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Will Power Overcomes Penalty to win Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach

[media-credit name=”IndyCar.com” align=”alignright” width=”333″][/media-credit]Following a Chevrolet mandated engine change, Will Power was going to have to start 12th in the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach despite qualifying second on Saturday. Power didn’t let them hold him back as he led the last 15 laps on his way to his second straight win of the season.

“You tell him what he needs to do and he does,” team strategist Tim Cedric says. “This team never quits and this race wasn’t over till it was over.”

Power was able to save fuel from when he pitted with 31 to go to make it to the end of the race.

“After last week, you can never say never, but I thought it’d be very tough to win the race,” Power says. “The end there, I had to save so much fuel to get there but so happy for the Verizon and Chevy guys. We got a penalty and overcome it. I’ve been trying to win here for four years now.”

When Simon Pagenaud headed down pit road with 16 to go, Power would take over the top spot and lead the whole way home for his 17th career win.

“I actually used some fuel to get around some, but Tim was telling me that I had to save some fuel,” Power continues. “So I was trying to save as much fuel as I could while staying in front.”

The win marked the third consecutive win this season for Team Penske as they won St. Petersburg with Helio Castroneves, followed by Barber and now Long Beach by Power. It marks Penske’s fifth win at Long Beach and their first since 2001.

Pagenaud would come second for a career best finish after leading the most laps – 26.

“It was great,” he says. “The car was fanstastic. The guys did such a good job. It’s a one-car team operation and we’re fighting against Penske and (Chip) Ganassi so hats off to the team.”

James Hinchcliffe would round out the podium for his first IZOD IndyCar Series podium finish.

“I feel really bad for Ryan (Hunter-Reay) because he drove a really good race,” Hinchcliffe. “I was following him through a lot of those passes he made, so I hate to have it at the expense to him. great job by the team with all the strategies today.”

Ryan Hunter-Reay crossed the line third, but was given a 30-second penalty for avoidable contact after he spun Takumo Sato on the final lap. Hunter-Reay was credited with a sixth place finish, behind Tony Kanaan and JR Hildebrand.

“I was told he was saving fuel and it looked like he was,” Hunter-Reay explains the incident with Sato. “He braked so early and I went to the inside there, I thought he’d give me a little room and he shut the door. I guess it was my fault. I’ll have to see where the penalty puts us. The team did a great job today. I love racing here. Anytime we don’t win here, we feel disappointed. Lots of side-by-side racing today, fun racing.”

Pole qualifier Ryan Briscoe, who started 11th due to the engine change penalty, finished seventh while Sato was credited with a eighth finish after the spin.

“On the last stint we had to work on the fuel mileage and on the very last lap Ryan Hunter-Reay basically took me out,” Sato says. “There was not enough depth on his overtaking maneuver. He had a chance for the last few corners so it’s very disappointing to finish the race this way.”

While the first two races of the season had run fairly clean, the race at Long Beach saw its fair share of incidents. On lap one, front row starters Dario Franchitti and Josef Newgarden made contact, causing Newgarden to get into the wall. Newgarden was credited with a 26th place finish.

“I saw one replay and I had a feeling that was going happen,” Newgarden says. “I got alongside him, gave him the inside and make slight contact, getting into the wall. It’s one of those tough breaks. Maybe I could’ve acted differently, I’ll review it and learn from it.”

Franchitti came home 15th after complaining the car was lacking horsepower the majority of the race.

On lap 25, the scariest wreck of the day happened when Marco Andretti catapulted over the right rear of Graham Rahal.

“I’m good,” Andretti, who was credited with finishing 25th, says. “I’m sore. I feel for the guys. They put so much into the RC car and I just feel bad. We were about to work on making some ground. There’s a difference between blocking and chopping and that’s chopping. I was lucky I didn’t get upside down; I could’ve been killed.”

Rahal wasn’t penalized by the officials for the incident, but was also out of the race, finishing 24th.

“It’s a cluster back there,” Rahal says. “We were just trying to stay clean and by that time, he’d already hit me. I was just trying to stay underneath (Scott) Dixon and obviously I surprised Marco. He wasn’t going to make the corner no matter what. If he stayed beside me, he was going to overshoot it. It’s just frustrating. The car felt really strong.”

On the same lap, Alex Tagliani suffered a flat tire and finished 21st.

