Sunday, November 23, 2014

LASTCAR EXTRA: One year later, Erik Davis and Always Evolving Racing drive in memory of team co-founders Paul Walker and Roger Rodas

Erik Davis and his Always Evolving Racing
Ford Mustang at Sonoma, 2014
SOURCE: Brock Beard
This past August at the Sonoma Raceway, I had the opportunity to cover the Pirelli World Challenge Series, a multi-divisional sports car series which runs 50-minute sprint races on road courses all across the country.  Parked in the series paddock near the entrance to Turn 7 were an eclectic collection of factory teams and independents who drove everything from the Ferrari 458 GT3 to the Kia Optima.

At the far end of all this, a single teal-and-white Mustang sat beneath a tent.  In front of the car was a blue fuel container with the name “Vin Diesel” scrawled on a strip of orange tape.  It was a peculiar sight, but not after noticing the logo on the reflective surface of the team’s hauler: Always Evolving Racing.

Predominately a tuner shop, Always Evolving began in the 1990s as Autobahn Exotics, established by Rich Taylor and his good friend, actor and producer Paul Walker.  Financial difficulties with the shop led Walker to Roger Rodas, a financial advisor and aspiring racer.  The two became close friends, and the team’s name was changed.

As part of Always Evolving’s reorganization, Rodas introduced Walker to Erik Davis, an SCCA racer, and in late 2012, the three planned to enter the World Challenge Series.  Walker’s film contracts prohibited him from competing, so Rodas and Davis would drive the team’s two cars in 2013.  They would run Mustangs as both had collected several older models over the years.

The two enjoyed a successful first season.  In a field of 45 entrants in the GTS division, Rodas came home 13th in points with Davis in 16th.  Rodas earned the team’s best finish - a 5th at Toronto.  All of this was accomplished without factory support.

“It’s definitely not a factory team,” said Davis during our interview.  “We’re effectively Ford customers.  We do enjoy some on-track support.  Ford comes here, as you know, there’s a lot of Mustang teams in the World Challenge, and so there’s factory representatives that are here.  But, you know, Ford’s here to sell cars and sell parts, so ultimately we’re a customer of Ford’s.  They do provide us some crash damage parts and stuff like that on a sponsorship basis, but not a factory effort by any means.”

On Saturday, November 30, 2013, Always Evolving was gearing up for an even better 2014 campaign.  That day, Rodas' #52 Mustang was on display at the shop as part of the their monthly car meet and charity drive.  Tragically, less than a mile away, Rodas and Walker would lose their lives in a single-car accident.  With so much said of Walker, I asked Davis about how he remembered Rodas:

“What I can tell you is Roger was one of my best friends on the earth.  He was a caring individual.  There’s probably a lot of people that would’ve said he was one of their best friends, which is a pretty interesting fact that very few people can actually say about another person.  He had a significant impact on a lot of people’s lives in a very positive way.  He was a loving father and a great husband and a tremendous businessman, and very astute, and I miss him a lot.”

In the media frenzy that followed, Davis stayed out of the public eye.  As Always Evolving’s last surviving co-founder, the responsibility was his to determine the team’s future.  He chose to keep the team going, moving out of Rodas’ shop in Valencia to his in Burbank, and again prepared to enter two cars in the World Challenge Series.  Belgian driver David Sterckx was tabbed to drive Rodas’ #52 while Davis remained in the #75, both in the same teal-and-white colors.  To honor both men, the team also continued its charitable relationships with the Mustard Seed Ranch and Dream Rides 4 Kids.

“For me personally,” said Davis, “it was important that we pay tribute, you know, to both Paul and Roger, and we did that in different ways for both of them.  In Roger's case, it's very visual and you can see it, and in Paul's case it's in more of an insider manner in which we did it.  We didn't ever want to appear like we're exploiting Paul or his name or anything along those lines, and ultimately, we wanted to respect his family's wishes.”

Sonoma was the next-to-last round of the 2014 World Challenge season.  When talking with Davis about how his season went, I was reminded of the struggles I’ve seen other teams face in my coverage of NASCAR.  In 1993, Alan Kulwicki lost his life in a plane crash less than five months after winning the series championship.  As an owner-driver, Kulwicki had made preparations for Jimmy Hensley to drive if such were to ever happen.  But the team still faced serious challenges as the rest of the staff tried to reorganize.

“We started out the season later than we would’ve liked based on, you know, the circumstances that occurred in November, so we started the season a little behind the 8-ball when you look at purely the racing effort.  Went into St. Pete, which is the first race of the season, and my car was totaled. . .We had David (Sterckx) and a spare that wouldn’t have been ready by Long Beach.  We elected to buy another car and engineer that for ourselves going to Long Beach.  And then we went into Long Beach two weeks later and David’s car was totaled in the first lap of Long Beach.  So, you know, tough way to start the season obviously.  We were forced to take a race off and ultimately got two cars ready.  So we own four cars currently, four Mustangs.  Three are race-ready, one is close to race-ready, although it will probably be kept inside the stable as a personal car for me, and once the season’s over, it’ll be retired.”

But, like Kulwicki’s team, Always Evolving has found a way to keep going, thanks in no small part to Davis’ efforts and the work of a close-knit crew.  On the Friday I spoke with him, Davis was called away for several meetings, and he is currently preparing for 2015.

“So, you know, as far as this season goes, we definitely didn’t achieve all of the things we wanted to achieve in the sense that we’re not gonna win a championship - that’s what every race team wants - but we did come out here and I feel represented the brand well.  We kept the brand alive.  We paid tribute to our two fallen friends, and ultimately created what I see as an opportunity to move forward with the brand in a much bigger way going into 2015 and into the future.  You’re gonna start to see some very interesting news coming out and we’re pretty proud of what we’ve been able to put together this year.”

In the second race at Sonoma, Davis finished 9th in the GTS division, his best finish of 2014.

Monday, November 17, 2014

CUP: Tony Stewart Last As Stewart-Haas Racing Bookends Homestead Field

SOURCE: NASCAR Media
Tony Stewart picked up the 6th last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway when his #14 Bass Pro Shops  / Mobil 1 Chevrolet fell out with crash damage after he completed 182 of the race’s 267 laps.

The finish was Stewart’s second of 2014 and his first since the spring race at Talladega, 26 races ago.  Stewart was one of 25 different last-place finishers in 2014, the most in a single Cup season since 2008, which had 27.  The modern-era record remains 29, set in 2002.

Stewart’s struggles worsened after the Talladega race.  A 7th in the June race at Dover, scene of his most recent win the year before, was Stewart’s first top-ten finish in five races, and he would not snare another until Loudon, six races after that.  19th in points heading into August’s race at Watkins Glen, frustrations gave way to tragedy when Stewart was involved in a tragic on-track accident that claimed the life of dirt track racer Kevin Ward, Jr.  Stewart sat out the next three races, and while he was given a chance to win his way into the Chase, he finished just 41st at Atlanta and 15th at Richmond.

In The Chase itself, Stewart qualified inside the Top Ten four times, but with the exception of a 4th-place run at Martinsville after a late-race battle with eventual winner Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Stewart only gained back one of the points positions he lost in his three-race absence, moving to 25th that afternoon.  After a 20th-place finish at Phoenix, where his driver Kevin Harvick dominated on his way to a championship-round-earning win, Stewart looked to Homestead, scene of his third career victory in 1999, to give him his first win of the season.

When practice opened on Friday, Stewart timed in 32nd in the opening session and improved to only 28th in qualifying with an average speed of 178.024 mph.  As his driver Harvick continued to fine-tune his championship machine, Stewart still struggled to find speed on Saturday, running 25th in Saturday’s morning practice and 26th in Happy Hour.  Stewart was one of only 43 drivers to attempt to make the season finale, so every driver on the list secured a spot in Sunday’s field.

Starting last Sunday was Brett Moffitt, making his seventh start of his abbreviated rookie season with new sponsorship from X8 Energy Gum on Identity Ventures Racing’s #66.  However, just seconds before the green flag, Michael Annett made an unscheduled stop in his #7 Pilot / Flying J Chevrolet and had to hustle down the backstretch to catch the back of the field.

Annett and Moffitt exchanged the 43rd spot in the early laps along with Blake Koch, the newly-crowned 2014 LASTCAR Nationwide Champion, making his first Cup start since Charlotte last month.  Annett was the first driver to lose a lap around Lap 13, the same lap Koch stayed out under caution to lead a lap before falling back, and Koch re-took the 43rd spot o Lap 49.  He didn’t hold it for long as Annett fell four laps off the pace, holding off Moffitt, who brought out two consecutive cautions for banging the wall on Laps 59 and 87.

Homestead’s traditionally low attrition created a surprising Bottom Five.  On Lap 119, with all 43 cars still running and much of the back half of the field only a few laps down to the leaders, 5th-place Kyle Busch broke an axle leaving pit road and took his #18 M&M’s Toyota behind the wall.  Just five laps later, Busch had slipped to last, a spot he held by a large margin when he returned on Lap 143, 24 laps in arrears.  Then on Lap 163, Greg Biffle lost the right-front tire on his #16 3M Ford, dropping him to 42nd by Lap 168 and to last on Lap 185.  By that time, the damaged #99 Fastenal Ford of Carl Edwards dropped to 39th.  But on Lap 189, Edwards was passed for the spot by Stewart, who apparently also tagged the wall and pulled his car to the garage.  By 55 laps to go, Stewart was officially listed as the race’s first retiree, and when Biffle returned to the track, Stewart took the 43rd spot on Lap 230.  He would not relinquish the spot.

While the finish ended Stewart’s streak of 15 consecutive seasons with at least one win, Kevin Harvick went on to win the race - and the championship - and a plain-clothed Stewart greeted him on the stage.

