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Joey Logano Earns GameStop Toyota a Top-10 Finish in First Race in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

Joey Logano wanted a good finish on Sunday for several reasons. Not only was he out to prove that his finish of second in the spring race at Martinsville Speedway wasn’t a fluke, but it was also the first race for his regular NASCAR Nationwide Series sponsor, GameStop, in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

And Logano came out of Martinsville Speedway with just what he wanted; a sixth-place finish behind the wheel of the No. 20 GameStop Toyota. It was Logano’s third-straight top-10 finish in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and fourth top-10 in the last five races.

Logano qualified the GameStop Toyota in the 22nd position. However, it didn’t take Logano long to move his way to the front of the field. After falling back on the initial start to 24th, Logano found himself in the top 20 by lap 22 and then found himself in the top 10 by lap 91.

Crew Chief Greg Zipadelli and the entire Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) team continued to improve the car all race long, searching for the perfect balance of a sometimes loose- and sometimes tight-handling car. All of the team’s adjustments seemed to be to Logano’s liking though, as the No. 20 was constantly picking up positions all afternoon noon no matter where he was in the running order.

The GameStop team got behind in the middle portion of the race when a caution brought half of the field to pit road while Joey and the other half stayed out on the track, forcing Logano to restart the race in the 19th position. However, Logano was able to log laps and pick off cars one-by-one, eventually racing his way back into the top 10.

Logan’s biggest detractor during the race was his proficiency for starting on the top-lane during restarts. More times than not, Logano found himself on the outside lane, which wasn’t the preferred line and would often find himself losing several spots on restarts before getting himself inline and back to the low side. However, once on the low side, Logano would start his march back to the front.

Logano once again found himself in the top 10 thanks to a great pit stop by the GameStop crew on lap 386. After restarting 10th, Logano worked his way up to sixth over the race’s final 100 laps, giving him a second and sixth in his last two races at the paperclip-shaped half-mile track.

Denny Hamlin, Logano’s teammate at JGR, earned the victory, while Kyle Busch finished fourth. The sixth-place run for Logano moved him up another position in the Sprint Cup point standings to 17th. He is less than 50 points out of 16th position.

Joey Logano Thoughts:

“I’m really happy with our sixth-place effort, especially with all of the things we had to overcome today. It was great to get GameStop a top-10 finish in their first effort in the Cup Series, and it was cool to see their car on the track. I always have a great time representing them in the Nationwide Series so it was fun to get to do it in the Cup world this weekend.

“We had a really good car. We were just a little tight there early and then had to go back on some of our changes in the middle portion of the race, then we got tight again late. Every time though, Zippy (Crew Chief Greg Zipadelli) would make the right calls and get the car a little bit better. Our biggest problem was getting stuck back there mid-pack when some of us leaders pitted and others didn’t and then also always finding ourselves running in a position that put us on the outside during all of those restarts. The top lane just doesn’t go here, and you always find yourself losing a few spots and working your butt off just to get clear and get down to the bottom. Once we did, we could make those positions up because we had a fast car. But in doing so, you also use your stuff up.

“I think we had a top-five car for sure. I don’t know if it was a winning car, but it was a top-five car. We just used up our stuff there on that last green-flag run. I think if we had a chance to come in and get some tires, we could have been in the top-five. But all-in-all, another top-10 finish is great. That is three in a row for us and two straight here at Martinsville, which I would say isn’t one of my best tracks. So we are headed in the right direction and building up a lot of momentum for the last four races of the season. I’m pretty pumped about it really.”

What’s Next:

The No. 20 GameStop Toyota will return to the NASCAR Nationwide Series in two weeks at Texas Motor Speedway for the O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge on Nov. 6. Texas is the home track for GameStop, which is located just miles away in Grapevine, TX. Logano started first and finished second earlier this year at Texas in the GameStop Toyota.

NASCAR DRIVER CARL EDWARDS TO AUCTION OFF PERSONAL MEMORABILIA

Edwards teams up with Copart .com to Host Auction; Proceeds to Benefit Back2Back Ministries

Concord, N.C. (October 25, 2010) – Copart-sponsored NASCAR driver Carl Edwards has teamed up with Copart, Inc., a leading online vehicle auction company, to auction off Edwards’ personal memorabilia beginning October 25, 2010. By using Copart.com as the sole auction platform, Copart will help Edwards auction off items including his Harley Davidson motorcycle that he won at Road America, a race-used firesuit, the hood of his No. 60 Copart Ford raced in Nashville and an autographed pit crew uniform. Edwards intends to donate all auction proceeds to Back2Back Ministries’ orphan care program based in Monterrey, Mexico.

“Track officials showed us the Harley that would go to the race winner and while Lonnie Clouse of Back2Back Ministries and I were admiring this motorcycle, I told him, ‘if we win this race I will donate this motorcycle to Back2Back Ministries,’ Edwards said. “I started thinking about how to sell the motorcycle – through a raffle or some sort of silent auction – and then it hit me that I have the perfect sponsor – who sells vehicles online – to help us raise money for this charity. It was a case of everything falling into place.”

Copart will use social networking platforms along with other viral marketing tactics to help drive people to the auction and sweepstakes where they can become a Copart.com member for free. Once a member, folks can place their bid on any of Edwards’ memorabilia and enter a sweepstakes with a chance to win one of 500 No. 60 Copart Ford die cast cars.

“This partnership is a humble way for Copart to test its new marketing platform and support Back2Back,” said Todd Guckenberger, director of Back2Back Ministries. “While they promote their auction via their social networking program, they are raising enormous amounts of visibility for our organization.”

The live online auction will take place on Copart.com November 15, 2010, but interested fans can start placing their maximum bids today. Fans are encouraged to visit Copart.com for a chance to own a piece of Carl Edwards’ history.

“We are incredibly proud to be the connecting piece of the puzzle in this campaign to support Back2Back Ministries,” said Jay Adair, CEO of Copart. “The opportunity to serve as the vehicle between Carl Edwards and Back2Back in raising money for this charity is tremendous and demonstrates a core value that we at Copart stand for.”

About Roush Fenway Racing

Roush Fenway Racing is NASCAR’s largest team operating nine motorsports teams. Four in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with drivers Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, Carl Edwards and David Ragan; and five in the Nationwide Series with Edwards, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., Trevor Bayne, Colin Braun, Brian Ickler, and Paul Menard. For more information on any of the Roush Fenway Racing teams, log onto www.RoushFenway.com. Become a fan of Roush Fenway Racing on Facebook by going to http://www.facebook.com/roushfenway and follow us on Twitter @roushfenway. For sponsorship inquiries please contact Robin Johnson at 704.720.4645.

About Copart

Copart, founded in 1982, provides vehicle sellers with a full range of remarketing services to process and sell salvage and clean title vehicles to dealers, dismantlers, rebuilders, exporters and, in some states, to end users. Copart remarkets the vehicles through Internet sales utilizing its patented VB2 technology. Copart sells vehicles on behalf of insurance companies, banks, finance companies, fleet operators, dealers, car dealerships, the general public and others. The company currently operates 147 facilities in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. Salvage vehicles are either damaged vehicles deemed a total loss for insurance or business purposes or are recovered stolen vehicles for which an insurance settlement with the vehicle owner has already been made. For more information, or to become a member, visit www.copart.com.

About Back2Back Ministries

Back2Back Ministries is an international Christian non-profit organization that is dedicated to being a voice for orphans. Since 1996, Back2Back has been impacting the lives of children across the globe, with a focus in Mexico, Nigeria and India. Back2Back exists to transform the lives of orphans and impoverished children in developing countries, by meeting their physical, spiritual, educational, social and emotional needs that they might overcome their life circumstances and break free from the cycle of poverty. Learn more at www.back2back.org.

