CLINT BOWYER – 2018 Bristol II Race Report

Date:  Aug. 18, 2018
Event:  Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race (Round 24 of 36)
Series:  Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Location:  Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (.533-mile oval)
Format:  500 laps, broken into three stages (125 laps/125 laps/250 laps)
Start/Finish:  16th/6th (Running, completed 500 of 500)
Point Standing:  5th (776 points, 227 out of first)

Race Winner:  Kurt Busch of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 1 Winner:  Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner:  Joey Logano of Team Penske (Ford)

Stage 1 Recap (Laps 1-125):

Bowyer started 16th and finished third, collecting eight bonus points.
● Bowyer was 10th after the first lap when a multicar accident brought out the caution.
● Passed teammate Aric Almirola for seventh on lap 26.
● During competition caution on lap 60, Bowyer pitted for four tires and fuel. Only adjustment was to tire pressures.
● Restarted third on lap 67, but fell to sixth before rallying to fourth by lap 75.
● Passed Erik Jones for third on lap 90.
● At conclusion of stage, Bowyer brought the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford to the pits for four tires and fuel.

Stage 2 Recap (Laps 126-250):

Bowyer started third and finished sixth, collecting five bonus points.
● Was fifth at lap 150, but by lap 163, Bowyer radioed that his Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford was “way too loose.”
● Caution on lap 199 allowed Bowyer to pit for four tires and fuel with a right-rear wedge adjustment.
● Restarted in 10th on lap 204 and climbed to seventh after one lap.
● Passed Jones for sixth on lap 240.
● “Got a little tight toward the end,” said Bowyer at the end of Stage 2.
● Pitted for four tires and fuel at end of the stage, and reversed previous right-rear wedge adjustment.

Stage 3 Recap (Laps 251-500):

Bowyer started seventh and finished sixth.
● Bowyer brought his No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford up to fifth by lap 290.
● Passed Almirola for fourth on lap 311.
● Cracked top-three with pass of Joey Logano on lap 320.
● Passed teammate Kurt Busch for second on lap 344.
● Caution on lap 353 sent everyone to pit road. Bowyer was happy with his car and radioed, “No changes.”
● Pit stop was fast, allowing Bowyer to take the lead on lap 356.
● Bowyer led the next 86 laps, pitting one final time for fuel and tires on lap 442.  He resumed the lead on lap 443.
● Bowyer continued to lead until lap 476, where a caution forced one final restart.
● Busch, who was running in second, took the lead from Bowyer on lap 477 as Bowyer spun his tires, dropping to sixth.

Notes:

● Bowyer earned his 13th top-10 in 26 career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starts at Bristol.
● Bowyer led twice for 120 laps to increase his laps-led total at Bristol to 257.
● Kurt Busch won the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race to score his 30th career Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his sixth at Bristol. His margin of victory over second-place Kyle Larson was .367 of a second.
● Busch delivered the 100th points-paying victory for Ford’s Fusion in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. It was Ford’s 669th all-time win in the NASCAR Cup Series and its 37th victory at Bristol.
● There were nine caution periods for a total of 70 laps.
● Only 15 of the 40 drivers in the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race finished on the lead lap.

Clint Bowyer, driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Fusion:

“I just clearly didn’t do a good job on the restarts. When I had the lead I thought I got a good jump and about the time I shifted Kurt (Busch) hit me in the door and it just lit the tires up. He didn’t do anything wrong – it’s just a product of it. Then when I was on the bottom, I spun the tires real bad and they all got around me. It’s disappointing. You get a car that good and you get that close you hate to not come home with it, but, all in all, for as terrible as we started the weekend and as bad as our day was yesterday, to lead laps or even be in the top-10, I was pretty surprised to be honest with you. In the grand scheme of things, it was a pretty good run for us, but you hate to give them up like that.”