Finishing 42nd on Sunday was Trevor Bayne, whose final start for the Wood Brothers ended when a brake line ruptured with 60 laps to go.  Biffle climbed to 41st while Busch made it to 39th, both of them still limping around the track when the checkered flag fell.  Finishing between the two in 40th was A.J. Allmendinger, who recovered from a spin on Lap 156 to get the Lucky Dog on Lap 195.  On Lap 237, Allmendinger was still on the lead lap and near the Top 20 when his #47 Hungry Jack / Martha White Chevrolet suddenly snapped loose and crashed in Turn 1.

Finishing 32nd on Sunday was Josh Wise, who in his first full season driving for Phil Parsons Racing did not finish last a single time in 2014.  It was a tremendous accomplishment for the entire PPR team, which had won four of the last five LASTCAR championships and finished last 38 times in the 180 races run in that stretch - more than 1 finish for every 5 races.  At season’s end, Wise had just eight bottom-five finishes - only three more than Jimmie Johnson.

Michael McDowell, PPR’s driver for three of those titles, also showed improvement.  He finished the year with just one last-place finish in his first full season driving for Leavine Family Racing (Las Vegas).  Driving a #95 Ford carrying all the sponsors the team gathered in 2014, McDowell came home 21st at Homestead, his best finish since an 18th at Bristol in August.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for both Stewart and the #14 in a Cup race at Homestead.  It’s also the first for Chevrolet in this event since 2005, when Brian Vickers’ #25 GMAC / ditech.com Chevrolet crashed after 82 laps.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #14-Tony Stewart / 182 laps / crash
42) #21-Trevor Bayne / 204 laps / crash
41) #16-Greg Biffle / 220 laps / running
40) #47-A.J. Allmendinger / 235 laps / running
39) #18-Kyle Busch / 246 laps / running

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Mike Bliss (5)
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Landon Cassill, Timmy Hill, Clay Rogers, Tony Stewart (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Alex Bowman, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing, #93-BK Racing (5)
2nd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #40-Hillman Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
3rd) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #23-BK Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Chevrolet (15)
2nd) Toyota (14)
3rd) Ford (7)

N’WIDE: Jeff Green Scores 65th Last-Place Finish In Final Nationwide Series Race

SOURCE: @TriStarRaceTeam
Jeff Green picked up the 60th last-place finish of his NASCAR Nationwide Series career in Saturday’s Ford EcoBoost 300 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway when his #91 Heroes Behind The Camo / SupportMilitary.org Toyota fell out with a vibration after he completed 3 of the race’s 206 laps.

The finish was Green’s seventh of the 2014 season and his first since Kentucky, six races ago.  He came just one finish short of tying teammate and 2014 LASTCAR Nationwide Champion Blake Koch, who ended Green’s three-year reign as champion two weeks ago at Texas.  Koch finished 22nd on Saturday when he ran TriStar’s fully-funded #44 Celsius Flo Fusion Toyota.  It is Green’s 65th last-place finish across all three of NASCAR’s top divisions, most of all drivers, and he now leads second-place driver Joe Nemechek by 16 finishes.  The finish also came in Nationwide’s final race as title sponsor of the series, a relationship which began at Daytona on February 16, 2008 when the soon-to-be-dominant last-place team MSRP Motorsports trailed its first field with veteran driver Steve Grissom.

Green was one of 45 cars on the entry list for Homestead.  He was giving TriStar’s #91 its first start since Charlotte, three races ago, as the team shuffled its drivers to allow Ross Chastain to run a watermelon-colored #10 for a full-race effort.  Blake Koch also was set to make his tenth start of the season in TriStar’s #44 Toyota, this time sponsored by Celsius Flo Fusion.  With Eric McClure back in the #14 and Mike Bliss rounding out the season in the #19, this left Green in the “start-and-park” #91.

Green did not participate in Friday’s opening practice session, then timed in 42nd-fastest of 45 in Happy Hour, beating fellow “go-or-go-homer” Ryan Ellis in The Motorsports Group’s persistent #46 Chevrolet.  Green dispatched with Ellis four others in qualifying by snaring the 34th spot on the grid with an average speed of 160.123 mph.  Sent home with Ellis were Kevin Lepage in Mike Harmon’s #74, past LASTCAR record holder Derrike Cope in the #70, John Jackson in the #72 James Carter entry, and Martin Roy’s #90 Gamache Truck Center / Cote Chevrolet fielded by Mario Gosselin.

In the race itself, Tanner Berryhill started 40th in Vision Racing’s #17 Excel Therapy Toyota.  Green pitted before the green flag, sending him to the rear of the field with Ty Dillon and Paul Menard, whose Richard Childress Racing Chevrolets were sent to the rear for unapproved adjustments and a driver change, respectively.  However, after one lap, all of these drivers were passed by Milka Duno, who was running a #87 CanTV Toyota fielded by RAB Racing with the owner points of the three teams who shared the #87 in 2014.  Two laps later, Green pulled off the track, securing the last-place finish.

Finishing 39th on Saturday was Joey Gase, whose unsponsored #52 Jimmy Means Racing Chevrolet fell off the pace early before the engine let go after 54 laps.  38th went to Matt DiBenedetto, who faced a similar fate, losing seven laps early before a broken transmission stalled his car on the access road to bring out the second yellow of the evening.  In 37th was Corey LaJoie, whose #98 Medallion Financial Ford was taken out in a hard crash in Turn 2 that brought out the fourth yellow.  Rounding out the Bottom Five was Ryan Sieg, his #39 Huntinator / SmartCellFundraising.com Chevrolet spinning in Turn 1 on Lap 155 then breaking the suspension less than 30 laps later.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This was Green’s first last-place finish in a Nationwide Series race at Homestead since November 20, 2010, when Green’s #36 TriStar Motorsports Chevrolet had a vibration after 2 laps of the Ford 300.
*This is the second-consecutive last-place finish for TriStar’s #91 at Homestead.  Last year, Michael McDowell’s #91 TriStar Motorsports Toyota overheated after 5 laps of the Ford EcoBoost 300.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
40) #91-Jeff Green / 3 laps / vibration
39) #52-Joey Gase / 54 laps / engine
38) #40-Matt DiBenedetto / 57 laps / transmission
37) #98-Corey LaJoie / 116 laps / crash
36) #39-Ryan Sieg / 179 laps / suspension

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Blake Koch (8)
2nd) Jeff Green (7)
3rd) Ryan Ellis, Kevin Lepage (3)
4th) Matt DiBenedetto, Jeffrey Earnhardt (2)
5th) Tanner Berryhill, Milka Duno, Matt Frahm, Roger Reuse, Robert Richardson, Jr., Tim Schendel, Jimmy Weller, Josh Wise (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) #10-TriStar Motorsports (11)
2nd) #46-The Motorsports Group (7)
3rd) #91-TriStar Motorsports (4)
4th) #4-JD Motorsports, #74-Mike Harmon Racing (2)
5th) #17-Vision Racing, #23-R3 Motorsports, #29-RAB Racing, #55-VIVA Motorsports / SS Green Light Racing, #77-Mike Harmon Racing, #87-Rick Ware Racing, #93-JGL Racing (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Toyota (16)
2nd) Chevrolet (12)
3rd) Dodge (5)

TRUCKS: Caleb Roark Snatches Away 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series Title With Series’ Final 36th-Place Finish

SOURCE: CIA Stock Photo
Caleb Roark picked up the 3rd last-place finish of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in Friday’s Ford EcoBoost 200 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway when his #0 Grimes Irrigation / Best Western Mesa Chevrolet fell out with a vibration after he completed 5 of the race’s 134 laps.

The finish was Roark’s third of the 2014 season and his first since Mosport, eight races ago.  Though tied with Justin Jennings for the most last-place finishes, it is Roark - not Jennings as I originally reported last week - who is officially the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series Champion.  Roark and Jennings left Phoenix tied with 9 bottom-five finishes each, so a last-place finish by Roark at Homestead and a finish by Jennings outside the bottom-five would secure Roark the title.  That is exactly what happened on Friday - Roark trailed the field while Jennings came home 22nd, ten spots outside the Bottom Five.

Roark also holds the distinction of being the final Truck Series driver to finish 36th in a race.  Starting next year, the series’ starting fields will be reduced to 32.

Following his withdrawal from last week’s race at Phoenix, Roark was back at the track at Homestead, driving what reports indicate was owner Jennifer Jo Cobb’s #10 truck from Phoenix with the number “1” decals peeled off.  He was one of 34 trucks on the preliminary entry list, a field extended to 36 by race weekend.  Roark did not practice in the opening session on Thursday and was the only driver to not turn a lap in Happy Hour, but still outpaced Norm Benning and Scott Stenzel to score the 34th starting spot at an average speed of 152.044 mph.

In the race itself, it appeared that Benning would score his first last-place finish of the season when he pulled his flat red unsponsored #6 Chevrolet lost a lap by Lap 3 with possible mechanical issues.  However, he returned to the track during the first caution of the night on Lap 6 when John Wes Townley crashed his #05 Zaxby’s Toyota in Turn 2.  Townley fell just short of a last-place finish, however, for in the chaos, Roark had pulled his #0 off the track for good, snagging away the championship-clinching 36th-place run.  Benning just passed Townley for 34th before he, too, left the race.

