73,675

11-16-08  Ford 400                          6          24     266/267      0          Running         $77,325

11-18-07  Ford 400                          7          10     267/267      1          Running         $127,675

                           Races        Wins    Top-5s    Top-10s     Poles      Led            Money          

Cumulative         3                0          0             1                0             1                $278,675

 

Ragan on racing at Homestead-Miami Speedway:

“Homestead is the last race of the year and I’m looking forward to it since it’s been a good track for us in the past.  It’s a track that really seems to suit the Roush Fenway style and I think we’ll all be strong this weekend.  Being Ford Championship weekend makes it extra special to try and get a win and we’ve been pretty fast on the mile-and-a-half tracks.  We’re taking the Texas car that ran well, so we should get a pretty good finish in our UPS Ford.”

Crew chief Drew Blickensderfer on racing at Homestead-Miami Speedway:

“Miami is a neat race track because it has variable banking meaning you can run the top and bottom.  Our mile-and-a-half program has been good as of late and we are all excited for Ford Championship weekend.  I’m looking forward to taking the same car that qualified in the top five and finished in the top 10 in Texas.  We should have a fast UPS Ford and look to get a solid finish to build up confidence heading into the off season.”

FAST FACTS

  • David Ragan and Daytona International Speedway will deliver tickets in a UPS Package Car to three lucky fans for the 53rd annual Daytona 500 on Tuesday afternoon. Ragan and DIS President, Joie Chitwood III, will also help kick off the area’s ‘Racing to Read’ program with a pep rally at Silver Sands Middle School.
  • Ragan has three starts at Homestead-Miami Speedway.  His best finish came in his first start in 2008; he qualified seventh and finished 10th
  • Ragan has competed three times in the Nationwide Series at Homestead-Miami Speedway.  In 2007 he claimed the pole position, but was caught up in an accident.  His best finish came in 2008 where he finished 23rd.
  • UPS Maximum Center Recognition—Homestead-Miami Speedway
    The Jacksonville South Center (SLIC – 3204) has been selected as the Maximum Center for the November 21 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The Jacksonville South Center will have its center number on David Ragan’s UPS Ford as a result of its outstanding performance in safety and operational excellence.

TIMOTHY PETERS FINISHES 13TH AT PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY AND INCHES CLOSER TO THE TOP-FIVE IN DRIVER POINT STANDINGS

Peters drove a consistent race and brought home another solid finish which helped him earn additional points and gain some ground in the point standings.

 

AVONDALE, AZ. (Nov 12)– Timothy Peters knew time was running out as he walked into the garage at Phoenix International Raceway. The track had been his Achilles heal just one year ago but this time he need a good run to meet his goal of a top-five finish in the season ending driver point standings. The #17 Red Horse Racing team put their nose to the grind stone and worked hard in two practice sessions on Thursday to give Peters a truck he could win with. He put the #17 in the sixth starting spot on Friday afternoon and prepared for the second to last race of the 2010 season. During the 150-lap event, Peters ran competitive lap times despite battling a loose condition. His “never give up” attitude helped him overcome the obstacles and capture a 13th place finish. He is now 73 points out of the fifth spot in the driver point standings. Aware of the uphill battle he faces in the season finale event, Peters will not rest until he has tried his best to get there.

The #17 team used two practice sessions on Thursday afternoon to prepare their Toyota Tundra for the Lucas Oil 150 under the lights at Phoenix International Raceway. Peters learned even more about the track and the crew worked to give him a set-up that would be fast on Friday night. Peters put his machine in the sixth starting spot on Friday afternoon and mentally prepared himself for the race.

When the green flag dropped in Phoenix, Peters was anxious to make his way to the front. He was still running in the sixth spot when the first caution of the night flew on lap 16. Peters reported that his Tundra was a little free everywhere on the race track. Crew chief Jeff Hensley made a plan to have his driver hit pit road but changed his mind when the leaders opted to stay out.