Surprising and Not Surprising: Martinsville’s Tums Fast Relief 500

In the only short track race of the 2010 Sprint Cup Series Chase, more drivers than not were reaching for the race sponsor Tums during this intense 500 lap dash to claim the grandfather clock.  Here is what was surprising and not surprising from the half mile track affectionately dubbed the “Paper Clip”:

Surprising:  Hendrick Motorsports teammates Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. surprised and delighted the fans in the stands at Martinsville with strong runs, including Martin finishing in the runner up position and Earnhardt in seventh.  Martin was undoubtedly the happiest driver at Martinsville, recovering from a close encounter with the wall on lap 226 to working his way back through the field to finish right behind the race winner. Earnhardt, while taking advantage of some pit strategy and a strong race car, actually led some laps, the first time since March 2008 when he had done so at Martinsville.

Not Surprising:  Although the other two Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon disagreed on the track, they agreed on one thing, their animosity toward the Busch brothers.  Hearkening back to their disagreements at Sonoma earlier in the year, Gordon and Kurt Busch got into it, with Gordon getting the worst of the altercation, resulting in a hard encounter with the wall.  Gordon went on to finish 20th, declaring his championship hopes all but lost.  Johnson and Kyle Busch had their own difficulties, with Busch deeming it a “heated battle” and Johnson admitting that he took advantage of the opportunity to give the other Busch brother the “one-fingered salute.”

Surprising:  While short tracks are known for creating even shorter tempers, the amount of aggression between drivers, especially teammates, was surprising to say the least.  Teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon got into it early, beating and banging for position, causing the original four-time champ to “ask the 48 if he has a spotter.”  Richard Childress Racing and Chase contenders Kevin Harvick and Jeff Burton also got into some on-track pushing and shoving.  While Harvick deemed it “just racing”, Burton begged to differ, saying “I’m a good teammate but I will not put up with him running into me.”

Not Surprising:  Denny Hamlin, typically strong at Martinsville, became only the fifth driver to win at his home track.  Although Hamlin struggled at the start of the race, falling back in the field after starting from the pole, he and his crew kept adjusting on the car throughout the race until the checkered flag flew.  Hamlin won his third straight race and the season sweep at Martinsville, tightening up the championship battle to striking distance to just six points behind leader Jimmie Johnson.  Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammates also finished in the top ten, with Kyle Busch finishing fourth and Joey Logano finishing sixth.

Surprising:   While Greg Biffle traditionally has not run so well on the short track in Virginia, it was surprising just how bad his race day was.  Biffle, starting from the third spot, deemed the day “unfortunate”, having a right-front tire go down, which led to suspension troubles.  Biffle also was penalized twice for pit road altercations, including having his pit crew go over the wall too soon.  In spite of all the troubles, resulting in a 33rd place finish, Biffle put on a surprisingly happy face, saying “We qualified well and practiced well this weekend.”

Not Surprising:  Kasey Kahne, who made headlines with his release from Richard Petty Motorsports, took the wheel of the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota.  Kahne, running continually around his old No. 9 RPM Budweiser Ford now piloted by Aric Almirola, finished with a top-15 run and a hearty welcome from his new pit crew.  Almirola, on the other hand, placed 21st, with his future, as well as the future of RPM, still uncertain.

Surprising:   While most eyes were on the Chase racers, one young up and comer and soon to be Nationwide champion Brad Keselowski had a great short track run.  In spite of a speeding penalty early in the race, Keselowski battled back to get his first top ten finish for the 2010 Cup season.

Not Surprising:   AJ Allmendinger continued to show his strength, in spite of all of the chaos at his Richard Petty Motorsports team.  Allmendinger finished the race in the 12th position, also marking the first time that he had finished all 500 laps at the track.  “After everything this week, I’m just proud of my guys,” Allmendinger said emotionally.

Surprising:  With a surprisingly strong run, in spite of causing a caution at lap 133, Kenny Schrader definitely deserves a “shout out”, as well as an “A” for effort.  Schrader, making a rare Cup appearance in the No. 26 Air National Guard Ford, brought his race car in for a top-20 finish, scoring the 18th position.

Not Surprising:  In spite of the “high stakes, high stress and a very, very small race track,” Carl Edwards admitted that it was “just a good day.” Edwards brought his No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion home in the eighth spot and gained one spot to sixth in the Chase standings.

The Cup Series will compete next, on Halloween no less, at the track that all agree is the wild card in this year’s Chase competition, Talladega Superspeedway.  The seventh race in the 10-race Chase, the Amp Energy Juice 500, will take the green flag on Sunday, October 31 at 1:00 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Hamlin Masters Martinsville

With clear skies over the speedway at Martinsville, Denny Hamlin took both the green and the checkered flags in the top spot. 

“Who said it was over? It isn’t over.” Hamlin jokingly greeted the media post race. After dropping like a rock after starting on the pole, many thought Hamlin’s chances of pulling of the season sweep was slim.

Watching a Chevy dominate race, the bets were on to see if the Gibbs teams would bring their defensive game.

Jeff Burton and teammate Kevin Harvick made excellent bids as the most dominate cars on Sunday. Between them, RCR lead 231 of the 500 laps. Despite being teammates and sharing the domination on the track, the “love” was not being shown in the RCR camp as several times the two were seen bumping, rubbing, and roughing each other up on track.

The surprise of the Tums Fast Relief 500 wasn’t the triumphant victory of Virginia’s “favorite” chaser, but the second place finish of Hendrick driver Mark Martin. The No. 5 team struggled throughout the day. After starting the race in 21st Martin had worked his way into the top 15 before he and AJ Allmendinger got together on lap 227 giving the No. 5 car damage. Battling the odds they fought their way back to finish a solid second.

“We were two laps down and to be honest we were going to finish 28th. So, boy; what an incredible race car, man!” Martin said post race.

All told it was the Gibbs Toyota of Denny Hamlin who stole the glory.  Sunday’s win was the 15th victory of his Sprint Cup Series career, his fourth win at Martinsville (the last three consecutive).  Taking the race win closes the gap between him and Jimmie Johnson to 6 points. They now share the closest margin between first and second with four races remaining since the beginning of the “Chase format era”.

Unofficial Race Results

Tums Fast Relief 500, Martinsville Speedway

October 24, 2010 – Race 32 of 36

http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/Race.asp?Race=32

Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
1 0 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 190 5 500 Running
2 0 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 170 0 500 Running
3 0 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 170 5 500 Running
4 0 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 160 0 500 Running
5 0 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 155 0 500 Running
6 0 20 Joey Logano Toyota 150 0 500 Running
7 0 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 151 5 500 Running
8 0 99 Carl Edwards Ford 142 0 500 Running
9 0 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 148 10 500 Running
10 0 12 Brad Keselowski Dodge 134 0 500 Running
11 0 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 130 0 500 Running
12 0 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 127 0 500 Running
13 0 98 Paul Menard Ford 124 0 500 Running
14 0 83 Kasey Kahne Toyota 121 0 500 Running
15 0 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 118 0 500 Running
16 0 2 Kurt Busch Dodge 115 0 500 Running
17 0 6 David Ragan Ford 112 0 500 Running
18 0 26 Ken Schrader Ford 114 5 500 Running
19 0 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 106 0 500 Running
20 0 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 108 5 498 Running
21 0 9 Aric Almirola Ford 100 0 498 Running
22 0 7 Robby Gordon Toyota 102 5 498 Running
23 0 82 Scott Speed Toyota 94 0 498 Running
24 0 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 96 5 498 Running
25 0 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 88 0 496 Running
26 0 71 Hermie Sadler Chevrolet 85 0 496 Running
27 0 0 David Reutimann Toyota 87 5 494 Running
28 0 19 Elliott Sadler Ford 79 0 474 Running
29 0 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 76 0 473 Running
30 0 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 78 5 455 Running
31 0 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 70 0 442 Running
32 0 34 Tony Raines Ford 67 0 437 Running
33 0 16 Greg Biffle Ford 64 0 432 Running
34 0 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota 66 5 428 Running
35 0 38 Travis Kvapil Ford 58 0 423 In Pit
36 0 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 55 0 418 Running
37 0 37 David Gilliland Ford 52 0 382 Running
38 0 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 49 0 359 Running
39 0 81 J.J. Yeley Dodge 46 0 282 Running
40 0 13 Casey Mears Toyota 48 5 271 Out
41 0 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 40 0 264 Running
42 0 164 Landon Cassill Toyota 37 0 200 Running
43 0 9 Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 34 0 197 Running