Rounding out the Bottom Five were Scott Stenzel, whose #36 Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet had electrical issues after 11 laps, and Roark’s team owner Jennifer Jo Cobb in the #10 Oohrah! Hydration Drink Chevrolet after clutch issues 58 laps into the race.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the second last-place finish in three Homestead Truck Series races for Jennifer Jo Cobb’s #0 team.  On November 16, 2012, Blake Koch lost the transmission on his #0 Driven2Honor.org Ford after 3 laps of the Ford EcoBoost 200.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
36) #0-Caleb Roark / 5 laps / vibration
35) #05-John Wes Townley / 6 laps / crash
34) #6-Norm Benning / 7 laps / rear gear
33) #36-Scott Stenzel / 11 laps / electrical
32) #10-Jennifer Jo Cobb / 58 laps / clutch

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Justin Jennings, Caleb Roark - 2014 CHAMPION (3)
2nd) Ryan Ellis, Mike Harmon, Blake Koch, Charles Lewandoski, Caleb Roark (2)
3rd) Mike Affarano, T.J. Bell, Bryan Dauzat, Alex Guenette, Ted Minor, Tommy Regan, Scott Stenzel, Jason White (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) #0-Jennifer Jo Cobb (5)
2nd) #36-Mike Mittler, #63-Mike Mittler / Randy Young (3)
3rd) #74-Mike Harmon (2)
4th) #28-FDNY Racing, #35-Win-Tron Racing, #42-Randy Young, #45-Regan Motorsports, #50-MAKE Motorsports, #57-Norm Benning, #74-Mario Gosselin, #93-RSS Racing, #03-Mike Affarano Motorsports (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP - FINAL
1st) Chevrolet (19)
2nd) RAM (2)
3rd) Toyota (1)

Sunday, November 9, 2014

CUP: Mike Bliss Claims First LASTCAR Sprint Cup Championship In Phoenix Garage

SOURCE: Chris Trotman, Getty Images
Mike Bliss picked up the 19th last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 at the Phoenix International Raceway when his unsponsored #37 Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet fell out with brake issues after he completed 16 of the race’s 312 laps.

The finish was Bliss’ fifth of the year and his first since Kansas, five races ago.  With one race to go and a two-finish lead over 2009 champion Dave Blaney and the rest of the field, Bliss has now secured his first-ever LASTCAR title as the 2014 LASTCAR Cup Series champion.  This ends a three-year reign by Michael McDowell and Phil Parsons Racing - in their first year apart, McDowell has finished last only once while Parsons' team has yet to at all.

Bliss’ last-place run at Kansas last month was the most recent for both driver and team.  The return upped the entry list to 44 cars for 43 spots, setting the stage for a qualifying battle between the veteran Bliss and upstart Clay Rogers, back to trying to qualify the #75 Beard Oil Chevrolet after a DNQ at Richmond in September.  Bliss outpaced Rogers in the opening practice, putting up the 36th-fastest time, then bumped Rogers from the field in qualifying with the 39th-best time at an average speed of 137.515 mph - nearly four-tenths of a second faster than Rogers’ 137.310.

Bliss did not participate in either of Saturday’s practice sessions, and with the team’s Accell Construction sponsorship moved to teammate Michael Annett’s #7 Chevrolet, it was all but certain Bliss would park on Sunday.

Mike Wallace started 43rd in the #66 Identity Ventures Racing entry, whose numbers were changed from white to dark blue.  However, he only held the spot until the end of the first lap, when Bliss fell to the rear, then along with the #32 Zimmer.com Ford of Joey Gase began to lose touch with the rest of the field.  Still under green on Lap 17, Bliss pulled onto pit road and turned to the garage, ending his day and securing his championship.

Finishing 42nd was Cole Whitt, who endured a miserable afternoon in his #26 fuelxx / Tapout Muscle Recovery / Amazon.com Toyota.  Around Lap 106, Whitt slowed on the backstretch with an apparent tire issue, but then spent several laps behind the wall for repairs.  Whitt returned nearly 70 laps later only to rear-end the slowing Casey Mears during a pileup triggered by Kyle Busch and Clint Bowyer in Turn 2 on Lap 213.  41st went to Josh Wise, whose #98 PPR98.com Chevrolet was running just one lap down to the leaders on Lap 205 when he was clipped by Ty Dillon in Turn 3 and spun backwards into the outside wall, destroying the rear clip.

40th went to Clint Bowyer, whose right-rear of the #15 5-Hour Energy Toyota clipped the spinning Kyle Busch moments before Whitt tangled with Mears.  Bowyer also spent several laps behind the wall before finally retiring in the closing laps.  Rounding out the Bottom Five was Jimmie Johnson, who tangled with Justin Allgaier on pit road during the first round of stops, then on Lap 238 suffered a sudden tire or suspension issue in Turn 1 that sent his car hard into the outside wall and out of the race.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for the #37 in a Cup race at Phoenix since November 15, 2009, when Tony Raines’ Long John Silver’s / A&W Chevrolet had electrical issues after 6 laps of the Checker O’Reilly Auto Parts 500.
*This is Bliss’ first last-place finish in a Cup race at Phoenix.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #37-Mike Bliss / 16 laps / brakes
42) #26-Cole Whitt / 147 laps / crash
41) #98-Josh Wise / 204 laps / crash
40) #15-Clint Bowyer / 211 laps / crash
39) #48-Jimmie Johnson / 235 laps / crash

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Mike Bliss (5) - 2014 CHAMPION
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Landon Cassill, Timmy Hill, Clay Rogers (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Alex Bowman, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing, #93-BK Racing (5)
2nd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #40-Hillman Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
3rd) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #23-BK Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet, Toyota (14)
2nd) Ford (7)

N’WIDE: Jeffrey Earnhardt’s Engine Unable To Complete First Lap At Phoenix

SOURCE: @JDMotorsports01
Jeffrey Earnhardt picked up the 2nd last-place finish of his NASCAR Nationwide Series career in Saturday’s DAV 200 Honoring America’s Veterans at the Phoenix International Raceway when his unsponsored #4 JD Motorsports Chevrolet lost the engine before he could complete any of the race’s 206 laps.

The finish was Earnhardt’s second of the season and his first since Charlotte, two races ago.

For the first time since Iowa in August, Earnhardt came to the race in an unsponsored #4 Chevrolet.  His was one of 41 entries for the race, a list twice extended from 39 earlier in the week.  Blake Koch, who last week at Texas clinched the 2014 LASTCAR Nationwide Series title, moved to TriStar’s #44 team to drive the fully-funded Ingersoll-Rand Toyota.  Koch’s #10 returned to four-time and defending LASTCAR champ Jeff Green, who seemed a favorite to score his seventh last-place finish of the season.

In the opening practice session, Earnhardt ran 28th-fastest of the 35 who ran, then was 33rd of the 41 in Happy Hour.  In qualifying, he improved to the 22nd-fastest time with an average speed of 131.014 mph.  The only DNQ was three-time 2014 last-placer Ryan Ellis, whose #46 The Motorsports Group entry missed its third race in four attempts.

At the start of the race, Earnhardt was sent to the back due to unapproved adjustments.  Just as at Charlotte, he did not complete the opening lap, though this time the official reason was engine trouble.

Finishing 39th, ten laps ahead of Earnhardt, was Carl Long, driving a flat black #87 Ford Mustang for Rick Ware Racing - the sixth different car number Long has driven in his last six starts.  38th went to T.J. Bell, making his first Nationwide start of the year in JGL Racing’s #93 Texas 28 Spirits Stage Dodge.  Morgan Shepherd came home 37th in his #89 Racing With Jesus / Courtney Construction Chevrolet, his first start since Dover in September.  Rounding out the Bottom Five was 36th-place Brennan Newberry in Bobby Dotter’s #77 Qore-24 Chevrolet.  Newberry was uninjured after a fiery single-car crash on Lap 38.

Jeff Green finished 34th on Saturday, having not retired until after 51 laps.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*Earnhardt is the first Nationwide Series driver to finish last in a race at Phoenix since November 12, 2011, when Matt Frahm’s #39 TSP Powder Coating Ford was involved in an eight-car accident on the opening lap of the Wypall 200.
*This is the first last-place finish for both Earnhardt and the #4 in a Nationwide Series race at Phoenix.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
40) #4-Jeffrey Earnhardt / 0 laps / engine
39) #87-Carl Long / 10 laps / brakes
38) #93-T.J. Bell / 14 laps / vibration
37) #89-Morgan Shepherd / 20 laps / brakes
36) #77-Brennan Newberry / 34 laps / crash

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Blake Koch (8) - 2014 CHAMPION
2nd) Jeff Green (6)
3rd) Ryan Ellis, Kevin Lepage (3)
4th) Matt DiBenedetto, Jeffrey Earnhardt (2)
5th) Tanner Berryhill, Milka Duno, Matt Frahm, Roger Reuse, Robert Richardson, Jr., Tim Schendel, Jimmy Weller, Josh Wise (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #10-TriStar Motorsports (11)
2nd) #46-The Motorsports Group (7)
3rd) #91-TriStar Motorsports (3)
4th) #4-JD Motorsports, #74-Mike Harmon Racing (2)
5th) #17-Vision Racing, #23-R3 Motorsports, #29-RAB Racing, #55-VIVA Motorsports / SS Green Light Racing, #77-Mike Harmon Racing, #87-Rick Ware Racing, #93-JGL Racing (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (15)
2nd) Chevrolet (12)
3rd) Dodge (5)

TRUCKS: Justin Jennings Claims 2014 LASTCAR Truck Title After First-Lap Crash

SOURCE: Rubbin's Racin' Forums
CORRECTION (November 14): Jennings has not claimed the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series title.  Although he does lead Caleb Roark in bottom-ten finishes (11-10), Jennings is still tied with Roark for most bottom-fives (9 each), so Roark can claim the title with a last-place finish at Homestead if Jennings does not also finish in the Bottom Five.  If Roark finishes last and Jennings does finish inside the Bottom Five, or if Roark fails to finish last, Jennings will win the title.