“As soon as it goes green, you can pass,” Tagliani says. “With being back in the pack like that, I passed (EJ) Viso and he pushed me into the wall. It’s hard to get disconnected.”

EJ Viso served a penalty for avoidable contact and finished 12th.

“The main problem occurred when Alex Tagliani made a very dangerous move passing two or three cars heading into the hairpin turn which is a very awkward place to overtake,” Viso says of his day. “I saw what he was doing and moved out of the way, but he was sideways coming out of the hairpin and when I attempted to pass he blocked me and I hit his tire and he spun. Because of the contact I was given a drive through penalty, which I feel was very unfair.”

On the last lap, an incident happened in the final corner involving Castroneves, Oriol Servia and James Jakes.

Power now leads the point standings, 24 points over teammate Castroneves heading into Brazil.

Lap by Lap: Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach won by Will Power

[media-credit name=”Jeff Gross/Getty Images” align=”alignright” width=”275″][/media-credit]Will Power came from 12th to 1st and conserved enough fuel in the final 30 laps to score his second consecutive win of the season.

 

Green Flag

Caution Lap 1 as Josef Newgarden and Dario Franchitti make contact

Restart Lap 4 as Dario Franchitti gets a good jump, but Justin Wilson makes the pass on Franchitti.

Lap 5 Helio Castroneves passes Simona De Silvestro.

Lap 6 Wilson leads Franchitti, Pagenaud, Sato, Dixon, Kimball, Rahal, Hunter-Reay, Conway and Briscoe.

Lap 8 Marco Andretti pits

Lap 12 Tony Kanaan pits

Lap 14 Wilson leads Pagenaud, Sato, Franchitti, Dixon, Kimball, Rahal, Hunter-Reay, Conway and Briscoe. Dixon passes Franchitti for fourth.

Lap 20 Sebastian Bourdais into the tires as there is a full course caution as Justin Wilson pits from the lead. Takumo Sato takes the lead.  Pagenaud hits a tire that is inside somebody else’s pit stall so he will have a penalty.

Lap 21 Sato leads Franchitti and Hunter-Reay.

Restart Lap 23 as Franchitti has a terrible start; Sato gets a good jump on the start and holds the lead over Hunter-Reay. Alex Tagliani has a flat tire, going off the run-off area. Marco Andretti gets into the barrier hard, bringing out the caution as Graham Rahal gets some damage. The replay shows Andretti catapulting over the right rear of Rahal. Katherine Legge also gets in the tires. JR Hildebrand pits under the caution.

Lap 25 Mike Conway stalls on the backstretch as Sato leads Hunter-Reay, Briscoe, Franchitti, Hinchcliffe, Castroneves, Wilson, Pagenaud, Kanaan and Kimball. Bourdais returns to the race track after his early trouble.

Lap 27 Dixon has stalled. Sato pitted, handing the lead over to Hunter-Reay.

Lap 28 Hunter-Reay and Hinchcliffe pit, handing the lead to Briscoe.

Restart Lap 31 Briscoe gets a good start; Briscoe and Franchitti make contact as Briscoe pulls ahead. Franchitti has front wing damage.

Lap 32 Briscoe leads Castroneves, Franchitti, Pagenaud, Kanaan, Wilson, Kimball, Sato, Jakes and Power.

Lap 34 Sato passes Kimball

Lap 35 Briscoe, Franchitti, Castroneves pit to hand the lead over to Pagenaud

Lap 36 Pagenaud leads Kanaan, Wilson, Sato, Jakes, Power, Kimball, Barrichello, Hildebrand, and Hunter-Reay

Lap 38 Viso serves a penalty for avoidable contact after instant with Tagliani.

Lap 40 Pagenaud leads Kanaan, Wilson, Sato, Jakes, Power, Kimball, Barrichello, Hilderbrand, Hunter-Reay

Lap 41 Power passes Jakes fifth

Lap 42 Kanaan pits from second while Pagenaud leads.

38 to go Pagenaud leads Sato, Wilson, Power, Jakes, Kimball, Barrichello, Hildebrand, Hunter-Reay, Hinchcliffe; Mike Conway has a problem as the car stalls; Simona De Silvestro pits

37 to go Pagenaud pits to hand the lead over to Sato; James Jakes pits

36 to go Power passes Wilson for second as Sato leads

35 to go Sato leads Power, Wilson, Kimball and Barrichello

33 to go Castroneves has damage on the front wing, needing a new one under the pit stop.