Hornaday Records First Career Win at Martinsville Speedway

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 24, 2010) — After a three-week break in the Truck Series schedule, Ron Hornaday was ready to get back to the race track and ready to get back to victory lane. Martinsville Speedway had long proved to be Hornaday’s achilles heel, and in 16 starts at the 0.526-mile oval, the four-time champion had yet to place a mark in the win column. Hornaday brought a new crew chief, Butch Hylton, and more determination than ever this go around at Martinsville. A solid qualifying effort placed the No. 33 team exactly where they needed to be. Biding their time all day, Hornaday was in position when it counted, passing Kyle Busch on lap 196 to take the lead. Hornaday never looked back, winning his first race at Martinsville in a green-white-checkered finish. The win marked Hornaday’s 47th trip to victory lane.

“This is so cool,” said Hornaday in victory lane. “To get a win at Martinsville is awesome. I can’t thank Butch Hylton and the No. 33 truck team enough. We’ve had a tough season and this has to be one of the highlights. We made some big changes at Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) over the break and this is cool that they still believe in the old man and I get to do this. Now I have to figure out where I’m going to put my grandfather clock. This is Martinsville, this is a big win.”

Hornaday began the Kroger 200 from the third position and immediately began to fight for position among the leaders. Once the beating and banging stopped, Hornaday rode in the fourth position until the first caution of the day waved on lap eight. Hornaday reported to Hylton that the truck was pretty good, but had developed a wheel hop. Hornaday added rear brake from inside the cockpit of the No. 33 truck to help the hop. For the restart on lap 14, the top four trucks battled for position, and by lap 17, KHI teammates Kevin Harvick and Ron Hornaday ran one-two. The second caution of the day waved on lap 24. Again, Hylton made the call to stay on the race track, feeling it was too early to take on tires and fuel. Under the third caution period on lap 39, Hornaday made his first scheduled stop of the day and came down pit road for four tires, fuel and an air-pressure adjustment. Half the field had pitted under the previous caution period, leaving Hornaday to restart in the 14th position. Immediately following the stop, Hornaday reported that he was now too tight through the center of the corner. Hylton reminded him to turn on all of his tire fans to try and build up more pressure and help his handling condition. By lap 53, Hornaday had moved back into the top 10.

Hornaday continued to make his way back toward the front of the field as the laps clicked by. The caution waved again on lap 90 and Hornaday reported to the No. 33 team that he was still way too tight. Hylton decided to bring the No. 33 truck back down pit road for four tires, fuel and a wedge adjustment. Following the stop, the team told Hornaday that he was good to go to the end of the race on fuel. Hornaday restarted the race from the 12th position on lap 98. Wasting no time, Hornaday motored up through the field, taking over the third position on lap 111. Minutes later, Hornaday was knocking on Todd Bodine’s bumper for the lead. Even though he was able to catch Bodine, he told the crew he was too tight to pass him. Hornaday continued to work on Bodine for the lead when a string of cautions led to a red flag period on lap 167 to clean up an incident involving Timothy Peters. Following the red flag, Hornaday restarted third behind Bodine and Kyle Busch. As the laps wound down in the 200-lap event, Busch and Hornaday were able to pass Bodine. Hornaday, hungry for a win, knew what he had to do to beat Busch. The caution flag flew again on lap 181. Hornaday restarted on the outside of Busch on lap 186. It was a side-by-side battle between the two drivers as Hornaday made a power move to the outside, and he was able to inch by Busch for the lead. Before Hornaday could complete the pass, the caution waved for the final time on lap 197. NASCAR determined that Hornaday was ahead of Busch at the last timing loop, giving Hornaday the lead for the first time in the race. The race finished under a green-white-checkered, and Hornaday was able to hold off Busch and score his first-career win at Martinsville.

The victory marked Hornaday’s second of the season and 47th in his Truck Series career. Hornaday has now won on 30 different race tracks in his NASCAR career. Following Hornaday across the start/finish line were Busch, Bodine, Jason White and Aric Almirola. The Truck Series returns to action next weekend at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway at 3:30pm, EST.

About Pinnacle Foods:

Pinnacle Foods Group LLC, with offices in Mountain Lakes and Cherry Hill, New Jersey, is a leading producer, marketer and distributor of high-quality branded food products in the frozen foods and dry foods segments. The dry foods segment consists primarily of Duncan Hines® baking mixes and frostings; Vlasic® pickles, peppers and relish; Armour® canned meats; Open Pit® barbeque sauce and Mrs. Butterworth’s® and Log Cabin® syrups and pancake mixes. The frozen foods segment consists primarily of Aunt Jemima® frozen breakfasts; Swanson® and Hungry-Man® frozen dinners and entrees; Van de Kamp’s® and Mrs. Paul’s® frozen seafood; Celeste® pizza; Lender’s® bagels; and Bird’s Eye ® vegetables and dinners.

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 Rallies Back From Brake Issues and Contact to Finish 15th at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 24, 2010) – After demonstrating his truck’s strength in practice and qualifying and leading 35 laps, brake issues and subsequent contact led to a disappointing 15th place finish for Kevin Harvick at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. Harvick experienced brake issues while leading early in the race, then made contact with multiple trucks, which ruined his chances of winning his fourth Truck Series race of the season in the No. 2 Kroger/Tide Chevrolet Silverado.

Harvick qualified fourth for the Kroger 200 after running second and seventh in the first and final practice sessions, respectively. Taking the green flag, Harvick quickly began his move to the front, taking the lead on lap eight before the first yellow flag of the race waved on lap 10 for an accident in turn three. Remaining on the track, Harvick restarted in the lead on lap 15 and maintained the first position through a caution for a spin on lap 26. Opting to remain on the track once again, the race restarted on lap 29 and Harvick continued to pace the field until the yellow flag waved for a spin on lap 41.

Feeling that the truck was turning too loosely in the middle and exit of the corners, Harvick and crew chief David Hyder called for four tires, fuel and a track-bar adjustment. The No. 2 Kroger/Tide Chevrolet restarted in the13th position after several trucks chose not to pit, but Harvick proceeded to march back toward the front when the green flag waved on lap 47. Harvick navigated up to third by the time a caution came out on lap 92, but as the field slowed, he keyed his radio. “I think we’re in trouble, boys,” said Harvick. He informed Hyder that the brakes were fading fast and that the pedal was going to the floor without stopping the truck.