Peters restarted sixth on lap 23 but by lap 46 had slipped back to the eighth spot, battling with that loose condition. Another caution flew on lap 52 and Peters told his team the balance was still as bad as before. He hit pit road on lap 54 for four fresh tires, fuel, and to allow the team to pull a rubber out of the right rear. He restarted from the ninth spot.

Racing three wide at times to gain position, Peters was being cautiously aggressive in his effort to find the front. Another caution came out on lap 60 and Peters told the team that his truck wasn’t working well on the bottom groove of the race track but that the balance of his Tundra had improved with the last adjustment. He continued to run ninth but reported a change in the condition of his truck on lap 79. Peters told the team it was tight in the center of turns three and four but loose off of turn two. Another caution came out on lap 88 and the #17 pulled back onto pit road on lap 91. Taking four fresh tires and fuel only, Peters lined up 12th for the restart

Working his way to 11th on the same lap as the restart, Peters lost his momentum and fell back to 13th one lap later. He slipped back to 15th by lap 97 and then started moving forward again, clawing his way back to the 13th spot on lap 101. A caution flag flew on lap 113 and Peters told the team he was having trouble keeping the back end of the truck in the race track. He restarted 12th on lap 118 but fell to 13th on lap 126. With just under 25 laps remaining, Peters had his hands full with the condition of his truck. Unable to make any more progress before the checkered flag waved, Peters brought the #17 home in the 13th spot. He sits sixth in the driver point standings, 73 points behind fifth. With one race remaining, Peters will give it all he’s got at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series heads to Homestead, Florida this week. The Ford 200  at Homestead-Miami Speedway is scheduled for Friday, November 19th and will be televised live on SPEED Channel at 8:00pm EDT.

Elliott Sadler Truck Series Advance: Homestead-Miami Speedway

THE FINAL RUN: The 2010 Truck Series season will come to a close at Homestead-Miami Speedway with Elliott Sadler behind the wheel of the No. 2 Chevrolet. Sadler has made seven previous Truck Series starts for Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) this season and has earned one win, (Pocono [Pa.] Raceway) three top-five and four top-10 finishes. Sadler has led a total of 104 laps in the No. 2 truck in 2010.

TOP-FIVE GUY: In his seven 2010 Truck Series starts, Sadler has started in the top five in all seven races. Sadler has earned one pole (Pocono Raceway) and has made four of his seven starts from the front row.

NO. 2 STATS: With 24 of 25 races completed, the No. 2 truck has racked up some impressive stats in 2010. The truck has earned five wins (Atlanta Motor Speedway, Martinsville [Va.] Speedway, Gateway [Ill] International Raceway, Pocono Raceway and Phoenix International Raceway) with three different drivers (KHI co-owner Kevin Harvick, three wins; Sadler, one win; Clint Bowyer, one win), 11 top-five and15 top-10 finishes. The No. 2 team has also earned two poles, (Harvick, Gateway; Sadler, Pocono) both of which were the driver’s first-career Truck Series pole award.

WELCOME ABOARD: Two weeks ago at Texas Motor Speedway, KHI announced that Sadler will race full time in the Nationwide Series in KHI’s No. 2 Chevrolet with primary sponsorship from CitiFinancial for 29 races. CitiFinancial will make their KHI debut this weekend at Homestead as sponsor of the No. 2 Truck Series entry.

THOUGHTS FROM THE DRIVER: Elliott Sadler

How do you feel going into the final race of the season at Homestead-Miami Speedway?

“I’m very excited to kick off the final race weekend of the season in the No. 2 truck, and I’m also looking forward to having CitiFinancial on the truck for the first time as they begin their relationship with KHI. I’ve had a longstanding relationship with CitiFinancial since my days back at Yates, and I’m really grateful that they’ve chosen to come on board with the KHI Nationwide Series program next year.”

What are your thoughts looking back on your 2010 races with KHI?

“I’ve been really lucky to have the opportunity to race in the Truck Series for KHI this year. I’ve had the equipment and the team around me to compete for a win every single week, and there’s not much more that you can ask for. I’m looking forward to going into the off season, spending some time with my wife and my son, and getting ready to run the full Nationwide schedule in 2011.”

PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: Three years after his last start for KHI, Clint Bowyer took the No. 2 Kroger Chevrolet Silverado to victory lane in his first and only KHI Truck Series start of 2010. After starting the race in the third position, Bowyer quickly took the lead and went on to lead the most laps before taking the checkered flag at Phoenix International Raceway. Bowyer earned the No. 2 truck’s fifth victory in 2010, and became the third different driver to visit victory lane in the No. 2 this season.

CHASSIS HISTORY: The No. 2 team will utilize chassis No. 047 this weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway. This chassis was most recently raced by Sadler at Texas Motor Speedway two weeks ago where the team started second and finished fifth.

ARE YOU A FOLLOWER? Twitter users can now keep up-to-date with Kevin Harvick Inc.’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Teams by following at http://twitter.com/KHI_TruckSeries. In addition, you can follow KHI’s Nationwide Series team at http://twitter.com /KHI_NNS. Want more from KHI? Follow KHI’s co-owners Kevin and DeLana Harvick at http://twitter.com/kevinharvick and http://twitter.com/delanaharvick.

MEDIA ACCESS: Members of the media can now log on to www.kevinharvickinc.com to gain access to press kit information online. For more information, please email Jessica Trippy at KHI: jtrippy@kevinharvickinc.com.

About CitiFinancial

CitiFinancial is the premier community lender in North America. With more than 1,500 locations across the US, Canada, and Puerto Rico, CitiFinancial has been serving communities since 1912. Additional information may be found at www.citifinancial.com.

About Citi

Citi, the leading global financial services company, has approximately 200 million customer accounts and does business in more than 140 countries. Through Citicorp and Citi Holdings, Citi provides consumers, corporations, governments and institutions with a broad range of financial products and services, including consumer banking and credit, corporate and investment banking, securities brokerage, transaction services, and wealth management. Additional information may be found at www.citigroup.com or www.citi.com.

About Kevin Harvick Inc.

Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI), established in 2001 by Kevin and DeLana Harvick, is an 80,000 sq. ft. facility located in Kernersville, N.C. Home of the 2009 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship team, KHI enters 2010 in its seventh full year of competition with two full-time Truck Series teams and one full-time Nationwide Series team. Four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday returns to the helm of the No. 33 Truck team looking for his fifth title and third championship for KHI (2009 and 2007), while Sprint Cup series stars Kevin Harvick and Elliott Sadler guide the No. 2 Truck team. Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Harvick will again shine as the lead driver of the No. 33 Nationwide Series team as he continues to make his mark in motorsports and establish KHI as one of the top teams in NASCAR competition. For more information about KHI and its teams, please visit www.KevinHarvickInc.com.

Kevin Harvick Homestead-Miami Speedway Preview (No. 33 NNS)

RETURN TO MIAMI: For the first time since 2007, two-time Nationwide Series champion Kevin Harvick will return to Homestead-Miami (Fla.) Speedway to compete in the Ford 300. In his seven previous starts in the series at the Miami track, Harvick has one win, two top-five and four top-10 finishes. He has completed 97 percent of laps attempted (1361 of 1403 laps) and has led 384 laps. In addition to making his first start since 2007, this will also mark Harvick’s first Nationwide Series start at Miami in a Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) car.Even though he has not competed in the Nationwide Series at Homestead-Miami Speedway since 2007, Harvick has competed in both the Truck and Cup Series in between the gap.

Harvick enters the weekend as the defending Truck Series winner, but is not scheduled to compete in the Truck Series race on Friday night. He has competed in five Truck Series events at the track, earning one win, three top-five and three top-10 finishes. For the Cup Series, Harvick has nine starts with four top-five and seven top-10 finishes.