ARIC ALMIROLA – 2018 Bristol II Race Report

 

Date:                 Aug. 18, 2018
Event:               Bass Pro Shops Night Race (Round 24 of 36)
Series:               Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Location:          Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (.533-mile oval)
Format:             500 laps, broken into three stages (125 laps/125 laps/250 laps)
Start/Finish:      8th/31st (Running, completed 428 of 500 laps)
Point Standing: 12th (658 points, 345 out of first) 

Race Winner:    Kurt Busch of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 1 Winner: Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: Joey Logano of Team Penske (Ford)

Stage 1 Recap (Laps 1-125):

  • Aric Almirola started eighth and finished Stage 1 in the fifth spot to earn six stage points.
  • The Smithfield driver avoided an early caution and was in seventh when the competition caution was displayed on lap 60.
  • During that caution he reported the No. 10 Ford Fusion was too tight. He came to pit road for fuel, four tires and adjustments during the caution and restarted 10th on lap 66.
  • The balance of the stage ran under green, and Almirola finished fifth in the Smithfield Anytime Favorites Ford. 

Stage 2 Recap (Laps 126-250):

  • Almirola started Stage 2 in fifth and completed it fourth to earn seven bonus points.
  • On lap 194 Almirola entered the second spot with the Smithfield Ford.
  • The fourth caution was display on 198; Almirola pitted for fuel, four tires and adjustments and restarted third on lap 203.
  • The remainder of the stage was under the green flag, and Almirola ended it fourth to earn seven stage points.

Final Stage Recap (Laps 251-500):

  • Almirola started the final stage in the second position and ended it 31st.
  • On lap 336, while running in fifth, Almirola was black flagged by NASCAR because of smoke coming from his Ford Fusion.
  • Ultimately, the Tampa native had to bring the Smithfield Ford behind the wall for the crew to repair a fluid leak.
  • Once the leak was repaired, Almirola returned to the race to log laps for the remainder of the event, finishing in 31st.

Notes:

  • Almirola finished fifth in Stage 1 to earn six bonus points and fourth in Stage 2 to earn an additional seven bonus points.
  • Almirola led twice for two laps, which were his first laps led at Bristol.
  • Kurt Busch’s victory in the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race marked the 54th overall win for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR). It was the organization’s 49th points-paying Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win, its second consecutive victory and its second win at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.
  • Busch’s margin of victory over second-place Kyle Larson was .367 of a second. There were nine caution periods for a total of 70 laps, and only 15 of the 40 drivers in the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race finished on the lead lap.
  • This was SHR’s 13th Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series victory with Ford. The team won its first race with Ford when Busch captured the 2017 Daytona 500.
  • Busch delivered the 100th points-paying victory for Ford’s Fusion in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. It was Ford’s 669th all-time win in the NASCAR Cup Series.

KEVIN HARVICK – 2018 Bristol II Race Report

Date:                 Aug. 18, 2018
Event:               Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race (Round 24 of 36)
Series:               Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Location:          Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (.533-mile oval)
Format:             500 laps, broken into three stages (125 laps/125 laps/250 laps)
Start/Finish:      6th/10th (Running, completed 500 of 500 laps)
Point Standing:  2nd (960 points, 43 out of first)

Race Winner:    Kurt Busch of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 1 Winner: Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: Joey Logano of Team Penske (Ford)

Stage 1 Recap (Laps 1-125): 

  • Kevin Harvick started sixth, finished second, collecting nine bonus points.
  • The Jimmy John’s driver raced in the top-five until the competition caution on lap 60.
  • The No. 4 Ford came to pit road for four tires, fuel and a small adjustment on lap 64 and came out in fourth.
  • Harvick raced from fourth to second on the lap-66 restart and held the position the remainder of the stage.
  • Harvick challenged for the lead in the closing laps of the stage and finished .003 of a second behind stage winner Ryan Blaney.
  • He came to pit road for four tires and fuel at the conclusion of the stage and claimed the lead on pit road.

Stage 2 Recap (Laps 126-250):

  • Started first, finished 21st.
  • Harvick raced out front at the start of the stage before dropping back to third.
  • The Jimmy John’s Ford reported a tire issue on lap 185 and was forced to make an unscheduled four-tire pit stop. The stop resulted in Harvick losing two laps to the leaders.
  • Harvick narrowly avoided a wreck on lap 200 that brought out a caution. The No. 4 team took the wave-around to gain a lap back.
  • The Jimmy John’s Ford remained a lap down the remainder of the stage.