Hyder called Harvick to the pits to take the tape off the grille of the truck, perform a track-bar adjustment and change four tires and fuel. Harvick pumped the brakes on the truck and was unsure if they’d hold out through the remainder of the 200-lap event, but adjusting the brake bias from the back to the front gave Harvick some extra stopping power when green flag racing resumed on lap 99.

Restarting in 16th, the No. 2 initially slid back to 18th, but Harvick was able to advance to seventh before he felt the brakes fading again on lap 127. He earned one more position before the caution would wave for debris 20 laps later. Hyder told his driver that his lap times were still very good and that his brakes were not glowing. Harvick continued to adjust his brake bias from inside the truck to do what he could to preserve his braking ability.

Harvick restarted from the fourth position on lap 155. As the green flag waved, Harvick made contact with the No. 17 of Timothy Peters, and within four laps Harvick felt that he had a flat left-rear tire. Before he could ease the truck to pit road, the flat tire caused Harvick to spin. At the same time, two other trucks collided, bringing out the caution. Harvick brought the No. 2 to pit road for four tires, fuel and to repair the rear bumper bar that had become damaged prior to the spin.

Racing resumed on lap 164 and Harvick was mired in 25th, one lap down. One lap later, Peters made contact with another truck on the restart, causing his own tire to go down, resulting in a damaging spin which brought out the red flag. When racing restarted on lap 174, Harvick was in 24th and one position away from being the free pass beneficiary. Harvick fought for position, taking over 23rd before the caution came out for a spin on lap 183, earning the Lucky Dog which allowed him to return to the lead lap.

Restarting 21st on lap 187, Harvick was on a mission to fight his way back to the front. He maneuvered up to 19th before a multi-truck melee erupted in front of him and the No. 7 of Justin Lofton made contact with him, causing Harvick to spin for the second time, damaging the rear end of the truck. Restarting with four laps remaining in the 18th position, Harvick made it through one final caution on lap 198 for a spin by the No. 24, which set up a green-white-checkered finish and allowed Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) teammate Ron Hornaday to take the checkered flag. Harvick crossed the finish line in 15th.

“I hate it for our Tide ride today, but I’m so happy that we were able to finally get Ron [Hornaday] into victory lane at Martinsville,” said Harvick after the race. “We had some brake issues that put us behind, and you never want to have to come from the back at Martinsville. We had some contact later in the race which made it an eventful day, but that’s all part of it at this track.”

Ron Hornaday earned his first-career victory at Martinsville Speedway and second of 2010, followed by Kyle Busch, Todd Bodine, Jason White and Aric Almirola rounding out the top five. The No. 2 remains fifth in the Owner’s Point Standings, 380 points out of first place.

The Truck Series hits the track again on Saturday, October 30th for the Mountain Dew 250 fueled by Fred’s at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway where Ken Schrader will be behind the wheel of the No. 2 truck. The race can be seen live on SPEED at 3:30 p.m. ET.

Surprising and Not Surprising: Martinsville’s Tums Fast Relief 500

Here is what was surprising and not surprising from the half mile track affectionately dubbed the “Paper Clip”:

Surprising: Hendrick Motorsports teammates Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. surprised and delighted the fans in the stands at Martinsville with strong runs, including Martin finishing in the runner up position and Earnhardt in seventh. Martin was undoubtedly the happiest driver at Martinsville, recovering from a close encounter with the wall on lap 226 to working his way back through the field to finish right behind the race winner. Earnhardt, while taking advantage of some pit strategy and a strong race car, actually led some laps, the first time since March 2008 when he had done so at Martinsville.

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Not Surprising: Although the other two Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon disagreed on the track, they agreed on one thing, their animosity toward the Busch brothers. Hearkening back to their disagreements at Sonoma earlier in the year, Gordon and Kurt Busch got into it, with Gordon getting the worst of the altercation, resulting in a hard encounter with the wall. Gordon went on to finish 20th, declaring his championship hopes all but lost. Johnson and Kyle Busch had their own difficulties, with Busch deeming it a “heated battle” and Johnson admitting that he took advantage of the opportunity to give the other Busch brother the “one-fingered salute.”

Surprising: While short tracks are known for creating even shorter tempers, the amount of aggression between drivers, especially teammates, was surprising to say the least. Teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon got into it early, beating and banging for position, causing the original four-time champ to “ask the 48 if he has a spotter.” Richard Childress Racing and Chase contenders Kevin Harvick and Jeff Burton also got into some on-track pushing and shoving. While Harvick deemed it “just racing”, Burton begged to differ, saying “I’m a good teammate but I will not put up with him running into me.”

Not Surprising: Denny Hamlin, typically strong at Martinsville, became only the fifth driver to win at his home track. Although Hamlin struggled at the start of the race, falling back in the field after starting from the pole, he and his crew kept adjusting on the car throughout the race until the checkered flag flew. Hamlin won his third straight race and the season sweep at Martinsville, tightening up the championship battle to striking distance to just six points behind leader Jimmie Johnson. Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammates also finished in the top ten, with Kyle Busch finishing fourth and Joey Logano finishing sixth.

Surprising: While Greg Biffle traditionally has not run so well on the short track in Virginia, it was surprising just how bad his race day was. Biffle, starting from the third spot, deemed the day “unfortunate”, having a right-front tire go down, which led to suspension troubles. Biffle also was penalized twice for pit road altercations, including having his pit crew go over the wall too soon. In spite of all the troubles, resulting in a 33rd place finish, Biffle put on a surprisingly happy face, saying “We qualified well and practiced well this weekend.”

Not Surprising: Kasey Kahne, who made headlines with his release from Richard Petty Motorsports, took the wheel of the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota. Kahne, running continually around his old No. 9 RPM Budweiser Ford now piloted by Aric Almirola, finished with a top-15 run and a hearty welcome from his new pit crew. Almirola, on the other hand, placed 21st, with his future, as well as the future of RPM, still uncertain.

Surprising: While most eyes were on the Chase racers, one young up and comer and soon to be Nationwide champion Brad Keselowski had a great short track run. In spite of a speeding penalty early in the race, Keselowski battled back to get his first top ten finish for the 2010 Cup season.

Not Surprising: AJ Allmendinger continued to show his strength, in spite of all of the chaos at his Richard Petty Motorsports team. Allmendinger finished the race in the 12th position, also marking the first time that he had finished all 500 laps at the track. “After everything this week, I’m just proud of my guys,” Allmendinger said emotionally.

Surprising: With a surprisingly strong run, in spite of causing a caution at lap 133, Kenny Schrader definitely deserves a “shout out”, as well as an “A” for effort. Schrader, making a rare Cup appearance in the No. 26 Air National Guard Ford, brought his race car in for a top-20 finish, scoring the 18th position.

Not Surprising: In spite of the “high stakes, high stress and a very, very small race track,” Carl Edwards admitted that it was “just a good day.” Edwards brought his No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion home in the eighth spot and gained one spot to sixth in the Chase standings.

The Cup Series will compete next, on Halloween no less, at the track that all agree is the wild card in this year’s Chase competition, Talladega Superspeedway. The seventh race in the 10-race Chase, the Amp Energy Juice 500, will take the green flag on Sunday, October 31 at 1:00 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Martinsville Delivered a Much Needed Top 10 for Dale Earnhardt Jr., Now Eyes Talladega

On Friday at the Martinsville Speedway, Dale Earnhardt Jr. wasn’t a driver who sounded like he was enjoying his job.

In a season that can’t wait to be put behind both himself and his fans (no wins, no Chase bid, and only two top fives and seven top 10s before Martinsville), Earnhardt Jr. said that there was nothing in his team’s performance that makes him optimistic about the rest of 2010 or heading into the 2011 season.