IT’S A WRAP: As the Nationwide Series season concludes this weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway, the No. 33 KHI team with co-owner DeLana Harvick sits third in the Nationwide Series Point Standings. Having seen Harvick, KHI newcomer Elliott Sadler, four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday, Mike Bliss and Max Papis in the driver’s seat this season, the team has earned four poles, three wins, 20 top-five and 29 top-10 finishes.

…AND THE COUNTDOWN BEGINS! At the conclusion of the Nationwide Series race at Homestead-Miami Speedway, the countdown will begin as teams feverishly begin working towards the start of the 2011 season. Once the race is complete in Miami, there will be 90 days until the first Nationwide Series race of the 2011 season at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway where Clint Bowyer will be behind the wheel of the No. 33 Rheem Chevrolet for the first time in his career.

BEFORE THE RACE: QUOTES WITH DRIVER KEVIN HARVICK:

Why is Homestead-Miami (Fla.) Speedway one of your favorite tracks? “Miami is one of those race tracks that you don’t know when it is going to stop aging.  It seems like every time we return to the track it loses a little grip, which is a good thing.  Since they repaved the track a few years back it has become one of my favorites.  You can move all around trying to find a groove that works for you. There are a lot of different places where you can make your car work.  For me it has been a lot of fun to race on and I look forward to going back this time around.”

CHASSIS HISTORY: This week the No. 33 Jimmy John’s crew will unload chassis No. 053 for team co-owner Kevin Harvick at Homestead-Miami Speedway. This chassis was last on track at Kansas Speedway where Harvick started the race third and led 43 laps before finishing the race fourth. Prior to Kansas, this chassis was on track at Kentucky Speedway with Mike Bliss where he started the race sixth and led 13 laps before a late-race spin relegated the team to a 24th-place finish. This chassis was previously on track at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway where Harvick piloted the car to an eighth-place finish, Las Vegas Motor Speedway where Harvick won his first Nationwide Series race for sponsor Rheem and Auto Club Speedway where a failed engine ended the team’s strong run with a 38th-place finish.

PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: For the final Rheem race of the 2010 season, Kevin Harvick piloted the No. 33 Rheem Solar Heaters Chevrolet to a solid second-place finish. Starting the 200-lap event from the fourth spot, Harvick remained in the top nine for the entire race and rebounded from a slow pit stop to finish solidly in the second position. The finish marked his 25th top-10 finish of the 2010 season.

ARE YOU A FOLLOWER? Twitter users can now keep up-to-date with Kevin Harvick Inc.’s NASCAR Nationwide Series by following @KHI_NNS. In addition, you can follow KHI’s Truck Series teams @KHI_TruckSeries. Want more from KHI? Follow KHI’s co-owners Kevin and DeLana Harvick @KevinHarvick and @DeLanaHarvick.

ONLINE MEDIA KITS: Media members can now access KHI media kits online at KevinHarvickInc.com. Included on the site are driver bios, driver and team images, KHI history and statistics, team profiles and schedules. Please contact Alicia Deal (adeal@kevinharvickinc.com) at KHI for access to the new site.

Kevin Harvick

Nationwide Stats at Miami

Year       No.          Team     Start       Finish

2007       21           RCR        4              16

2006       21           RCR        1              6

2005       21           RCR        16           4

2004       29           RCR        12           1

2003       21           RCR        4              6

2001       2              RCR        4              37

2000       2              RCR        27           21

*RCR: Richard Childress Racing

About Jimmy John’s:Jimmy John’s Gourmet Sandwiches was founded in 1983 by 19-year-old Jimmy John Liautaud in a converted garage in Charleston, IL. Since its inception, the company has grown to over 1,000 corporate and franchised locations in more than 37 states throughout the U.S. The company is known for its obsession with fresh, quality products and high-speed execution. For more information, visit www.jimmyjohns.com.
About Kevin Harvick Inc.:Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI), established in 2001 by Kevin and DeLana Harvick, is an 80,000 sq. ft. facility located in Kernersville, N.C. Home of the 2009 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship team, KHI enters 2010 in its seventh full year of competition with two full-time Truck Series teams and one full-time Nationwide Series team.  Four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday returns to the helm of the No. 33 Truck team looking for his fifth title and third championship for KHI (2009 and 2007), while Sprint Cup series stars Kevin Harvick and Elliott Sadler guide the No. 2 Truck team.  Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Harvick will again shine as the lead driver of the No. 33 Nationwide Series team as he continues to make his mark in motorsports and establish KHI as one of the top teams in NASCAR competition. For more information about KHI and its teams, please visit www.KevinHarvickInc.com.