Justin Jennings picked up the 3rd last-place finish of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in Friday’s Lucas Oil 150 at the Phoenix International Raceway when his #63 Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet was involved in a four-truck accident which prevented him from completing any of the race’s 126 laps.

The finish was Jennings’ third of the season and his first since Pocono, ten races ago.  And, with one race to go, Jennings has now clinched the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series Championship.  Caleb Roark, who took the lead on bottom-five finishes last week, withdrew prior to Friday’s race, preventing him from challenging on a possible tiebreaker.  Even if Roark finishes last next week at Homestead and Jennings does not finish inside the Bottom Ten, Jennings would still prevail on a bottom-ten tiebreaker 11-10.

Roark’s withdrawal on Thursday shortened the Phoenix field further from 35 to 34, the fourteenth short field in twenty-one races.  Next season, Truck Series fields will be reduced further to 32 trucks - seven races this year have had fewer entries than that.  Jennings did not participate in the opening practice session, was 26th of 34 in Happy Hour, and kept the 26th starting spot at an average speed of 128.567 mph.

When the green flag flew on Friday night, however, the outside line checked-up, causing an accordion effect through the middle of the field.  Trouble broke out when 22nd-place starter John Wes Townley rear-ended 20th-place starter Bryan Silas, leaving 24th-place German Quiroga and 26th-place Jennings nowhere to go but to pile in.  Townley, Quiroga, and Jennings suffered the most severe damage to the noses of their trucks.  Jennings was the only driver who couldn’t complete the first lap - he pulled to the garage first and was credited with the last-place finish.

Behind Jennings and Townley were 32nd-place B.J. McLeod in the unsponsored #07 SS-Green Light Racing Chevrolet, his first race since Las Vegas.  Rounding out the Bottom Five were both Gallagher Motorsports trucks, which each qualified in the third row.  31st-place Spencer Gallagher crashed out after 27 laps when Timothy Peters made contact with his #23 Kingman Chevy-Buick / Allegiant Travel Chevrolet entering Turn 3, sending him into the outside wall.  Teammate Joey Coulter followed on Lap 38 when his #21 Allegiant Travel Chevrolet lost control in the same corner shortly after the restart.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*Jennings is the first Truck Series driver to fail to complete the opening lap at Phoenix since October 26, 2001, when Lance Hooper’s #23 National Wild Turkey Federation Chevrolet had brake issues at the start of the Chevy Silverado 150.
*This is the first last-place finish for both Jennings and the #63 in a Truck Series race at Phoenix.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
34) #63-Justin Jennings / 0 laps / crash
33) #05-John Wes Townley / 1 lap / crash
32) #07-B.J. McLeod / 21 laps / axle
31) #23-Spencer Gallagher / 27 laps / crash
30) #21-Joey Coulter / 38 laps / crash

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Justin Jennings (3)
2nd) Ryan Ellis, Mike Harmon, Blake Koch, Charles Lewandoski, Caleb Roark (2)
3rd) Mike Affarano, T.J. Bell, Bryan Dauzat, Alex Guenette, Ted Minor, Tommy Regan, Scott Stenzel, Jason White (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #0-Jennifer Jo Cobb (4)
2nd) #36-Mike Mittler, #63-Mike Mittler / Randy Young (3)
3rd) #74-Mike Harmon (2)
4th) #28-FDNY Racing, #35-Win-Tron Racing, #42-Randy Young, #45-Regan Motorsports, #50-MAKE Motorsports, #57-Norm Benning, #74-Mario Gosselin, #93-RSS Racing, #03-Mike Affarano Motorsports (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet (18)
2nd) RAM (2)
3rd) Toyota (1)

Sunday, November 2, 2014

CUP: Landon Cassill One Of Five Drivers In Contention For 2014 LASTCAR Cup Title

SOURCE: Hillman Racing's Facebook
Landon Cassill picked up the 5th last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 at the Texas Motor Speedway when his unsponsored #40 Hillman Racing Chevrolet lost the engine after he completed 134 of the race’s 441 laps.

The finish was Cassill’s second of the 2014 season and his first since Sonoma, eighteen races ago.  With two races remaining, Cassill is now one of five drivers still in contention for the 2014 LASTCAR Cup Series Championship.  Mike Bliss and Dave Blaney have each run just 7 races in 2014 and have not raced in Cup since Kansas in October and Bristol in August, respectively, but both still lead the standings.  Bliss leads Blaney in bottom-five finishes 5-4, but Blaney can only claim the title by finishing last in both the final two races as he trails Bliss in bottom-ten finishes 7-4.

If neither Bliss nor Blaney run another race, any of the two-time last-placers in 2014 can also claim the title on a tiebreaker by sweeping the 43rd spots at Phoenix and Homestead.  The top contender is Timmy Hill, who already has 5 bottom-fives, while Clint Bowyer and Cassill now have 4 apiece.  Clay Rogers, another driver with two last-place finishes, has now been eliminated with only 2 Bottom Fives.  Still, the only way Bliss can lose the title is if Blaney, Bowyer, Cassill, or Hill finish last in both of these final two races of the season, so there’s a good chance the title chase ends at Phoenix.

Cassill came into the Texas race on te heels of four straight finishes of 23rd or better, including a career-best 4th in the thrilling finish at Talladega.  Months after scoring a previous career mark of 11th in the spring race at the 2.66-mile track, Cassill remained with the leaders nearly all afternoon and was a threat to pull the upset before Brad Keselowski pulled away for the win.

After running eight different sponsors through the first part of the season, Cassill brought a flat white Chevrolet to the Texas track.  He timed in 39th of the 43-car entry list in the opening practice session, timed in 34th in qualifying at an average speed of 195.744 mph, then hovered in 38th and 35th in Saturday’s final two practices.

Starting last in Sunday’s race was Joey Gase, making his third start of the season in Frankie Stoddard’s #32 Ford.  Just before the green, however, Danica Patrick pulled her #10 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet to the back due to a pre-race transmission change.  As Patrick climbed through the field on the opening lap, 43rd went to Brett Moffitt in the unsponsored #66 Identity Ventures Racing entry, the Iowa driver’s sixth start of the season and first since Charlotte last month.

Moffitt was the first driver to lose a lap on Lap 16, and he lost another on Lap 34.  Four laps later, Patrick slowed on the backstretch and made an unscheduled stop, dropping her to 43rd for a handful of laps.  That changed on Lap 43, when the first caution of the race flew for Josh Wise and the #98 Provident Metals Chevrolet.  Wise’s car snapped loose off Turn 2 and smacked the outside wall hard, fracturing a brake rotor that required several laps of repairs.  With such low attrition for most of the race, it appeared the PPR team would have its first last-place finish since last year’s finale at Homestead.  However, Wise rolled back on track on Lap 125, 82 laps down, but with nearly 200 laps to gain spots.

Moments later, Cassill, who had completed 134 laps, pulled behind the wall with apparent engine issues.  The ESPN broadcast officially listed Cassill as out by Lap 190, and Wise dropped him to 42nd on Lap 222.  Wise ended up 41st in the final running order, passing the #23 Dr. Pepper Toyota of rookie Alex Bowman with four laps to go in regulation.  Rounding out the Bottom Five were Moffitt, whose rear clip fell apart after a late tire failure, and Trevor Bayne, whose second-straight Bottom Five of the weekend came after a late tangle with Kasey Kahne.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*The 134 laps Cassill completed are the most by a Cup Series last-place finisher at Texas since November 2, 2008, when Juan Pablo Montoya’s #42 Texaco / Havoline Dodge completed 262 laps of the Dickies 500 before a late-race crash with David Gilliland.
*This marks the first season that Chevrolet has swept both Cup last-place finishes at Texas in the same season (the other being Dale Earnhardt, Jr.’s run in the spring).
*This is the first last-place finish for both Cassill and the #40 in a Cup race at Texas.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #40-Landon Cassill / 134 laps / engine
42) #23-Alex Bowman / 245 laps / engine
41) #98-Josh Wise / 256 laps / running
40) #66-Brett Moffitt / 283 laps / crash
39) #21-Trevor Bayne / 318 laps / crash

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Mike Bliss (4)
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Landon Cassill, Timmy Hill, Clay Rogers (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Alex Bowman, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #93-BK Racing (5)
2nd) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing (4)
3rd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #40-Hillman Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
4th) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #23-BK Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (14)
2nd) Chevrolet (13)
3rd) Ford (7)

N’WIDE: Ryan Ellis Last at Texas; Blake Koch Ends Jeff Green’s Three-Year LASTCAR Reign

SOURCE: Rubbin's Racin' Forums
Ryan Ellis picked up the 3rd last-place finish of his NASCAR Nationwide Series career in Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge at the Texas Motor Speedway when his unsponsored #46 The Motorsports Group Chevrolet fell out with a vibration after he completed 3 of the race’s 200 laps.

The finish was Ellis’ third of the season and his first since Dover, three races ago.  Already eliminated from championship contention, history was made before the race even started when Blake Koch locked-up his first-ever LASTCAR championship.  Koch’s teammate, four-time and defending LASTCAR champion Jeff Green, needed to finish last in all three of 2014's final races to defend his title.  When Green did not enter nor start the race, Koch’s two-finish lead secured him the championship.  Koch pulled out one lap after Ellis to come home 39th.

Hours before finishing next-to-last in the Truck Series race, Ellis timed in 31st of 40 drivers in the opening practice session and 37th of 42 in Happy Hour.  In total, 43 drivers - including the post-entry of Tanner Berryhill in Vision Racing’s rebuilt #17 Toyota - contended for the 40-car field.  Ellis secured the final spot with an average speed of 178.235 mph, narrowly edging former LASTCAR record holder Derrike Cope’s lap of 178.059.  Cope missed the race along with fellow owner-drivers Mike Harmon and Morgan Shepherd.