“Even if we run good I would need a little more convincing,” Earnhardt Jr. “We need more than one good run. … If it hadn’t happened all year, I don’t believe anybody believes it will happen the rest of the year.

“We’re going to show up and work hard and try not to give up,” he said.

After 500 laps on Sunday the paperclip it would be strange if Earnhardt Jr. wasn’t just a little convinced and looking forward to the next race. Not only because it’ll come at a track that he’s won at five times, but also because his No. 88 team finally has a little bit of momentum.

And momentum in this sport can go a long way.

Denny Hamlin, who closed the championship lead to within six points of four-time defending champion Jimmie Johnson, won the TUMS Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville. The Chase is first and foremost on everyone’s mind and as such Hamlin and Johnson will continue to earn much attention heading into the final four races of the season.

Elsewhere “Junior Nation” has awoken from their two-year slumber and are ready for their moment in the sun. It took until the second half of the race but their voices were heard loud and clear and for all the right reasons.

Qualifying 28th didn’t set a great tone early in the weekend and neither did a spin in final practice on Saturday.  but Martinsville is one of Earnhardt Jr.’s better tracks and thankfully it’s not where you start, it’s where you finish. In his first career start in Martinsville Earnhardt Jr. hit everything but the pace car, getting his NASCAR short track career off to a rocky start.

The driver has come a long way since then and this has been a place where he’s proven to be a contender. As such it’s sent a strong message that it’s not just restrictor plate tracks he can excel on.

His Martinsville statistics, which were all improved upon Sunday: 21 starts, 10 top 10’s and eight top fives finishes with 758 laps led. That includes a memorable race in 2006 where he drove his then No. 8 Budweiser Chevrolet to a fourth place finish after tearing off the right front fender.

Sunday, Earnhardt Jr. was ran between 10th and 20th the first 150 laps as he battled the likes of Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth. Pit strategy then took him to the top 10 and finally to the lead when he drove around teammate Jeff Gordon on lap 285 who later said that Earnhardt Jr. was doing an awesome job.

“He’s making a race out of it now,” Gordon radioed as Earnhardt Jr. closed in. “He’s going to make a lot of people happy.”

When the caution came out and the leaders came down pit road, the AMP Energy/National Guard team went to work and busted off an 11.7 second pit stop to keep their driver in the lead. Earnhardt Jr. went on to lead 90 circuits, even holding off dominant Jeff Burton through lap 300.

It was Burton’s teammate Kevin Harvick that got the best of Earnhardt Jr. on lap 378 as Earnhardt Jr. then faded throughout the rest of the race.

The radio communication between driver and crew chief Lance McGrew got heated, nothing new, as Earnhardt Jr. tried to understand why the car was reacting differently than it had during the first half of the event.

At the end of the day it was a seventh place finish. Much needed and hard earned and now onto the next one.

Talladega has been circled on many driver calendars; it’s expected to shake up the Chase. But, non-Chase drivers have faired well at the superspeedway and next weekend on Halloween anything can happen. Jamie McMurray and Dale Jarrett each pulled off a victory at the 2.66 mile beast and Earnhardt Jr. wants to get back to victory lane in Alabama for the first time since 2004.

Should it happen it would be his sixth win at the track and Junior Nation is looking at it as potentially their last chance in 2010 for a victory. The No. 88 will be watched very closely by both fans and competitors on Sunday and not just as an expected factor but for a new paint scheme he’ll be sporting.

Earlier this year AMP Energy and director Terry Gilliam paired to produce a short film titled “The Legend of Hallowdega,” which will air Chapter 1 of the story prior to Sunday’s race. David Arquette and Justin Kirk will star as Earnhardt Jr. and Darrell Waltrip make a special appearance.

In connection to the movie Earnhardt Jr. will run a black and yellow “Legend of Hallowdega” car for the AMP Energy Juice 500. A new look, a little momentum from Martinsville, a very special and successful track and a whole lot of fan support can lead to a big weekend at the big track for Earnhardt Jr.

And maybe it’ll help him be more optimistic than he’s been this season.

TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes Martinsville Speedway

Camry driver Denny Hamlin earned his seventh victory of the season in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) race at Martinsville Speedway.  

The win marks the third consecutive victory for the Chesterfield, Va.-native (Oct. 2009 and March 2010) and fourth of his career at the half-mile Virginia oval.  

Hamlin started from the pole and led twice for 40 (of 500) laps in the race.  

The win marked the 11th NSCS win of the year for Toyota and 32nd since joining the series in 2007.  

Kyle Busch (fourth) and Joey Logano (sixth) also finished in the top-10 for Toyota.   Other Camry drivers in the field included Kasey Kahne (14th), Robby Gordon (22nd), Scott Speed (23rd), David Reutimann (27th), Martin Truex Jr. (29th), Marcos Ambrose (34th), Casey Mears (40th), Joe Nemechek (41st) and Landon Cassill (42nd).  

Hamlin cut into Jimmie Johnson’s point lead, but remains second in the unofficial NSCS point standings and trails Johnson by six points after six events in the 10-race 2010 Chase for the Sprint Cup championship playoff.  Busch moved to the fourth position and is now 172 points behind Johnson.

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  1st Have you ever been able to close the gap so fast in a race as you did today? “I don’t think I’ve ever closed that well – ever.  We kept working.  We did not have a race-winning car all day until the very end.  Mike (Ford, crew chief) and those guys just adjusted and adjusted.  The pit crew got me from sixth to third on that last restart and that was the key – bottom line that was the key.  I was just waiting and hoping that the 31 (Jeff Burton) and 29 (Kevin Harvick) would use their stuff up racing each other.  I was just sitting there and sitting there trying to be patient with those rear tires and saved it for the end.  Just a great run by this FedEx team.  I have to thank everyone from Toyota and Joe Gibbs Racing, Coca-Cola, Gillette, FedEx, Sprint for their support and these Martinsville fans – I can’t say enough about them.   This is unbelievable.  I had already counted how many points I was going to be behind after this race.” What happened to your car early in the race when you fell back? “I’m not sure if we had a left-rear tire equalize or what not, but I was very worried.  Everyone saw how far back we were dropping and I thought it was the end of our day.  We kept fighting, kept digging, kept making up spots throughout the day and just had the best car at the end.  I just can’t say enough for everyone who put all the work in to get this done.  This is a come- from-behind victory.” How did you approach the closing laps of the race? “I just tried to be patient.  I knew that the 29 (Kevin Harvick) and 31 (Jeff Burton) were extremely fast all day and they were the class of the field, but all I could do was try to time how many laps I had to run on this set of tires and go from there.” How does it feel to be only six points behind Jimmie Johnson in the points? “It’s a great feeling and what’s a better feeling is being here in front of all these Martinsville fans.  I love everyone here and they’ve always been great to me.  I can’t believe we’re back in victory lane.”

MIKE FORD, crew chief, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing What were your thoughts at the start of today’s race? “To start, it didn’t look too good.  Backed straight up, slowest car on the race track.  After yesterday we kind of chased the racetrack a little bit.  Came in this morning, put a setup in the car very close to what we’ve run here last couple of times.  Looked like we made the wrong decision.  I knew we couldn’t be that far off.  So I figured something was wrong with the car.  Instead of making wholesale changes, we went a little bit more than what we typically would change hoping we saw something with a set of tires coming off.  We certainly did.  We saw a lot of buildup to the left rear, probably four times more than we normally see.   We knew right there if something was going to happen, if it was the race car making it do it again, but we never saw it again all day.  Very fortunate to not panic and lose the race right at the beginning.”