Edwards Sweeps Weekend, Wins with FR9 Engine

Mooresville, NC (November 15, 2010) Carl Edwards’ Ford Fusion has been on an impressive winning streak, earning front row starting positions and capturing the win in the last two Nationwide Series races.  Edward’s also qualified on the pole during this week’s Sprint Cup Series race at Phoenix International Raceway and swept the weekend by winning the Kobalt Tools 500.

Edwards drives the #99 Aflac Ford Fusion powered by Roush Yates’ new FR9 engine.  The FR9 is the first Ford purpose-built race engine ever engineered and produced at Roush Yates Engines in Mooresville, NC.  The new Ford engine has been integrated slowly into the Sprint Cup Series throughout the second half of the 2010 season with help from Roush Fenway Racing and Richard Petty Motorsports’ cars racing the engine intermittently.  It has been a remarkable learning period for the FR9, with a total of 5 poles and 3 wins, including Edwards’ win this weekend that required both horsepower and efficient fuel mileage to beat Championship contenders Jimmie Johnson and Denny Hamlin.

“The new FR9 engine that Ford helped us with certainly was a factor today,” said Jack Roush, owner of Roush Fenway Racing.  “The fact that we were able to save gas and still have enough speed to maintain position on the race track was all very good.  I’m thrilled to be in Victory Lane this weekend.”

Even though a Championship is out of reach for Ford this year, the FR9 engine has shown an impressive increase in performance and reliability throughout the second half of the 2010 Sprint Cup season.  These improvements bring enthusiasm to the Ford Racing and Roush Yates Engines camps, as they plan to run the FR9 in all Ford cars for the full 2011 Sprint Cup Season.

“I’m excited to be running the FR9 in all Fords for the entire 2011 Sprint Cup Season and soon to come for the Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series,” said Doug Yates, CEO of Roush Yates Engines.  “Carl’s win at Phoenix is just another testament to the power Roush Yates’ FR9 engine is capable of.  Everyone at the engine shop has been working hard to get this engine just right, and we are extremely proud of Roush Fenway Racing and their accomplishments with it this year.  I look forward to watching the FR9 race at Ford Championship weekend next week at Homestead, as well as the 2011 Sprint Cup Season.”

To learn more about the FR9 engine and how you can get the same power that Carl Edwards has in your race car, please contact Jeff Clark at 1-877-361-1545 or visit our website at www.roushyatesparts.com.

About Roush Yates Engines

Roush Yates Engines designs, engineers and crafts high performance racing engines with the power to perform and the horsepower and durability you’d expect from legendary NASCAR pioneers Jack Roush and Robert Yates. The partnership of power and precision has come from merging the knowledge and experience of two legendary engine builders, both with a passion for winning today and powering up for tomorrow. In 2009 Doug Yates purchased his father’s half of Roush Yates Engines to become a co-owner in the company.

As CEO, Doug Yates leads a staff of 180 engineers and technicians who design, assemble, test, and service racing engines at two separate state-of-the-art facilities in Mooresville, North Carolina. Here, the best minds and latest technology are hard at work producing nearly 1,500 racing engines each year for teams in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, ARCA, Grand-Am, FIA GT3, Dirt Late Model, Sprint cars, and NHRA Pro Stock. At Roush Yates Engines, the mission is Power Performance, which is achieved through innovation design, precision engineering, and skillful craftsmanship. Building the best engines in racing today, providing service that’s second to none, and honoring a commitment to research and development are the heart of Roush Yates Engines.