32 to go Charlie Kimball pits as Sato continues to lead Power

31 to go Power pits

30 to go Sato leads Hildebrand, Hunter-Reay, Hinchcliffe, Pagenaud, Kanaan, Power, Wilson, Jakes and Barrichello

29 to go Sato and Hildebrand pit, handing the lead over to Hunter-Reay. Hunter-Reay leads over Hinchcliffe, Pagenaud, Kanaan, Sato, Power, Wilson, Jakes, Barrichello and Hildebrand.

28 to go Hunter-Reay and Hinchcliffe pit, handing the lead over to Pagenaud.

27 to go Briscoe pits as Pagenaud leads Kanaan, Sato, Power, Wilson, Jakes, Barrichello, Hildebrand, Kimball and Castroneves.

26 to go Power passes Sato for third.

25 to go Viso pits as Jakes passes Wilson

22 to go Pagenaud leads Power, Sato, Jakes, Wilson, Barrichello, Hildebrand, Kimball, Hunter-Reay and Hinchcliffe

16 to go Pagenaud goes down pit road as Power takes the lead.

15 to go Power leads Sato, Barrichello, Pagenaud, Hildebrand, Jakes, Kimball, Hunter-Reay, Wilson and Hinchcliffe

10 to go Power leads Sato, Pagenaud, Barrichello, Hildebrand, Hunter-Reay, Kimball, Wilson, Hinchcliffe and Kanaan. Simona de Silvestro on pit road with more problems.

7 to go Barrichello pits for fuel only out of the fourth position. So now it is Power leading Sato, Pagenaud, Hildebrand, Hunter-Reay, Kimball, Wilson, Hinchcliffe, Kanaan and Barrichello.

6 to go Pagenaud passes Sato for second

5 to go Charlie Kimball comes down the pits as he has issues.

4 to go Wilson dives to pit road

3 to go Power leads Pagenaud, Sato, Hunter-Reay, Hinchcliffe, Hildebrand, Kanaan, Barrichello, Castroneves and Briscoe. / Kanaan passes Hildebrand for sixth

Last Lap – Sato spins after contact from Hunter-Reay.

Will Power wins over Pagenaud, Hunter-Reay, Hinchcliffe, Kanaan, Hildebrand as a wreck happens in the last lap involving Castroneves, Oriol Servia and James Jakes. Hunter-Reay given a 30 second penalty, therefore resulting in him being moved back to sixth.

Surprising and Not Surprising: Texas Samsung Mobile 500

[media-credit name=”Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”254″][/media-credit]Deep in the heart of Texas Motor Speedway, here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 16th running of the Samsung Mobile 500.

Surprising:  In spite of Jimmie Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Lowe’s/Kobalt Tool Chevrolet, leading over 150 laps, it was surprising that his team owner will have to wait yet another race to secure the 200th win for Hendrick Motorsports.

Johnson, who finished second, was the highest ranking HMS driver for the night. This was Johnson’s 13th top-10 finish in 18 races at Texas and his fifth top-10 finish for the year.

“I’m definitely disappointed, but we had a great race car and there’s a lot to be proud of here today,” Johnson said. “Certainly wish we were there in Victory Lane but everybody knows we’re here.”

“We’re awfully close to it with this KOBALT Tools Chevrolet.”

Although still at the 199 win mark, all of the Hendrick drivers had surprisingly good nights, even Jeff Gordon and Kasey Kahne, who finished fourth and seventh respectively. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., the final HMS pilot, finished tenth.

This was the first time since the 2011 spring race at Talladega that Hendrick Motorsports had all four of its cars in the top-10 at the finish.

Not Surprising:  At a track where Roush Fenway Racing traditionally dominates, it was not surprising to see one Roushketeer, Greg Biffle, in the winner’s circle with his cowboy hat and guns. This was Biff’s first win of the 2012 season and ended a 49 race winless streak.

The win was the company’s ninth win at Texas, the most of any other racing entity.

“I just dug deep,” Biffle said about his hard fought win. “I knew I had to do it and I kept trying and trying and trying.”

“I knew the team would forgive me if I wrecked it trying to beat him,” Biffle continued. “So, I just gave it all I had.”

Surprising:  It was surprising that the fire was extinguished and there was no smoke at Texas this weekend. Tony Stewart, reigning past champion, finished 24th, two laps down.