J.D. GIBBS, president, Joe Gibbs Racing How does it feel to have all three Joe Gibbs Racing cars finish in the top-six today? “It was encouraging.  When the race started, it wasn’t going the way we had planned.  I think for our guys just to keep their heads, stay calm, work on it.  Each car had their own issues, but especially the 11 (Denny Hamlin) did a good job making their way back up, doing what you have to do, being conservative on pit calls, but at the same time being wise in how you go about the whole championship hunt.  We’re excited about that.  We’re still in it.  We’re so proud to represent FedEx.  They’re so excited back home in Memphis.  Kind of fun to call those guys and let them hear our excitement here in victory lane.”

KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  4th How do you feel about your finish today? “That was just a good way to run here at Martinsville – one of these places that I struggle at tremendously.  To come out of here with a fourth-place finish – I can finish fourth here – I’ve done that maybe two or three times, but any higher than that, I’m struggling for it.  All these guys on this M&M’s team did a great job.  We were fighting it since we unloaded.  Made a lot of changes to it and tried to make it a lot better and we got it there.  What a race there at the end with 100 laps straight on tires – that made it look like Pensacola (Fla.) in Late Models.” What happened between yourself and Jimmie Johnson? “It’s racing and I felt like I had the faster car than he (Jimmie Johnson) did and he was kind of slowing the center down a little bit.  That’s where I was faster.  I couldn’t get by him on forward bite – he had better forward bite than I did, but if I could just roll my line and just keep rolling around there then I could be faster than him.  I was just getting agitated.  Typical short track fashion – you come down toward the end of the race and he wants to keep his points intact and I want to get up there and run a little bit better and put him further behind from Denny (Hamlin).  There were too many different things going on there.  Jimmie and I – we know how to do it and I didn’t do it rough enough to where I turned him or nothing.  I just tried to give him a little bit, a little bit to try to get by him.  Finally we got by him so it worked out.” Are you pleased with a fourth-place finish? “It was a tie of a best career finish – I’ve done it like three or four times.  Fourth is getting a little tiring, but after a day that we fought there – we’re happy with that.  I’ll take it.  This isn’t one of my best places to begin with, but Dave (Rogers, crew chief) and all these guys on this M&M’s team did a great job.  They gave me a good race car.  We weren’t quite the best out there today – we were slow on the get-go, but it seemed like lap 50 to lap 100 there at the end we were pretty good and we could run those guys down a little bit.  All in all I can’t thank these guys enough.  They kept digging in hard all weekend and we unloaded a little bit off, but Dave and the guys did a nice job.  To bring home a fourth – we’re happy with that.  I have to thank M&M’s, Interstate Batteries and Toyota – everyone that is a big part of this program.” How was your race today? “It wasn’t a bad day.  We really fought a couple things that we made changes with, but overall the guys did a great job from when we unloaded here.  We were a little off, but Dave (Rogers, crew chief) and the guys never gave up on this M&M’s car and they made a lot of changes and got it a lot better.  Real proud of the effort and the way we came out here today.  Pit strategy got us up front and we kind of kept it from there.  We weren’t that great on the beginning of the run – I would fall back a little bit – probably a couple seconds off the lead, but then after about 40 or 50 laps I could start reeling them back in a little bit.  There wasn’t enough of those long runs in there to keep us in the ball game.  Overall a good day for us and we’ll take it.  Everybody wants to ask about points – I chipped away at it, but I’m not chipping very much.” How hard did you have to work in the race? “I was working pretty hard.  Jimmie (Johnson) and I had a heated battle there for a little bit.  I was just trying to get by him.  I knew he was trying to protect his points and he was doing what he needed to do to finish well – as best as he could anyways.  I kept leaning on him and kept leaning on him.  I was faster than him in the center of the corner, but he had better drive off the corner than I did so he could stay in front of me.  Finally once I got by him I seemed to pull away a little bit, but by then it was way too late to go get the front runners.”

JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 GameStop Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  6th

KASEY KAHNE, No. 83 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  14th How did you feel about your first race with Red Bull Racing Team? “We made some gains.  Really learned a lot about the program.  Feel like next week it’s going to be better.  And the following week it’s going to be better.  And we’ll just keep going after it.  Engine ran great.  Car ran good.  Everybody put out a good effort, and we got the best spot we could today.”

ROBBY GORDON, No. 7 Extenze Toyota Camry, Robby Gordon Motorsports Finishing Position:  22nd

SCOTT SPEED, No. 82 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  23rd

DAVID REUTIMANN, No. 00 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  27th How was your race today? “That really wasn’t how I thought our day was going to end.  We started out so strong and had a really good Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota early in the race, but as the race went on things got a little crazy.  There were cars trying different pit strategy that shuffled the field and we had some guys driving pretty aggressive and just a lot of hard nosed short track racing.  We fell victim to a combination of factors that put us in the wrong place at the wrong time and it cost us.  It’s a pretty disappointing day, but I’m really proud of my team.  We had great pit stops early in the day to help us gain track position and the guys did a great job getting the car back out after it got messed up.  Not the best day, but we’ll take what we can from it and head to Talladega next weekend and try to have a better day then.”

MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  29th How has bad luck impacted your season? “This season certainly has not gone the way we wanted. I guess we’re getting all the bad luck out of the way now.  We just need to keep our focus and get better as a team for next year and run for a Chase spot.  It was tough out there today.  We weren’t very good at the start, but Pat (Tryson, crew chief) made a big change on our third stop and the NAPA Toyota started to get better. Unfortunately it wasn’t long until our problems started.  It’s hard to tell what we could have done out there.  We just need to get a little luck on our side.”

MARCOS AMBROSE, No. 47 Dollar General Country Million Sweepstakes Toyota Camry, JTG-Daugherty Racing Finishing Position:  34th

CASEY MEARS, No. 13 GEICO Toyota Camry, Germain Racing Finishing Position:  40th

JOE NEMECHEK, No. 87 Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Finishing Position:  41st

LANDON CASSILL, No. 64 Little Joe’s Auto Toyota Camry, Gunselman Motorsports Finishing Position:  42nd

CHEVY NSCS AT MARTINSVILLE TWO: Johnson Holds Points Lead-Post Race Press Conference Transcript

Team Chevy Driver Jimmie Johnson Maintains Point Lead with Four Races To Go in Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

Kevin Harvick Closes in to Within 62 points of Overall Lead with Solid Martinsville Run

Martinsville, Va. (October 24, 2010) – Four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet, held on to the overall points lead in the Sprint Cup Series championship standings despite a furious challenge from two other contenders today.  With four races remaining Johnson’s lead is now just six points over Denny Hamlin, and 62 over Kevin Harvick, driver of the Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet.

Several Chevrolet drivers led 410 laps in the race today taking their overall total laps led in the series to 200,080 since 1949.    

Harvick was the surprise of the day after qualifying in 36th position on Friday, he torched the field and stormed to the lead by lap 172 of the 500 slated for Sunday’s TUMS Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway.  Harvick led a total of 97 laps before finishing third in today’s race and slicing a bit into Jimmie’s lead. 

Johnson never led today, but was hardly ever outside the top-five running order.   Their car was a bit off from the start and they never could quite get the grip they needed to make a charge for the lead.  But Johnson was strong enough to score his 15th top-five of the 2010 season and keep the competition at bay.

Driver of the No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet, Jeff Burton, looked to have one of the strongest cars all day, but fought a loose condition late in the race and faded to ninth after leading a race-high 134 laps. He now sits eighth in the standings, up two positions.