Three laps into Saturday’s race, Ellis pulled behind the wall, edging new LASTCAR champ Blake Koch and his #10 Heroes Behind the Camo / SupportMilitary.org Toyota by a single lap.  This ended a streak of three-consecutive last-place runs at Texas for the #10 TriStar team.  38th went to Carlos Contreras, whose #87 RaceTrac Convenience Stores Chevrolet fielded by Rick Ware was seen during the broadcast driving through the garage after the hard single-car wreck that took then-leader Trevor Bayne out of the running after 48 laps.  Finishing between Contreras and Bayne was Joey Gase in the #52 Better Business Bureau Chevrolet for Jimmy Means.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for both Ellis and the #46 in a Nationwide Series race at Texas.  However, The Motorsports Group most recently trailed a Texas field on November 5, 2011 when Scott Speed’s #47 Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet had electrical issues after 3 laps of the O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge.  It was Speed’s first last-place finish in Nationwide competition.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
40) #46-Ryan Ellis / 3 laps / vibration
39) #10-Blake Koch / 4 laps / vibration
38) #87-Carlos Contreras / 33 laps / engine
37) #52-Joey Gase / 34 laps / axle
36) #6-Trevor Bayne / 48 laps / crash / led 15 laps

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Blake Koch (8) - 2014 CHAMPION
2nd) Jeff Green (6)
3rd) Ryan Ellis, Kevin Lepage (3)
4th) Matt DiBenedetto (2)
5th) Tanner Berryhill, Milka Duno, Jeffrey Earnhardt, Matt Frahm, Roger Reuse, Robert Richardson, Jr., Tim Schendel, Jimmy Weller, Josh Wise (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #10-TriStar Motorsports (11)
2nd) #46-The Motorsports Group (7)
3rd) #91-TriStar Motorsports (3)
4th) #74-Mike Harmon Racing (2)
5th) #4-JD Motorsports, #17-Vision Racing, #23-R3 Motorsports, #29-RAB Racing, #55-VIVA Motorsports / SS Green Light Racing, #77-Mike Harmon Racing, #87-Rick Ware Racing, #93-JGL Racing (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (15)
2nd) Chevrolet (11)
3rd) Dodge (5)

TRUCKS: Blake Koch In Position To Score Two LASTCAR Titles In Same Year

SOURCE: Rubbin's Racin' Forums
Blake Koch picked up the 5th last-place finish of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in Friday’s WinStar World Casino & Resort 350 at the Texas Motor Speedway when his #36 Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet fell out with a broken rear axle after he completed 3 of the race’s 152 laps.

The finish was Koch’s second of 2014 and his first since Dover, fifteen races ago.  With just two races remaining, Koch joins a six-way tie for the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series Championship.  The lead, however, now belongs to Caleb Roark, whose 30th-place run broke a bottom-five tiebreaker with Justin Jennings, who came home 23rd.  Roark leads with 9 Bottom Fives over Jennings’ 8, Charles Lewandoski’s 7, Ryan Ellis’ 5, Blake Koch’s 4, and Mike Harmon’s 2.  Jennings and Roark are the only drivers who can win the title with a bottom-ten tiebreaker as Jennings leads Roark in that statistic 10-9 over Lewandoski’s 7.  The remaining four drivers can only claim the title by scoring more last-place finishes than Roark and Jennings.

If Koch claims the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series title, he will become the first driver ever to claim two LASTCAR titles in the same season.  Koch secured the 2014 LASTCAR Nationwide Driver’s Championship on Saturday when four-time and defending LASTCAR champ Jeff Green did not enter the race.

Friday marked Koch’s fourth Truck Series start of the season, his first since a next-to-last-place run at Bristol in August, and his third in a row driving the second #36 entry fielded by Mike Mittler.  Just 32 trucks showed up to the Texas track, which in June saw a 27-truck field - the shortest starting grid since the series’ inaugural season in 1995.  Koch was the third-slowest of the 25 drivers who took laps in the opening practice session and did not participate in Happy Hour.  He timed in 29th-fastest for the race itself at an average speed of 164.459 mph.

At the start of Friday’s race, Koch pulled behind the wall first, followed a lap later by Ryan Ellis in the unsponsored #35 Win-Tron Racing Toyota.  30th went to Caleb Roark in Jennifer Jo Cobb’s #0 Grimes Irrigation & Construction Chevrolet, which exited the race after 5 laps with the #57 Watt’s Truck Center Chevrolet of Adam Edwards.  Norm Benning, the owner of the #57, rounded out the Bottom Five when his #6 Tom Corbett for PA Governor / Pro1 Automotive Chevrolet crashed in Turn 2 on Lap 23.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*Koch is the first last-place finisher in Truck Series history to retire from the race due to a rear axle failure.
*This is the first last-place finish for both Koch and the #36 in a Truck Series race at Texas.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
32) #36-Blake Koch / 3 laps / rear axle
31) #35-Ryan Ellis / 4 laps / vibration
30) #0-Caleb Roark / 5 laps / electrical
29) #57-Adam Edwards / 5 laps / rear gear
28) #6-Norm Benning / 19 laps / crash

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Ryan Ellis, Mike Harmon, Justin Jennings, Blake Koch, Charles Lewandoski, Caleb Roark (2)
2nd) Mike Affarano, T.J. Bell, Bryan Dauzat, Alex Guenette, Ted Minor, Tommy Regan, Scott Stenzel, Jason White (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #0-Jennifer Jo Cobb (4)
2nd) #36-Mike Mittler (3)
3rd) #63-Mike Mittler / Randy Young, #74-Mike Harmon (2)
4th) #28-FDNY Racing, #35-Win-Tron Racing, #42-Randy Young, #45-Regan Motorsports, #50-MAKE Motorsports, #57-Norm Benning, #74-Mario Gosselin, #93-RSS Racing, #03-Mike Affarano Motorsports (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet (17)
2nd) RAM (2)
3rd) Toyota (1)

Sunday, October 26, 2014

CUP: For The First Time Since 1951, #93 Finishes Last In Cup Race At Martinsville

SOURCE: Mark Agee
Clay Rogers picked up the 2nd last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at the Martinsville Speedway when his #93 Burger King Toyota fell out with overheating issues after he completed 25 of the race’s 500 laps.

The finish was Rogers’ second of the 2014 season and his first since his series debut at New Hampshire, five races ago.  Rogers is now tied with Timmy Hill and Clint Bowyer for 3rd in the 2014 LASTCAR standings.  Season leaders Mike Bliss and Dave Blaney - with four and three last-place finishes, respectively - did not compete in Sunday’s race.  Mathematically, all 25 drivers who have scored at least one last-place finish this season are still in contention for the title.

Sunday was the first appearance for the #93 BK Racing team since Rogers’ debut at Loudon, a race where 43 cars showed up to make the 43-car field.  The preliminary entry list showed all four BK Racing cars, but did not list drivers for both the #93 and #83 until later in the week: J.J. Yeley in the #83 on Thursday and Rogers in the #93 on Friday.

Rogers was 42nd-fastest in the opening practice session, qualified 38th at an average speed of 96.770 mph, and was the only driver to not participate in Happy Hour on Saturday.

At the start of Sunday’s race, Mike Wallace rolled off 43rd in the #66 Testoril Toyota in his fourth start of the year for Identity Ventures Racing.  After the opening lap, Wallace passed the #32 Corvetteparts.com Ford driven this week by Kyle Fowler, who was making his Cup debut after fifteen Nationwide Series starts.  Alex Bowman, last week’s last-placer at Talladega, brought out the first caution when he spun on Lap 3, but only remained 43rd until the restart, when Fowler took it back.  Timmy Hill, back in the #44 since his last-place run at Dover, took 43rd on Lap 9, but only held it until Lap 11, when J.J. Yeley crunched the nose of his #83 and went behind the wall.  While the crew removed the hood of Yeley’s Toyota, Rogers pulled off the track on Lap 25, followed five laps later by Hill, whose car was smoking under the hood in the infield on Lap 37.  Yeley returned to the track on Lap 39, and in short order dropped Rogers and Hill to the final two spots in the field.

Finishing 41st Sunday was Travis Kvapil, who following a sterling 6th-place run at Talladega spun on Lap 11 and was among the first to be lapped before a mid-race engine failure took him out of the running.  In 40th was a frustrated Kasey Kahne, who after three on-track tangles with Brian Vickers was taken out in a five-car accident on Lap 438 triggered by the slowing Ford of Brad Keselowski.  Yeley rounded out the Bottom Five in 39th, 64 laps down, but still under power.