“We just couldn’t get the handle on this thing tonight,” Stewart said. “We chased it all night.”

“We’ll go back to the shop, tear it apart, and see what the deal is.”

Surprisingly, his teammate Ryan Newman was right there with him, finishing a bit better at 21st, yet also two laps down.

“Things didn’t go our way today,” the driver of the No. 39 US Army Chevrolet said. “But we’ll be back stronger next week to complete the mission, which is winning the race.”

Not Surprising:  Martin Truex, Jr., to no one’s surprise, continued tearing up the track for Michael Waltrip Racing. The driver of the No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota started from the pole position and finished top ten, in sixth place to be exact.

Truex, Jr. has finished top-10 in nine of the last twelve races.

“It was a lot of fun out there running up front with the NAPA Toyota,” Truex, Jr. said. “I can’t say enough about everybody on this NAPA team and everybody at MWR.”

“Hopefully we can keep this thing going.”

His MWR teammate Mark Martin also had a great run at Texas, a track where he was rated 12th in the driver rankings. Martin, behind the wheel of the No. 55 Aaron’s 2000 Best of the Best Toyota, finished third.

This was Martin’s 13th top-10 finish in 23 races at Texas Motor Speedway.

“Mark Martin is so enthusiastic,” team owner Michael Waltrip said. “He has pumped all of the drivers up.”

“We are very happy with our team’s performance.”

Surprising:  It was most surprising that at a race where there are on average eight to nine restarts, there were only two caution flags thrown, one for debris and one for Trevor Bayne’s encounter with the wall.

The yellow flag flew just twice within the first 100 laps of the race, leaving the rest of the race to be run under green flag conditions. This was the first time in history that a superspeedway race had that many green flag laps without a caution.

Not Surprising:   Unfortunately but not surprisingly, there was no Bubba Watson moment for Denny Hamlin at Texas, a track at which he traditionally runs well. The driver of the No. 11 FedEx Office/March of Dimes Toyota had a decent day, finishing 12th, but was the last car on the lead lap at race end.

Surprising:  At a track where he sat out last year’s fall race because of the Truck race incident with Ron Hornaday and where this year he had an issue in the pits with his air hose getting stuck under the car, Kyle Busch had a surprising good day after all.

The driver brought his No. 18 Toyota Interstate Batteries Toyota to the checkered flag in the 11th spot.

Not Surprising:  Since Chassis No. 665 scored a good finish for Landon Cassill at Michigan last year, it was not surprising that new driver Kurt Busch gave it a whirl for a good run at Texas. The driver of the No. 51 Phoenix Construction Chevrolet finished 13th.

“It was a good night and finish for us,” Busch said. “We had little struggles but were able to overcome those.”

“This was a good night and a nice top-15 finish for us.”

Surprising:  The struggles of the Penske Dodge teams surprisingly continued and both drivers ended up just plain frustrated.

AJ Allmendinger, in the No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge, finished 15th but his teammate Brad Keselowski, behind the wheel of the Blue Deuce, had all kinds of problems that sent him off to the garage, finishing in the frustratingly low position of 36th spot.

“The race tonight was frustrating,” Dinger said. “We had a fast Shell/Pennzoil Dodge and we just didn’t make it happen tonight.”

“This has been a very frustrating weekend to say the least,” Keselowski said. “We just need to clean some things up so that the potential of this team can shine.”

“Right now, we aren’t doing that.”

Not Surprising:  As predicted, especially given the wicked weather in the area, the wind most certainly did wreak havoc throughout the race. And while it affected most drivers equally, there were still some drivers that felt the high wind added to the frustrations of their day.

“Between the wind, the changing race track and the handling, it was a long night for the Target team,” Juan Pablo Montoya said. “We didn’t have much of a chance to work on the car like we had hoped to.”

JPM finished 16th in his No. 42 Target Chevrolet, one lap down at race end.

Mark Martin praises MWR and teammate Martin Truex Jr. after Texas

[media-credit name=”Credit: John Harrelson/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”245″][/media-credit]There’s no better indicator for team about how far them have come then when it’s no longer news about how well they’re running.

It’s taken Michael Waltrip Racing six years but they’ve finally reached that point. Now seven races into the 2012 season MWR drivers are making waves and headlines for all the right reasons.

Saturday night in Texas that continued as their three drivers finished third, sixth and 17th. It started with Martin Truex Jr. on the pole, Mark Martin close behind in fourth as the two drivers carried the MWR banner.