Dale Earnhardt Jr., No. 88 AMP Energy/National Guard Chevrolet, thrilled the crowd by taking the lead at lap 285 and stayed on the point for a total of 90 laps but lost the handle and became too tight after the final pit stop before finishing seventh.

Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Dupont/National Guard Families Appreciation Chevrolet, recovered from contact with the wall after being spun by another car at lap 386 to finish in 20th position.  Gordon had a strong run in today’s race leading 56 laps.  He fell one position in the overall points from fourth to fifth.

Tony Stewart, No. 14 Office Depot Chevrolet, finished 24th after suffering a flat tire late in the race and falls one spot to seventh in the overall standings while Clint Bowyer, No. 33 BB&T Chevrolet was involved in a single car accident early in the race at lap 193 and returned to the track after lengthy repairs in the garage and finished 38th in today’s race.  He remains in 12th position in the Chase standings.

Denny Hamlin (Toyota) was the race winner. Kyle Busch (Toyota) completed the top-five finishers.

The series moves next to the biggest track, Talladega Superspeedway on October 31,2010.

POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPTS:

MARK MARTIN, NO. 5 EBAY MOTORS/GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET – Finished 2nd

KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 SHELL/PENNZOIL CHEVROLET – Finished 3rd

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET – Finished 5th

            KERRY THARP:  Let’s roll right into our post race for today’s race.  Our third place finisher, currently third in points, is Kevin Harvick.  He drives the No. 29 Shell Pennzoil Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing.

            Kevin, you have to be pleased with your performance out there today.  You contended for the win.  You sliced 15 points off of Jimmie Johnson’s lead.

            KEVIN HARVICK:  That’s what we have to do.  Coming into this race, no one gave us a chance to even run anywhere towards the front.  So it’s nice to come here, get the finishes we feel like we deserve, that we’ve run well over the last few years, just hadn’t got the finishes to show for it.

            Great day for us.  Everybody did a great job on pit road and in the pits, doing everything they had to do to keep the car up front.

            KERRY THARP:  Questions for Kevin.

            Q.  Kevin, Denny just said that he was watching you and Jeff go after each other, hoping you used up your stuff.  Does the thought process ever enter into your mind as teammates not to use each other up?

            KEVIN HARVICK:  I didn’t see any bent fenders or contact, so I think it was fine.

            Q.  Kevin, how close were you to hitting that home run you said you probably needed to hit on Friday?

            KEVIN HARVICK:  We came pretty close.  I mean, coming here and getting our first top five, beating the 48, being in contention to win was pretty close to a home run.

            Q.  Kevin, we heard what you said on TV about Bowyer’s pit crew.  Talk about how that went today?  Did that make you more relaxed?

            KEVIN HARVICK:  Yeah, I didn’t have any to do’s with how it all went down or anything like that.  That was something that they handled internally at the shop.

            Clint is obviously doing everything he can to try to help us win the championship.  It’s just unbelievable the stops that those guys had on pit road today.  Makes life a lot easier.

            Q.  What was going on with you and Burton?  At some point you have to look at the big picture, say we don’t need to be doing this, just worry about the points?

            KEVIN HARVICK:  We were just racing.

            KERRY THARP:  Thank you, Kevin.  Congratulations.  See you at Talladega.

            Our race runner up is Mark Martin.  He drives the No. 5 eBay Motors Go Daddy.com for Hendrick Motorsports.  I can tell you from watching this race, folks here in this media center, what a performance you put on there today with a car that was pretty tore up.

            MARK MARTIN:  Yeah, lap 30 I started overheating my brakes, started having to baby them.  I thought there was no possible way we were going to run 500 laps.  At lap 150, 175, I thought, Oh, my goodness, it’s going to be a long, long day.

            Then we had all the stuff tear up.  I never really have much enjoyed this place, to be real honest with you.  But that last hundred laps was fun.  I’ve had guys pass me and I wondered how in the world they did that.  Now I see how.  What an incredible racecar that Alan Gustafson and everyone gave me.  Really good looking paint job with eBay Motors onboard.

            Really a great time, great recovery from two laps down.  I really want to thank my teammates and everyone at Hendrick Motorsports for supporting us through a really tough summer.  We’ve turned it around with some good runs.  Hopefully we can continue to do that.

            KERRY THARP:  Certainly a great performance out there from you today.

            Also joining us up at the podium is our currently points leader and four time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series defending champion, Jimmie Johnson.  He comes in fifth in today’s race.  He holds a six point lead after today’s race here at Martinsville.

            Jimmie, talk about your performance out there.  You kind of gutted it out and still are the points leader heading into Talladega.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Good top five finish today.  We certainly wanted to finish higher.  But it’s over and done with.  It is what it is.  Top five is something would have been a good goal coming in here this weekend.  We’re rolling into Talladega.  We all know what can happen there.

            Happy to still be leading.  Wish the margin had gone the other way.  Denny won the race, closed it up.  We’ll buckle down, go to work the next four.

            KERRY THARP:  We’ll take questions for Mark or Jimmie.

            Q.  Jimmie, Denny was talking all week about his strategy, the pressure was on you.  What is your feeling after seeing him do what he did, backing up what he said?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I really felt like he had a chance to win the race here.  You can’t argue with stats.  The speed that he and that team have had here over the years.

            Did a good job of stepping up to all the talk.  He did a great job today.  For a long time I thought the 29, the 11 and us were going to finish in sequential order.  We were around each other all day long.  That last stop at the end, those guys found a little something and got going.

            A lot of racing left.  We’ll see.

            Q.  Season high number of cautions today, but didn’t get one at the end.  Were you surprised there wasn’t?  You could have used one.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yes, with how often we get cautions when guys blow a tire and end up into the fence.  Once the first two or three had gone by and we didn’t have a caution, I was glad to not see one, although it would have helped me.  I just felt it was fair that point.  If you didn’t throw it for the first couple, guys were blowing them, no sense in throwing them now.  NASCAR stuck to their plan on this and wanted it to finish under green.

            Some weekends the smallest piece of debris will bring out a caution.  This week you have seven or eight cars blowing a front tire up at the wall, we don’t get one.  I’m not complaining about it.  I wasn’t counting on getting one.  We made or bed and finished fifth today because we didn’t have the car we needed on the long haul.  It’s not that I’m blaming my finish on anything.

            It is odd sometimes.

            Q.  Mark, Denny said in Victory Lane that he had never closed that well before.  Had you ever had a closer rate like you had at the end of the race?

            MARK MARTIN:  Not in Cup.  In Nationwide, Busch races, some short track late models.  That baby was rolling.  That last 50 laps was unbelievable.  Man, that was fun.  I love long green flag racing.  I don’t like these 10 lap sprints, all that crazy junk.  I love long runs.  When I don’t have a good car and we get a long run, we suffer miserably.  When we have a great racecar like California or here, that’s to me what racing is all about and always has been.

            Q.  Jimmie, you just talked about didn’t have the car you needed on the long haul.  Certainly this race going green the last 100 laps is a rarity here.  That catch you off guard?  With the history here with the cautions, were you more set up for a short run at the end?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  In the past I’ve always been really good here on the long runs.  In the past we’ve worked more on the short runs.  Got beat a few times on the short run stuff.

            Today the trend of our car was very quick at the beginning, would fall off, get tight as the run would go on.  It didn’t really change much about all the adjustments we made to the car all day long.

            It did hurt us with it staying green.  Typically it’s good for me when it stays green, but it was just circumstances today.  Last night, we overadjusted a little bit.  I’m just as responsible, probably more responsible than anyone.  Yesterday the way we needed to get the car in the track and working was far different than what we had seen here in the past for our setups.  That’s what brought our car around yesterday at the end of practice.