It was the fifth-straight last-place finish for the #93 team after its 41st-place debut in Kentucky’s 42-car field in June.  The team now leads the 2014 LASTCAR Owner’s standings, having broken a tie with the #37 Tommy Baldwin Racing team, which did not compete on Sunday.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
Donald Thomas' 1950 Plymouth at New Mobile Speedway, 1951
SOURCE: Getty Images, RacingOne
*This is the first last-place finish for the #93 at Martinsville since May 6, 1951 - the fourth-ever race run at the half-mile track.  The finish was earned by Donald Thomas, younger brother of two-time series champion Herb Thomas.  In that day’s 200-lapper, Thomas’ 1950 Plymouth was involved in a five-car accident on Lap 11 involving Jim Paschal, Fireball Roberts, Jim Fiebelkorn, and Ewell Weddle.  The next year, Thomas won his only career race in Herb’s Fabulous Hudson Hornet at Lakewood Speedway in Atlanta.  At age 20 years, 4 months, and 5 days, Thomas was the youngest driver to win a Cup race until 2005, when Kyle Busch took his first victory at Fontana at age 20 years, 4 months, and 2 days.  Thomas also claimed the 1953 LASTCAR Championship with three last-place finishes and prevailing in a bottom-five tiebreaker with Dick Rathmann 6-4.  For more profiles on LASTCAR champions, check out my year-by-year chronicle at this link.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #93-Clay Rogers / 25 laps / overheating
42) #44-Timmy Hill / 30 laps / brakes
41) #33-Travis Kvapil / 280 laps / engine
40) #5-Kasey Kahne / 403 laps / crash
39) #83-J.J. Yeley / 436 laps / running

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Mike Bliss (4)
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Timmy Hill, Clay Rogers (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Alex Bowman, Landon Cassill, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #93-BK Racing (5)
2nd) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing (4)
3rd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
4th) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #23-BK Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #40-Hillman Racing, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (14)
2nd) Chevrolet (12)
3rd) Ford (7)

TRUCKS: T.J. Bell Finishes Last In First Truck Race In Two Years

SOURCE: MAKE Motorsports Facebook
T.J. Bell picked up the 2nd last-place finish of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in Saturday’s Kroger 200 at the Martinsville Speedway when his #50 Dedicated to Electrical Linemen Chevrolet fell out with a broken radiator after he completed 44 of the race’s 200 laps.

The finish was Bell’s first of the season and his first in a Truck Series race since Michigan on August 18, 2012, 52 races ago.

Following his most recent Sprint Cup start driving Frankie Stoddard’s #32 in late 2012, Bell and Mark Beaver’s MAKE Motorsports completed their 21st and final Nationwide race of the season with a last-place finish at Texas.  In 2013, Bell and MAKE parted ways, and the driver ran eleven races for The Motorsports Group, coming up just short of a last-place finish while parking the team’s cars in seven of those starts.

This year at Kansas, Bell and MAKE reunited with a 17th-place showing in the SFP 250, his best finish in the series since the 2007 finale at Homestead.  Driving a #50 Chevrolet carrying logos in honor of electrical linemen - workers in the high-risk profession of servicing power lines - Bell and MAKE have made every race since except a withdrawal at Talladega, where Bell was slated to run a second MAKE entry, #56, while Milka Duno made her series debut in the renumbered #1.  Bell’s best finish of the year remains a 15th at Dover, and after a 4th-place showing in his qualifier, he started 15th at Eldora and came home 21st.  In most of these starts, Bell has driven a pre-2014-bodied Chevrolet, though he has on occasion run the updated template.

The Martinsville entry list changed a few times through the week.  Originally, the 37-truck entry list did not have a driver listed for the #35 Win-Tron entry that trailed the field at Las Vegas with Charles Lewandoski.  By Thursday, when Peyton Sellers was selected to drive the Win-Tron entry, B.J. McLeod was replaced in the #08 by Enrique Contreras III.  On Friday, a 38th entry was added with Dustin Hapka in his #93 Sure-Step Chevrolet.  In qualifying, Hapka missed the show along with fellow independent Chuck Buchanan, Jr. in his #87 Spring Drug Ford.  Hapka’s lone Truck start came at Iowa in July while Buchanan is still seeking his series debut.

Bell ran 28th-fastest in both of Friday’s practices and backed up his performance with the 28th spot for Saturday’s race at an average speed of 93.107 mph.  His truck was painted mostly white, carrying few of the bright blue and black graphics the team has carried for much of this season.  In the race itself, however, Bell fell to the rear along with Wendell Chavous, who was making his series debut Mike Harmon’s #74 Vydox.com Chevrolet.  Chavous had backed his truck into the fence during practice, but despite quick work by the crew, the truck was still off the pace.  Bell also seemed to struggle early, running low on the straightaways to stay clear of traffic.  Bell pulled behind the wall first while Chavous managed to come home 7 laps down in 27th.

Early exits have been a rarity at Martinsville, and Saturday was no exception.  No other driver retired until Lap 100, when Justin Jennings lost the brakes on his #63 Papa Murphy’s Pizza / Mittler Bros. Chevrolet.  Finishing 34th was Jody Knowles, making his third start of the season and his first since Bristol in Tracy Wallace’s #80 Clayton Signs / Korban Partners Ford.  Rounding out the Bottom Five were John Wes Towley and Brandon Jones, whose trucks were severely damaged in a grinding Turn 1 accident with 48 laps to go.  Both drivers were uninjured.

Finishing 8th on Saturday was 18-year-old Matt Tifft, whose series debut gave owner Christopher Long his first top-ten finish.  Tifft threaded the needle in a mid-race accident and brought his #0 B.J. McLeod Motorsports Chevrolet home in one piece.  Alex Guenette, who trailed the Truck Series field here in the spring, came home a career-best 9th in Turner Motorsports’ #32.  And in his 20th series start, Caleb Holman picked up a career-best 11th in Charlie Henderson’s #75 Gain Flings / Food Country USA Chevrolet - the best run for Henderson’s team in any of NASCAR’s top divisions since August 23, 1992, when Butch Miller came home 11th in a Nationwide race at New Hampshire.

With three races to go, the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series title is still up for grabs.  However, Justin Jennings picked up his 8th bottom-five finish of the season Saturday, matching fellow two-time last-placer Caleb Roark’s mark in the tiebreaker.  If the season ended today, Jennings would take the title with 10 bottom-ten finishes to Roark’s 8.  Charles Lewandoski runs third with 2 last-place runs and 7 bottom-fives, and is mathematically eligible to force a tiebreaker as well.  Ryan Ellis and Mike Harmon, both with 4 and 2 bottom-fives, respectively, cannot rely on a tiebreaker and can only win the title by finishing last at least one more time.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for the #50 in a Truck Series race since April 2, 2010, when G.R. Smith lost the engine on his MAKE Motorsports / Ronald McDonald House Dodge after 27 laps of the Nashville 200 at the Nashville Superspeedway.  The number had never finished last in a Truck Series race prior to Saturday.  That race was MAKE’s Truck Series debut and its only start running Dodges.
*Bell is the first Truck Series driver to finish last because of radiator issues since April 17, 2004, when Ken Schrader’s #52 Federated Auto Parts Chevrolet fell out after 136 laps of the Kroger 250 at Martinsville.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
36) #50-T.J. Bell / 44 laps / radiator
35) #63-Justin Jennings / 100 laps / brakes
34) #80-Jody Knowles / 124 laps / transmission
33) #05-John Wes Townley / 150 laps / crash
32) #33-Brandon Jones / 150 laps / crash

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Ryan Ellis, Mike Harmon, Justin Jennings, Charles Lewandoski, Caleb Roark (2)
2nd) Mike Affarano, T.J. Bell, Bryan Dauzat, Alex Guenette, Blake Koch, Ted Minor, Tommy Regan, Scott Stenzel, Jason White (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #0-Jennifer Jo Cobb (4)
2nd) #36-Mike Mittler, #63-Mike Mittler / Randy Young, #74-Mike Harmon (2)
3rd) #28-FDNY Racing, #35-Win-Tron Racing, #42-Randy Young, #45-Regan Motorsports, #50-MAKE Motorsports, #57-Norm Benning, #74-Mario Gosselin, #93-RSS Racing, #03-Mike Affarano Motorsports (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet (16)
2nd) RAM (2)
3rd) Toyota (1)

Sunday, October 19, 2014

CUP: Alex Bowman Scores First Last-Place Finish at Talladega

SOURCE: Rubbin's Racin' Forums
Alex Bowman picked up the 1st last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Sunday’s GEICO 500 at the Talladega Superspeedway when his #23 Dustless Blasting Toyota was involved in a ten-car pileup that ended his race after 102 of the 194 laps.  The finish came in Bowman’s 32nd series start.

Bowman, a 21-year-old rookie from Tucson, Arizona, has risen rapidly through the stock car racing ranks.  In 2010, Bowman finished 8th in his X-1R Pro Cup Series debut at the venerable North Wilkesboro Speedway.  In 2011, he won his first two ARCA starts at Madison International Speedway and Kansas Speedway, paving the way to a 4th-place finish in the 2012 ARCA standings and 6th in that year’s K&N Pro Series East.  This led to Bowman’s Nationwide Series debut driving at Chicago in late 2012, where he finished 17th.

In 2013, Bowman attempted his first full season in Nationwide competition driving for Robby Benton and the familiar RAB Racing team.  The pair showed promise early with a 3rd-place finish in the crash-marred Daytona opener, his first pole at Texas, and two Top Fives and six Top Tens.  Despite being released by RAB prior to the Homestead finale, Bowman failed to finish just one race all year - an early engine problem at Atlanta - and came home 11th in the standings.  His performance was rewarded with an opportunity to move to the Cup Series this season, joining fellow rookie Ryan Truex at BK Racing in the #23 Dr. Pepper Toyota.

This year, however, Bowman has struggled to make the adjustment.  After racing his way into the Daytona 500 and coming home 23rd, he’s finished better than that only two other times in thirty-one starts with a season-best 13th in the series’ return to Daytona in July.  35th in points coming into Talladega, and with Truex out of the #83 since last month at Loudon, Bowman and team looked for a turnaround at the superspeedway.

Carrying sponsorship from Dustless Blasting, which last ran on the car at Watkins Glen, Bowman was just 43rd-fastest of the 46 cars in the opening practice and did not participate in Happy Hour.  Qualifying, however, worked in Bowman’s favor.

As several drivers tried to play the clock and wait until the last minute to make a run, Bowman turned in the 17th-fastest time in Round 1, moving him on to Round 2, where he qualified a season-best 14th at an average speed of 193.376 mph.  Several other teams waited too long and failed to complete more than a warm-up lap, putting five Chase drivers in the back and sending home full-timers Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and Justin Allgaier.  Reed Sorenson, also out in the initial cut, later made the field when RAB Racing lost their first Cup starting spot when the time for Joe Nemechek’s #29 Toyota was withdrawn for a technical infraction.