“I am just so proud of MWR and all the people there and the teamwork that they have shown there starting with Martin Truex Jr., who has put so much work into getting the program where it was when we started the season and everybody combined,” said third place finisher Martin.

“They really have a lot of great people there with great attitude, great teamwork and man, have I got one awesome crew chief in Rodney Childers. This is so much fun and such an incredible privilege to drive a racecar at this point in my career – to be able to drive a racecar for a team like that and in a hot rod like that.”

Martin noted that even though Greg Biffle and Jimmie Johnson dominated the race, he wasn’t far behind. The No. 55 Aarons 2011 Best of the Best Toyota held steady in the top three for the second half of the race, able to see the leaders in front of him.

“We don’t have much more work to do and we can get up there and be battling for the win, so I’m really proud of the guys,” said Martin. “We’ve made improvements every race that we’ve got to run together, so Rodney and I are starting to figure some things out in the car that I like for the long haul, so it’s working well.”

The 53-year-old Martin has never been one to hide his excitement but Saturday night he looked all but ready to jump out of his chair when asked about racing next weekend in Kansas. His face lit up and he had to contain himself when acknowledging that going to work is easy when a driver has a great race team.

“After today I’m really excited but I was excited anyway,” said Martin. “I love going to the race track. There’s nothing else that I find quite as much fun as going to work with a great race team with a great attitude. So it’s fun for me to go to every race that I get to go to.

“But with the great run we had here we’ll be able to roll this setup logic into next week’s car – we’re still working. We’re still trying to improve our long haul, getting a little easier on the tires so the thing will stay faster. If we can make any more improvements maybe we can get right up there and make some sparks for those guys.”

Martin won’t stop at praising just MWR, he says a big part of the company’s turnaround has been his teammate, Martin Truex Jr. Joining MWR in 2010, Truex has been there as they struggled and weren’t doing much of anything right.

Instead of giving up and looking for a way out, Truex hung tough and worked as hard as he could with not just his own No. 56 NAPA team, but vowing to make everyone better. On the verge of snapping his own winless streak and after another strong run in Texas, he’s getting strong words from Martin.

“Martin Truex Jr. has been phenomenal, phenomenal,” said Martin. “The teamwork I’m feeling right now at MWR is second to none I’ve ever been at. [He’s] really, really engaged and he’s working hard to help the whole program. We’re racing three cars to put two in the Chase for sure and win races and try to go toe-to-toe with the likes of Hendrick [Motorsports] and Roush [Fenway] and those guys.

“That’s a tall order for right now. I’m very proud of the results we’re getting. It’s coming from a lot of good attitudes and hard-working people.”

Martin’s only running a partial schedule; therefore he’s not in the championship battle. But Truex Jr. sits fourth and Bowyer slipped one spot to 10th following Texas. Both Truex and Bowyer were once questioned for their decision to leave high profile companies like Earnhardt-Ganassi and Richard Childress Racing for MWR, now however, it looks like it wasn’t such a bad decision.

Truex has been knocking on the door to victory lane for the past few weeks, trying to earn just his second career win. Bowyer has had rough luck to start the season, but once the No. 15 Five Hour Energy team puts that behind them they’re expected to be there contending with Truex.

After his Texas run, Bowyer took to Twitter to apologize to his fans for their performance, saying the team got their butts kicked. He also said though they would get back after it next weekend.

Should any of the three MWR drivers win in Kansas it would just be the third victory for the organization, first since July 2010. But now not the longshot that it once was thought to be.

Kahne Wins Inaugural Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200 at Rockingham Speedway

Kasey Kahne was in the lead heading into the final 20 laps at Rockingham Speedway. He never relinquished that lead, scoring the victory in the inaugural Camping World Truck Series race at Rockingham Speedway. This was Kahne’s first victory in of 2012.

Kahne described this as “the best weekend I have had in a long time.” He drove in three races this weekend with three impressive finishes; third place in the Nationwide Series in Texas, seventh place in the Cup race, and the win at Rockingham.

[media-credit name=”Credit: Rainer Ehrhardt/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”253″][/media-credit]He went on to explain how happy he was to be a part of the event.

“When I heard they were putting a race on here at Rockingham, as soon as I heard about it, I was trying to figure out whom I would race for and how I would make it here,” he said.