Final Stage Recap (Laps 251-500):

  • Started 20th and finished 10th.
  • Harvick raced his way up to the 17th position while remaining one lap down until staying out under caution on lap 442 to return to the lead lap.
  • The No. 4 Ford restarted 15th on lap 445 and gained one position by the following caution on lap 472.
  • Harvick brought the Jimmy John’s Ford to pit road for the final time on lap 474 for four tires and fuel.
  • The team restarted 13th on lap 477 and battled through a series of late-race cautions to capture a top-10 finish.

Notes:

  • This was Harvick’s series-leading 20th top-10 finish of the season and his 19th top-10 finish in 36 career Cup Series starts at Bristol.
  • Harvick finished second in Stage 1 by .003 to Blaney to earn nine bonus points.
  • Harvick led twice for a total of eight laps to increase his laps-led total at Bristol to 884.
  • Busch’s margin of victory over second-place Kyle Larson was .367 of a second.
  • There were nine caution periods for a total of 70 laps.
  • Only 15 of the 40 drivers in the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race finished on the lead lap.

COLE CUSTER – 2018 NXS Bristol II Race Report

Date: Aug. 17, 2018
EventFood City 300 (Round 21 of 33)
SeriesNASCAR Xfinity Series
LocationBristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (.533-mile oval)
Format: 300 laps, broken into three stages 85 laps/85 laps/130 laps)
Start/Finish: 9th/4th (Running, completed 310 of 310 laps)
Point Standing: 4th with 791 points
Note: Race extended 10 laps past its scheduled 300-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.

Race WinnerKyle Larson of Chip Ganassi Racing (Chevrolet)
Stage 1 WinnerKyle Larson of Chip Ganassi Racing (Chevrolet)
Stage 2 WinnerKyle Larson of Chip Ganassi Racing (Chevrolet)

Stage 1 Recap (Laps 1-75):

● Custer started ninth, finished fifth and earned six bonus points.
● Piloted the Haas Automation Ford Mustang in and around the top-10 until the yellow flag waved on lap 70.
● During the caution, he reported tight-handling conditions, but elected not to pit in order to maintain track position.
● Restarted in first and kept the Haas Automation Ford inside the top-five before the stage ended.
● After the stage concluded, Custer pitted for four tires, fuel and air pressure and chassis adjustments.

Stage 2 Recap (Laps 76-150):

Custer started 10th, finished 14th.
● Custer drove the Haas Automation Ford back into the top-five in the opening laps.
● Ran inside the top-10 until a lap-104 caution and noted loose-handling conditions.
● Crew chief Jeff Meendering radioed Custer to the pits during a lap-159 caution for four tires, fueland chassis adjustments.
● Custer restarted in 13th place and remained outside of the top-10 before the stage concluded.

Final Stage Recap (Laps 151-310):

● Custer started eighth, finished fourth.
● Custer was forced into the wall on lap 178, pushing him outside the top-10.
● During a caution on lap 259, Custer pitted for four tires, fuel and chassis adjustments to correct loose-handling conditions.
● Custer powered the Haas Automation Ford into seventh place before he was forced into the wall again on lap 272, falling back to 11th.
● Custer’s long-run speed proved to be valuable when he battled back to seventh with nine laps to go.
● After a caution was brought out with three laps remaining, the Haas Automation Ford driver climbed to the third position and was passed for fourth place by inches just as the checkered flag waved.

Notes:               

● Custer scored his eighth top-five of the season and his first at Bristol. It was also 18th top-10 of the year and third top-10 at Bristol.
● Custer earned six bonus points in the Food City 300 at Bristol.
● Custer led once for five laps.
● Eight cautions slowed the race for 59 laps.
● Only 11 of the 40 drivers finished on the lead lap.
● Kyle Larson won the Food City 300 to score his 12th career Xfinity Series victory, fourth of the season and first at Bristol. His margin of victory over second-place Christopher Bell was .434of a second.