In the race itself, a handful of drivers were sent to the back for unapproved adjustments, moving Jeff Gordon up from only the second 43rd-place starting spot in his entire career.  By the first corner of the race, the 43rd spot went to Mike Wallace, who had put the #49 Royal Teak Collection Toyota into the 23rd spot.  Wallace’s first Talladega Cup race since 2008 came with the same Jay Robinson-owned Identity Ventures Racing that has fielded the #66 for much of this season, the car renumbered to #49 in part due to Michael Waltrip running the #66 on Sunday.

Wallace pulled behind the wall after just one lap, but concerns over a possible “start-and-park” went away when he returned on Lap 9, eight laps down.  Wallace remained in the 43rd spot for most of the afternoon and was the only car off the lead lap until Lap 61, when Terry Labonte was lapped seconds before a six-car accident dropped Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, and Michael McDowell one lap back.

Then, heading onto the backstretch on Lap 102, contact from Aric Almirola sent J.J. Yeley’s #83 Burger King / Dr. Pepper Toyota hard into the outside wall, triggering a ten-car wreck.  As the rest of the field slowed, Chase competitor Kyle Busch was turned into the path of A.J. Allmendinger, collecting Bowman’s Toyota in the process.  Both Busch and Bowman made hard contact with the inside wall in what would be just the second caution of the afternoon.  Busch, Bowman, and Yeley fell to the final three spots on Lap 112 with Busch in 43rd - potentially headed for his first last-place finish since Dover in the fall of 2008.

Trying to keep Busch in the Chase, the Joe Gibbs Racing team banded together and got Busch back on the track with just 37 laps to go.  By completing a single lap, Bowman and Yeley fell to the final two spots.  Busch climbed no higher than 40th and missed the Chase cutoff by seven points.  Finishing between them was McDowell, whose #95 Jordan Truck Sales Ford was finished off in a hard slam into the Turn 4 wall after an apparent cut right-front tire.  Almirola, also involved in the Busch accident, rounded out the Bottom Five.

Talladega also saw several underdogs turn in great finishes.  In his 147th series start, Landon Cassill ran near the front all day and finished a career-best 4th in Hillman Racing’s #40 Carsforsale.com Chevrolet.  The run bested Cassill’s previous mark of 11th in the spring race at the Talladega track.  7th went to Travis Kvapil, Cassill’s teammate in an unsponsored #33 Circle Sport Chevrolet.  The finish tied Kvapil’s career-best 6th-place run at the same track in the spring of 2008, when he was driving the #28 Northern Tool & Equipment Ford for Yates Racing.  Rounding out the Top 10 was Casey Mears, running the title sponsor’s #13 GEICO Chevrolet to his fourth-straight Top-15 finish in the season’s four plate races.

Finishing 33rd on Sunday in the #32 C&J Energy Services Ford was Terry Labonte, who ran his 890th and, as confirmed through numerous sources, final Cup Series start.  In those nearly 900 starts dating back to 1978, Labonte won 22 races and two championships in 1984 and 1996.  In his Cup career, he finished last in just 12 points-paying races.  The first came at Riverside’s season-opener in 1979 and the last at Chicagoland in the summer of 2006.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for the #23 in a Cup Series race since August 5, 2012 when Scott Riggs’ North Texas Pipe Chevrolet fell out with brake problems after 9 laps of the Pennsylvania 400 at Pocono.  It’s also the first last-place finish for the number in a Cup race at Talladega.
*With this race, all four of BK Racing’s teams (#23, #26, #83, #93) have each finished last at least once in 2014.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #23-Alex Bowman / 102 laps / crash
42) #83-J.J. Yeley / 102 laps / crash
41) #95-Michael McDowell / 127 laps / crash
40) #18-Kyle Busch / 145 laps / running
39) #43-Aric Almirola / 166 laps / running

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Mike Bliss (4)
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Timmy Hill (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Alex Bowman, Landon Cassill, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Clay Rogers, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing, #93-BK Racing (4)
2nd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
3rd) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #23-BK Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #40-Hillman Racing, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (13)
2nd) Chevrolet (12)
3rd) Ford (7)

TRUCKS: Mike Harmon Trails Talladega Truck Field

SOURCE: Rubbin's Racin' Forums
Mike Harmon picked up the 6th last-place finish of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in Saturday’s Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola at the Talladega Superspeedway when his #74 Jr. Peters Automotive Chevrolet fell out with engine trouble and did not complete the first of the race’s 194 laps.

The finish is Harmon’s second of 2014 and his first since Chicagoland, three races ago, and his second in a row without completing the opening lap.  With four races to go, Harmon is now part of a five-way tie for the 2014 LASTCAR Truck Series Championship.  The lead in the tiebreaker goes to Caleb Roark, who has 8 bottom-five finishes over Justin Jennings and Charles Lewandoski’s 7 and Ryan Ellis’ 4.  Harmon’s two last-place finishes were his only series starts so far this season, so he trails the tiebreaker with just 2 bottom-fives.

Harmon’s #74 was one of 36 entries on the preliminary entry list for Talladega, creating the first full Truck Series field since Bristol in August.  Series veteran Ryan Sieg, a Nationwide regular this season, joined as a late entry in his #39, and when T.J. Bell withdrew the #56, the field remained at 36.

Harmon ran the slowest speed in the weekend’s only practice session, clocking in at just 134.602 mph.  He did not run a lap in qualifying, settling on the 35th spot - a one-position improvement when Milka Duno, making her series debut in the #1 CanTV Chevrolet, also did not run.  In the race itself, Harmon did not complete a lap and remained in the 36th spot.  Finishing 35th was Justin Jennings in the second Mike Mittler-owned truck, two laps in arrears.

Rounding out the Bottom Five were Ron Hornaday, Jr., Ryan Sieg, and Mason Mingus, all of them taken out in a multi-truck accident on Lap 12 when German Quiroga lost control heading onto the backstretch and swerved into traffic.

In the frantic run to the finish, several drivers turned in excellent runs.  Spencer Gallagher, fresh off his first ARCA win at Kansas, earned his first top-five finish in just his tenth career start when a daring move to the outside left his #23 Allegiant Travel Chevrolet 3rd at the finish.  Gallagher’s previous best was an 11th earlier this year at Iowa.  Chris Fontaine, making his 50th series start, equaled his career-best 7th at Daytona in 2012 driving his #84 Glenden Enterprises Toyota.  And John Wes Townley finished 8th in the #05 Zaxby’s Toyota - his best run since he parted ways with Richie Wauters’ team after Kentucky.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*Harmon is the first driver to not complete a lap of the Truck Series race at Talladega.
*This is the first last-place finish for both Harmon and the #74 in a Truck Series race at Talladega.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
36) #74-Mike Harmon / 0 laps / engine
35) #36-Justin Jennings / 2 laps / vibration
34) #9-Ron Hornaday, Jr.  11 laps / crash
33) #39-Ryan Sieg / 11 laps / crash
32) #15-Mason Mingus / 11 laps / crash

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Ryan Ellis, Mike Harmon, Justin Jennings, Charles Lewandoski, Caleb Roark (2)
2nd) Mike Affarano, Bryan Dauzat, Alex Guenette, Blake Koch, Ted Minor, Tommy Regan, Scott Stenzel, Jason White (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #0-Jennifer Jo Cobb (4)
2nd) #36-Mike Mittler, #63-Mike Mittler / Randy Young, #74-Mike Harmon (2)
3rd) #28-FDNY Racing, #35-Win-Tron Racing, #42-Randy Young, #45-Regan Motorsports, #57-Norm Benning, #74-Mario Gosselin, #93-RSS Racing, #03-Mike Affarano Motorsports (1)

LASTCAR TRUCK SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet (15)
2nd) RAM (2)
3rd) Toyota (1)

Sunday, October 12, 2014

CUP: Clint Bowyer Saves Parsons Team From First Last-Place Finish Of 2014

SOURCE: Jonathan McCoy, RubbingsRacing.com
Clint Bowyer picked up the 2nd last-place finish of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Saturday’s Bank of America 500 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway when his #15 Pink Lemonade 5-Hour Energy Toyota fell out with a blown engine after he completed 94 of the race’s 334 laps.

The finish was Bowyer’s second of the season and his first since the spring race at Richmond, 22 races ago.

From that Richmond race to the Chase cutoff at the track last month, Bowyer showed signs of improvement, scoring four Top Fives and nine Top Tens in 17 races.  In his Richmond return, he matched his season-best 3rd at Talladega in April and climbed to 17th in points - but, hamstrung by a 38th-place finish at Atlanta the week before, he missed a spot in the Chase by just seven points.  Bowyer came to Charlotte with just one top-ten finish in the postseason: a 9th at Dover.

For Charlotte, Bowyer would run his second-straight race with sponsorship from 5-Hour Energy’s Pink Lemonade flavored product, one of many pink schemes in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  Bowyer’s car showed speed early, running 15th in Thursday’s opening practice and 9th in the second session on Friday.  He qualified 25th at an average speed of 195.291 mph, then inched back to 21st in Happy Hour.

The only driver missing the show was Trevor Bayne, his first DNQ in Cup competition after 55 successful attempts - nearly all of them as a “go-or-go-homer.”  It was Bayne’s first Cup attempt that was not in the Wood Brothers’ #21, but rather the #6 Advocare Ford he will run full-time next season.