He only got about 4 ½ hours sleep the previous night but that did not dampen his enthusiasm.

“Coming to ‘The Rock’ I was so excited that I woke up early. My alarm was supposed to go off at nine this morning and I woke up at 7:30 and couldn’t go back to sleep.”

Sunday marked NASCAR’s first return to Rockingham Speedway since February 2004.

‘The Rock,’ under the guidance of Andy Hillenburg, opened its arms to the fans allowing them access to the infield and pit road, areas that are normally out of bounds for most ticket holders. Golf cart shuttles were available to take fans to their seats. They were limited but if you didn’t mind waiting, you could catch a ride. The atmosphere was more like a family reunion than a sporting event.

Everyone from the staff to the fans to the drivers was excited to be a part of the track’s return to NASCAR.

Nelson Piquet Jr. led the field to green on a sunny Sunday afternoon in the Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200. He led a total of 107 laps during the race and was dominant most of the race.

Points leader John King spun out on lap four, hit the inside wall and brought out the first caution.

Piquet continued to lead the field and had just lapped the tenth place car when a debris caution was called.

Matt Crafton took the lead shortly after the restart, leaving Piquet Jr. in second place.

Kasey Kahne started in the rear of the field but quickly worked his way into the top three battling with Matt Crafton and Nelson Piquet Jr. for the lead. Kahne took over the lead on lap 155.

On the final pit stop Piquet Jr. was caught too fast exiting and had to go to the back of the field, ending his bid for a win. He fought his way back to finish the race in seventh position.

James Buescher finished the race in second place position earning him his second top ten finish of 2012. Matt Crafton finished third followed by Johnny Sauter. Timothy Peters rounded out the top five.

Peter’s fifth place pushed him to a six point lead in the point standings over Justin Lofton. Ty Dillon is third, followed by James Buescher and Parker Kligerman.

Ty Dillon finished in eighth place and was the highest finishing rookie.

The next Camping World Truck Series race will be April 21, 2012 at Kansas Speedway.

Unofficial Race Results
Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200, Rockingham Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/truckseries/race.php?race=3
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 5 4 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 0
2 16 31 James Buescher Chevrolet 42
3 8 88 Matt Crafton Toyota 42
4 10 13 Johnny Sauter Toyota 40
5 3 17 Timothy Peters Toyota 40
6 17 22 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 38
7 1 30 Nelson Piquet Jr. Chevrolet 39
8 12 3 Ty Dillon * Chevrolet 36
9 6 29 Parker Kligerman Ram 35
10 19 6 Justin Lofton Chevrolet 34
11 27 27 Jeb Burton * Chevrolet 33
12 22 9 Ron Hornaday Chevrolet 32
13 21 81 David Starr Toyota 31
14 11 98 Dakoda Armstrong * Toyota 30
15 23 32 Miguel Paludo Chevrolet 29
16 29 2 Tim George Jr. Chevrolet 28
17 13 33 Cale Gale * Chevrolet 27
18 15 24 Max Gresham * Chevrolet 26
19 18 92 David Reutimann Chevrolet 0
20 20 9 John Wes Townley * Toyota 24
21 24 275 Caleb Holman* Chevrolet 23
22 32 39 Ryan Sieg Chevrolet 22
23 30 214 Brennan Newberry Chevrolet 21
24 28 23 Jason White Ford 20
25 14 8 Ross Chastain * Toyota 19
26 2 5 Paulie Harraka * Ford 18
27 36 170 Jeff Agnew Chevrolet 17
28 26 202 Tyler Young Chevrolet 16
29 33 93 Chris Cockrum Chevrolet 15
30 35 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet 14
31 7 11 Todd Bodine Toyota 13
32 31 99 Bryan Silas * Ford 12
33 25 7 John King * Toyota 11
34 4 18 Jason Leffler Toyota 10
35 34 7 Johnny Chapman Toyota 9
36 9 60 Grant Enfinger Chevrolet 8

Lap by Lap: Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200 won by Kasey Kahne

[media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]With 46 laps to go, Kahne passed Matt Crafton for the lead and didn’t look back as he led the field off pit road with 26 laps to go after a caution for debris.

Green flag as Nelson Piquet Jr. gets a solid start

Lap 3 Nelson Piquet Jr. leads Jason Leftler, Paulie Harraka, Parker Kligerman, Timothy Peters, Matt Crafton, Todd Bodine

Caution Lap 5 Points Leader John King gets into the inside wall. Got loose off of turn two and gets into the inside wall.