            We started with it stowed, spent a lot of the day backing out of the stuff we did last night to the car.  I’ll take the blame on that.  Just happy we got a good finish out of it.

            Q.  You said last week at Charlotte, Jimmie, that Talladega is always your worry in the Chase.  Having your points lead cut today here, is it hard not to feel that sense of dread going to that track next?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  36, whatever it was, 41, whatever it was.  That’s not a huge amount.  You hate to see it vanish.  I’m really trying to not be emotionally attached to things until we get out of Talladega.  So much can happen at Talladega.  Last year, Mark, catch me in the points, right there with me on the points, I’m running sixth on the track, he’s running seventh coming to the checkered flag, his car gets hit, he gets hit, he is upside down.  I’m just one spot ahead of him.  I finish the race, get a bunch of points.

            MARK MARTIN:  The race is on after Talladega.  Nobody knows what’s going to happen.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Not getting involved.  Not worrying.  Three races left after that.  If we’re close, we’ll race like hell.

            Q.  Mark, how do you judge a finish like this?  Are you happy to see the improvement or do you dwell on the season saying we should have been running like this all year?

            MARK MARTIN:  I hadn’t thought about that.  Pretty dang happy.  That’s what I did think about, definitely.  You know, it’s not a gimme.  You don’t get this stuff.  You’re not owed it.  You’re lucky if it happens.  That’s the way I look at it.  I feel darn lucky to have been in that seat today.

            Q.  You said you really haven’t had a lot of fun at this track.  Can you talk specifically about what happened today?

            MARK MARTIN:  With a hundred to go, we were 20th or something like that, 111 to go.  We drove to second.  Why wouldn’t that be fun?  I’m used to people passing me.  I was passing good cars the way they usually do me here.  I never could figure out how they did that.  Now I know.  When the car was working like mine was working today, that was really fun.  We had a spectacular racecar at the end.  Seemed to get better throughout the race.  We had to run it harder.  We weren’t running it real hard before we got wrecked and tore up, lost the laps we lost.  We had a flat tire under the green and lost two laps, too.  But we had time to get them back.

            Great success for us.

            Q.  Mark, you say you had a great car.  Those closing laps we saw so many cars fall off.  What adjustments did you make to be there at the end and come on strong while others were falling off?

            MARK MARTIN:  Car just got better.  The only thing we did was raise the track bar two rounds today and took half a wedge out.  Over the course of 500 laps, the car was mediocre at the start of the race and spectacular at the end.  The adjustments weren’t what made the car spectacular.  I think the racetrack just came to us.  We had a good setup in the car for the racetrack when it was rubbered up in the second half of the race.

            KERRY THARP:  Mark, thank you.  Super performance.

            MARK MARTIN:  Thank you, guys.

            Q.  Jimmie, what was the issue with the draft shaft cover?  Why did NASCAR ask you to replace it?  Any fear there might be any penalty involved with that?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I don’t know what you’re speaking about, to be honest with you.  Is this before or after?

            Q.  Before.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I don’t have a clue.  Not my job, man, as Juan would say.

            Q.  I think everybody expected you and Hamlin to do well here because you have such a great track record here.  Were you a little bit surprised how well he did, making this a three man Chase?  Could he be figured the favorite because of his success at Talladega?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Coming into the Chase I definitely felt like the 29 was the favorite with the speed they showed on all types of tracks.  Didn’t matter, short track, big track, those guys did a great job.  They got off to a good start.  We thought it would be a bit stronger of a start.  They’re on it, they’re not slouches.  They ran great here.  There’s been an RCR car always fast at this track.  The 31, the 29, the 33 at times.  I felt like all three RCR cars would be quick here, including the 29, and they were.

            I almost fell into a sense of security today where the 29, the 11 and us were all like a third, sixth place car.  We stayed together most of the day.  The last stop at the end, those two both got going.  We just didn’t go anywhere.

            Wish that was different on our case.  But I can’t remember what you really asked me.  I know I answered the 29 part.

            Q.  With Harvick’s success at Talladega, is he considered the favorite now?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Kevin’s done a great job at those big tracks.  Man, you can make all the right moves and something out of your control happens.  We’ll just have to see what happens.  I know he’s going to be a great threat.  Have to naturally think the 1 car is going to be strong there.  The Gibbs cars are strong on those big tracks.  We’ll roll the dice and see what happens.

            Q.  You spent a lot of time nose to tail with the 18.  That got heated.  Can you talk about that a little bit.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah.  I was doing all that I could to hang on to the position I was in and the points that came along with that.  Worked me over from time to time.  Never really got inside of me.  Then the contact started.  That’s fine.  I get it.  Especially in the center of the corner off the turn, that’s not a problem.  Then I got hit a couple times going into the turn.  That’s when I thought it was uncool.  Showed him the one finger salute a few times.  It was more me letting him know I was pissed.  He mellowed out.

            Once he got back to me, got back inside of me.  I knew he was just racing hard.  I had to show him I was not happy getting hit going in the turn.  Left in the lane, raced hard side by side.  He went on his way, that was that.

            I had a prime opportunity if I really felt like what he was trying to do was unfair, I could have dumped him if I wanted to.  That wasn’t the case.  He was just racing hard.  I was expressing my frustration with getting hit going into the turn, and that was that.

            We had a good talk after the race.  Everything’s good.

            Q.  Jimmie, if you and Denny and Kevin come out of Talladega similarly close as you are now, who has the edge in the last few races?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  There’s no way I can answer that.  It’s going to be one helluva race.  I can promise you that, though.

            Q.  Obviously you have teammates, Denny has teammates.  I assume Charlotte was trying to keep you from getting another five points.  I assume that’s going to be the problem at Talladega.  In other words, it’s not just you racing the other two guys.  You’re racing two other teams, whether it’s Clint Bowyer or Jeff Burton or something like that.  Is that just natural, you understand that, or is that something your spotter has to remind you of?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  No, I’m certainly aware of that.  At Charlotte I didn’t think that    Kyle was just trying to finish second.  He didn’t do anything wrong.  He was running as hard as he could.  He wasn’t mirror driving me.  I had zero issues there.  That was just racing hard.

            Today, I mean, I was totally fine with it until I started getting hit going into the turn.  That’s a big no no.  If you want to move someone out of the way, contact center of the turnout, but you get hit going in, that gets people’s attention.

            Q.  Is that Denny’s teammate trying to take five points.

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  If he handled the situation differently, yes.  If he went in there and blasted me out of the way, yeah.  But, you know, it was short track racing.  There’s a line there that I guess we recognize as drivers.  Kyle just did his job to finish as good as he could at Charlotte, and it was short track racing here.

            But that is a concern.  If it does cross that line, that’s not cool.  I’ll do my best to make sure to show it.

            Q.  Jimmie, Chad came over the radio when you asked for more front grip and said he couldn’t do much else, it was in your hands.  How do you feel you did with what you did or didn’t have?  Did you adjust the way you drove to try to stay as competitive as you could?

            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I did.  I’m not going to stop trying things in the car, searching for different lines, different techniques with the steering wheel and the brake and all that stuff.

            Oddly enough, we came in the next pit stop.  We found something.  Went back on some adjustments.  Found some speed, the car was faster.

            I know it’s tough for him on the pit box, sitting there working adjustments, feel like you’re boxed into a corner, can’t do anything.  After he had some time to think about it, he found me a little more.

            KERRY THARP:  Jimmie, thanks a lot.  Good luck at Talladega.

     FastScripts by ASAP Sports

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