At the start of Saturday’s race, which ESPN pre-empted with both college football and pre-season basketball, the online leaderboard indicated 2014 LASTCAR Nationwide Series leader Blake Koch held the 43rd spot on the opening lap in the #32 Leaf Filter Ford.  It was Koch’s first Cup start since driving Frankie Stoddard’s #32 at Dover in June.  On Lap 2, Koch surrendered the spot to Brett Moffitt, who was making his first start in the #66 Identity Ventures Racing team since Atlanta.  Moffitt was the first driver to lose a lap on Lap 7, and he soon lost a handful more, perhaps due to contact with the outside wall as indicated by damage shown to his passenger side door on Lap 189.  On Lap 17, Moffitt was still last, five laps down to the leaders.

With 2014 LASTCAR Cup leaders Dave Blaney and Mike Bliss not in Saturday’s field, Timmy Hill emerged as a threat to join the late-season battle for most last-place finishes.  Driving the #33 Retroinfinity.com Chevrolet for the second-straight race, Hill slipped to 42nd during a round of green-flag stops on Lap 78.  He was then passed by Josh Wise, whose #98 Provident Metals Chevrolet went behind the wall with mechanical troubles moments later.  By Lap 84, Wise had slipped past Moffitt for last, off the track and apparently headed for Phil Parsons Racing’s first last-place run of 2014.

Then, on Lap 94, smoke billowed from underneath Bowyer’s #15, bringing out the second caution of the night.  He pulled behind the wall, his night done.  Wise returned to the track on Lap 116, then dropped Bowyer to last on Lap 133, just as the engine on Paul Menard’s #27 Schrock / Menards Chevrolet let go.  On the broadcast, a plain-clothed Bowyer was seen giving a thumbs-up to Menard as he pulled the yellow car behind the wall.  Wise ended up 41st, his rear gear giving out on the backstretch on Lap 222.  Moffitt and Koch rounded out the Bottom Five, both finishing under power.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*The #15 had never before finished last in a Cup Series race at Charlotte.
*This is the first last-place finish for Michael Waltrip Racing in a Cup race at Charlotte since October 11, 2008, when A.J. Allmendinger crashed in the #00 Champon Mortgage Toyota after 52 laps.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
43) #15-Clint Bowyer / 94 laps / engine
42) #27-Paul Menard / 134 laps / engine
41) #98-Josh Wise / 178 laps / rear gear
40) #66-Brett Moffitt / 320 laps / running
39) #32-Blake Koch / 322 laps / running

LASTCAR CUP SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Mike Bliss (4)
2nd) Dave Blaney (3)
3rd) Clint Bowyer, Timmy Hill (2)
4th) A.J. Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Trevor Bayne, Landon Cassill, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., David Gilliland, Denny Hamlin, Travis Kvapil, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell, Joe Nemechek, Clay Rogers, Johnny Sauter, Morgan Shepherd, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Truex, Brian Vickers, Cole Whitt, J.J. Yeley (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #37-Tommy Baldwin Racing, #93-BK Racing (4)
2nd) #15-Michael Waltrip Racing, #77-Randy Humphrey Racing (2)
3rd) #11-Joe Gibbs Racing, #14-Stewart-Haas Racing, #21-Wood Brothers Racing, #26-BK Racing, #32-Go FAS Racing, #33-Circle Sport, #38-Front Row Motorsports, #40-Hillman Racing, #42-Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, #43-Richard Petty Motorsports, #44-Team XTREME Racing, #47-JTG-Daugherty Racing, #55-Michael Waltrip Racing, #66-Michael Waltrip Racing / Identity Ventures Racing, #78-Furniture Row Racing, #83-BK Racing, #87-Identity Ventures Racing, #88-Hendrick Motorsports, #95-Leavine Family Racing (1)

LASTCAR CUP SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Chevrolet, Toyota (12)
2nd) Ford (7)

N’WIDE: Opening-Lap Pileup Gives Jeffrey Earnhardt First Last-Place Finish

SOURCE: Terry Renna, AP
Jeffrey Earnhardt picked up the 1st last-place finish of his NASCAR Nationwide Series career in Friday’s Drive for the Cure 300 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway when his #4 Flex Seal Chevrolet was involved in a grinding 11-car pileup just seconds after the green flag, preventing him from completing a any of the race’s 200 laps.  The finish came in Earnhardt’s 57th series start.

Jeffrey, the 25-year-old son of Kerry Earnhardt, came into the Charlotte race near the end of his first full season in Nationwide Series competition.  Following two seasons in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East with a career-best 5th-place ranking in the 2007 standings, Earnhardt made his Nationwide debut at Watkins Glen in 2009, driving the #40 for what is now The Motorsports Group to a 24th-place finish.  After three partial seasons with Rick Ware Racing and Go Green Racing, Earnhardt signed with another veteran organization - Johnny Davis’ JD Motorsports - for the full 2014 campaign.  JD’s lineup would include Cup regular Landon Cassill in the #01 and a part-time third entry, #87, shared with NEMCO Motorsports and Rick Ware.

This season, Earnhardt improved on his career-best finish of 16th at Talladega in 2013 with a 12th-place run at Bristol in August, but six DNFs in the first 29 races held him to 18th in points with an average finish of 25.7.  He looked to improve at the Charlotte track, where he’d come home 25th in the spring.

Earnhardt timed in 28th in Thursday’s opening practice, then slipped to 31st in Happy Hour.  He picked up a couple more spots in qualifying, improving to the 29th spot on the grid with an average speed of 174.622 mph.  Though he was a locked-in driver, it was a competitive qualifying session behind him as 45 drivers showed up for 40 spots, leaving two team cars and three single-car teams on the DNQ list, including Morgan Shepherd and Mike Harmon.

When the green flag flew on Friday’s race, however, 13th-place starter Chris Buescher lost traction on his #60 RFRShop.com Ford in the quad-oval, causing Mike Bliss to check-up in the unsponsored #19 TriStar Motorsports Toyota.  As the field accordioned behind them, Earnhardt rear-ended the #28 Texas 28 Spirits Stage Dodge, turning Yeley directly into the path of oncoming traffic.  As the field piled-up behind him, Earnhardt clipped the infield grass and spun backwards into the inside retaining wall, where it stayed under the caution.  Earnhardt was uninjured, but his car couldn’t get out of the grass.  After a tow to the garage, he was done for the night.

The remainder of the Bottom Five consisted entirely of the other four drivers most seriously damaged in the opening-lap wreck.  39th-place went to Yeley, who like Earnhardt, had to be towed to the garage and did not complete the opening lap.  38th-place Will Kimmel suffered extensive nose damage to his #44 Ingersoll-Rand Toyota, ending his fifth start of the year for TriStar Motorsports.  37th went to Tanner Berryhill, who after losing his Dodge to a wreck at Dover had originally planned to drive the renumbered blue-and-gold #13 Dodge entered by Carl Long.  However, Vision Racing completed work on Berryhill’s brand-new Toyota just in time for Happy Hour - only to have its front valence crunched in the pile-up.  36th went to The Motorsports Group’s Matt DiBenedetto, debuting a new white-and-blue paint job on the #40.  DiBenedetto suffered nose and hood damage to his Chevrolet, the only TMG car in the field after the DNQ of Ryan Ellis in the #46.

Six other drivers were involved in the wreck, but all of those drivers continued to run the race.

The crash also proved crucial to the LASTCAR Championship prospects of Jeff Green.  The all-time last-place leader finished 35th on Friday in TriStar’s #91 - just outside the bottom five.  Now, with three races to go, teammate Blake Koch holds both a two-finish lead in the standings and is ahead of Green in bottom-fives 16-12.  Unable to surpass Koch in bottom-fives, Green cannot win a tiebreaker with Koch.  This means for Green to claim the 2014 title, he must finish last in all three remaining races (Texas, Phoenix, Homestead).  A single last-place finish by anyone else will end Green’s three-year reign, whether or not Koch runs any more Nationwide races this season.

LASTCAR STATISTICS
*This is the first last-place finish for the #4 in a Nationwide Series race in exactly six years, dating back to this very Charlotte race on October 10, 2008.  That night, in the Dollar General 300, Derrike Cope trailed the field when his #4 JVC / ALLINENERGY.COM Chevrolet, fielded by Jay Robinson Racing, broke the suspension after 3 laps.
*Earnhardt is the first Nationwide driver to finish last at Charlotte without completing a lap since Angela Cope, one of Derrike’s twin nieces, did in the 2012 running.

THE BOTTOM FIVE
40) #4-Jeffrey Earnhardt / 0 laps / crash
39) #28-J.J. Yeley / 0 laps / crash
38) #44-Will Kimmel / 1 lap / crash
37) #17-Tanner Berryhill / 1 lap / crash
36) #40-Matt DiBenedetto / 1 lap / crash

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES DRIVER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Blake Koch (8)
2nd) Jeff Green (6)
3rd) Kevin Lepage (3)
4th) Matt DiBenedetto, Ryan Ellis (2)
5th) Tanner Berryhill, Milka Duno, Jeffrey Earnhardt, Matt Frahm, Roger Reuse, Robert Richardson, Jr., Tim Schendel, Jimmy Weller, Josh Wise (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES OWNER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) #10-TriStar Motorsports (11)
2nd) #46-The Motorsports Group (6)
3rd) #91-TriStar Motorsports (3)
4th) #74-Mike Harmon Racing (2)
5th) #4-JD Motorsports, #17-Vision Racing, #23-R3 Motorsports, #29-RAB Racing, #55-VIVA Motorsports / SS Green Light Racing, #77-Mike Harmon Racing, #87-Rick Ware Racing, #93-JGL Racing (1)

LASTCAR N'WIDE SERIES MANUFACTURER'S CHAMPIONSHIP
1st) Toyota (15)
2nd) Chevrolet (10)
3rd) Dodge (5)