Restart Lap 9 as Nelson Piquet Jr. gets a good restart and pulls ahead

Lap 10 Ross Chastain bounced off the wall in turn two

Lap 11 Piquet Jr. leads Leftler, Crafton, Kligerman, Bodine, Harraka, Peters, Ty Dillon, Johnny Sauter, James Buescher

Lap 15 Sauter passes Dillon for eighth

Lap 16 Buescher passes Dillon for ninth

Lap 19 Peters, Sauter and Buescher pass Haraka

Lap 19 Crafton passes Leftler for second as Leftler heads down pit road with motor problems

Lap 21 Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Kligerman, Bodine, Peters, Sauter, Buescher, Dillon, Justin Lofton and Harraka

Lap 29 Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Kligerman, Peters, Sauter, Buescher, Bodine, Dillon, Lofton and Joey Coulter

Lap 31 Kasey Kahne passes Coulter for 10th after starting in the rear

Lap 36 Dillon, Lofton and Kahne pass Bodine for position

Lap 39 Coulter passes Bodine for 10th

Lap 47 Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Kligerman, Peters, Buescher, Sauter, Kahne, Dillon, Lofton and Coulter

Lap 50 Piquet Jr. puts Cale Gale a lap down. Only the top 13 are on the lead lap

Lap 52 Lofton passes Dillon for eighth

Lap 54 Dillon passes Lofton back for eighth

Lap 55 Coulter passes Lofton for ninth

Lap 58 Piquet Jr. has a half a lap lead on second place Crafton

Lap 60 Caution for debris……Piquet Jr. leads Peters, Kligerman, Crafton, Buescher, Kahne, and Sauter off pit road……Jeb Burton got the lucky dog….

Restart Lap 66 as Piquet Jr. gets another strong start

Lap 68 Crafton takes the lead from Piquet Jr as they lead Peters, Kahne, Dillon, Sauter, Buescher, Kligerman, Lofton and Coulter.

Lap 70 Problems for Todd Bodine as he hit the wall off of turn two

Lap 71 Bodine brings the truck down pit road. No caution

Lap 73 Crafton leads Piquet Jr., Kahne, Peters, Sauter, Buescher, Dillon, Kligerman, Lofton and Coulter

Lap 87 Piquet Jr. now leads Crafton, Kahne, Peters, Sauter, Buescher, Dillon, Kligerman, Lofton, Coulter

Lap 94 Peters passes Kahne for third

Lap 95 Sauter passes Kahne for fourth

Lap 100 Coulter passes Lofton for ninth

HALFWAY as only 11 trucks are on the lead lap as Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Peters, Sauter, Kahne, Buescher, Dillon, Kligerman, Coulter, Lofton and Jeb Burton

Lap 108 Kligerman passes Dillon for seventh

Lap 109 Crafton and Piquet Jr. battle side-by-side for the lead

Lap 110 Piquet Jr. holds Crafton off

Lap 111 Buescher passes Kahne for fifth

Lap 112 Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Peters, Sauter, Buescher, Kahne, Kligerman, Dillon, Coulter, Lofton and Burton

Lap 113 Kahne, Kligerman and Dillon pass Buescher as Burton passes Lofton

Lap 116 Ron Hornaday runs in the lucky dog spot.

Lap 117 Jason White hits pit road

Lap 118 Piquet Jr. leads Crafton, Peters, Sauter, Kahne, Kligerman, Dillon, Busecher, Coulter, Burton, Lofton and Hornaday

Lap 121 David Reuitmann brings out the caution as he goes for a spin, collecting Bryan Silas…..Pit stops…..Peters leads Crafton, Sauter, Kahne, Piquet Jr., Dillon, Buescher and Kligermann off pit road. Sauter had to come back down pit road as they did not get it full of fuel. He’ll restart 11th. Ron Hornaday gets the lucky dog to make it 12 trucks on the lead lap.

Restart Lap 131 as Crafton gets a good restart and takes the lead from Peters

Lap 133 Crafton leads Peters, Kahne, Dillon, Buescher, Piquet Jr., Kligerman, Coulter, Lofton, Burton, Sauter and Hornaday. Starr runs in the lucky dog position.

Lap 136 Piquet Jr. passes Buescher for fifth

Lap 139 Lofton passes Coulter while Sauter passes Burton

Lap 140 Buescher passes Piquet Jr. back while Kahne passes Peters

Lap 141 Crafton leads Kahne, Peters, Dillon, Buescher, Piquet Jr., Kligerman, Lofton, Coulter, Sauter, Burton and Hornaday. Starr still runs in the lucky dog position.

Lap 142 Sauter passes Coulter for ninth

Lap 143 Sauter passes Coulter for eighth; Piquet Jr. passes Buescher for fifth

Lap 144 Coulter passes Lofton for ninth

Lap 146 Piquet Jr. passes Dillon for fourth

Lap 148 Buescher passes Dillon for fifth; Sauter passes Kligermann for seventh

Lap 150 Crafton leads Kahne, Peters, Piquet Jr., Buescher, Dillon, Sauter, Kligerman, Coulter, Lofton, Burton and Hornaday. Starr still runs in the lucky dog position.

46 to go Kasey Kahne passes Matt Crafton for the lead

40 to go Kahne leads Crafton, Piquet Jr., Peters, Buescher, Dillon, Sauter, Kligerman, Coulter, Burton, Lofton, Hornaday. Starr still runs in the lucky dog position

35 to go Piquet Jr. passes Crafton for second

33 to go Kahne leads Piquet Jr., Crafton, Buescher and Peters

Caution 26 laps to go for debris. David Starr gets the lucky dog to put 13 trucks on the lead lap…..Pit stops…….Kahne leads Piquet Jr., Buescher, Peters, Crafton, Dillon, Sauter, Coulter, Kligerman and Burton off pit road. Piquet Jr. too fast exiting pit road so will need to go to the tail end of the longest line.

Restart 20 to go as Kahne keeps the lead from Buescher

14 to go Kahne leads Buescher, Crafton, Sauter, Peters, Coulter, Kligerman, Dillon, Lofton, Burton, Hornaday, Piquet Jr., Starr. Daykota Armstrong is in position for the lucky dog.

12 to go Dillon passes Kligerman for seventh

10 to go Piquet Jr. passes Hornaday 11th

9 to go Piquet Jr. passes Burton for 10th

8 to go Piquet Jr. passes Lofton for ninth

7 to go Piquet Jr. passes Kligerman for eighth

Kasey Kahne wins over Buescher, Crafton, Saute, Peters, Coulter, Piquet Jr., Dillon, Kligerman, Lofton, Burton.

Unofficial Race Results
Good Sam Roadside Assistance 200, Rockingham Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/truckseries/race.php?race=3
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 5 4 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 0
2 16 31 James Buescher Chevrolet 42
3 8 88 Matt Crafton Toyota 42
4 10 13 Johnny Sauter Toyota 40
5 3 17 Timothy Peters Toyota 40
6 17 22 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 38
7 1 30 Nelson Piquet Jr. Chevrolet 39
8 12 3 Ty Dillon * Chevrolet 36
9 6 29 Parker Kligerman Ram 35
10 19 6 Justin Lofton Chevrolet 34
11 27 27 Jeb Burton * Chevrolet 33
12 22 9 Ron Hornaday Chevrolet 32
13 21 81 David Starr Toyota 31
14 11 98 Dakoda Armstrong * Toyota 30
15 23 32 Miguel Paludo Chevrolet 29
16 29 2 Tim George Jr. Chevrolet 28
17 13 33 Cale Gale * Chevrolet 27
18 15 24 Max Gresham * Chevrolet 26
19 18 92 David Reutimann Chevrolet 0
20 20 9 John Wes Townley * Toyota 24
21 24 275 Caleb Holman* Chevrolet 23
22 32 39 Ryan Sieg Chevrolet 22
23 30 214 Brennan Newberry Chevrolet 21
24 28 23 Jason White Ford 20
25 14 8 Ross Chastain * Toyota 19
26 2 5 Paulie Harraka * Ford 18
27 36 170 Jeff Agnew Chevrolet 17
28 26 202 Tyler Young Chevrolet 16
29 33 93 Chris Cockrum Chevrolet 15
30 35 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet 14
31 7 11 Todd Bodine Toyota 13
32 31 99 Bryan Silas * Ford 12
33 25 7 John King * Toyota 11
34 4 18 Jason Leffler Toyota 10
35 34 7 Johnny Chapman Toyota 9
36 9 60 Grant Enfinger Chevrolet 8