Cole Custer, driver of the No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing With Biagi-DenBeste:       

“We came back from a lot. We definitely got used up on restarts for no reason. I don’t know why everybody wanted to put us in the wall today, but we had a solid Haas Automation Ford Mustang. The short run wasn’t the best, so maybe I could have done a little bit better, but our long-run speed was really good. I think we need to get a little bit better, but I’m happy that we had a pretty good points day.”

KEVIN HARVICK – 2018 Bristol II Race Advance

For the first time since the July race at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, Kevin Harvick will get behind the wheel of the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series heads to Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway for “America’s Night Race” this weekend.

Harvick heads to Bristol with his head held high as he leads the series with seven points-paying wins and 40 playoff points. The Bakersfield, California native remains second in the NASCAR Cup Series point standings with 924 points, trailing leader Kyle Busch by 62 points with three races remaining in the 26-race regular season.

At the conclusion of regular-season-ending Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the points leader collects 15 playoff points while the driver who finishes second collects 10. That five-point differential between first and second in the regular-season championship could play a vital role in whether a driver makes the winner-take-all Championship 4 playoff finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

In addition, with his 44th career Cup Series win Sunday at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Harvick became the first driver since Busch in 2008 to win seven of the first 23 races in a season. It also moved him into a tie with Bill Elliott for 17th on the all-time NASCAR Cup Series win list.

With the end of the regular season in sight, each race is an opportunity to kick it up a notch. Harvick and the No. 4 Jimmy John’s team have been the freaks of the Cup Series field in 2018. They are putting up freaky numbers with a series-best 1,190 laps led, 17 top-five finishes and 19 top-10s.

Harvick has some impressive statistics on Bristol’s high banks, having led 876 laps at the short track while earning two wins, 12 top-five finishes and 18 top-10s in 35 starts. In his nine starts at Bristol for SHR, he has accumulated six top-10 finishes, including one victory.

While the No. 4 team’s stats are impressive, it’s only looking for one thing this weekend – to get its Freaky Fast Ford back to victory lane at Bristol.

 

KEVIN HARVICK, Driver of the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

How is the intensity at Bristol different in the fall with only a three races remaining in the regular season?

“There are a lot of different agendas as we go back to Bristol this weekend because there are only three races left before we get to the playoffs. Obviously Bristol, being a short track, has that atmosphere where you can be aggressive and make more happen than you can at Indy or Darlington. But, Darlington is one of those places where you aren’t likely to see someone win who is too far outside of the box because of how the tires wear and you have extreme falloff. The good-handling cars are going to migrate toward the front and be up front, competing for the win. At Bristol, you tend to see Ricky Stenhouse Jr. running in the top-five and you saw Bubba Wallace leading laps there in the spring race. You’ll have a guy like (Ryan) Blaney, who thought he had the best car and had a chance to win that race and wound up not winning. In the end, you’re going to have to beat Kyle Busch. He’s had the car to beat there for the last several years. If the high line gets going, a guy like Kyle Larson is going to be tough to beat and is looking for his first trip to victory lane. There are a lot of variables in terms of how the bottom groove holds and if the groove widens out. If you see Ricky Stenhouse up there with a few laps to go, he is probably going to take some risks because that is his way into the playoffs. This is the place where all those agendas collide and people take chances they wouldn’t normally take.”

What makes Bristol a place that people love for the drama and the racing under the lights?

“Before they reconfigured the racetrack, the only way to pass was to hit the guy in front of you. You knew that if he wasn’t giving you some room, or wasn’t coming down on the straightaway, that that person was there to defend his position and was basically giving you the middle finger, saying, ‘Alright, if you’ve got the balls to knock me out of the way, go ahead and knock me out of the way.’ Sure enough, every time it happened, the person who got knocked out of the way was mad and it built rivalries. That is what it was and the fans loved it. Now that they’ve brought the bottom groove back at Bristol – and it moves around throughout the night, but for the first half of that race you are on the bottom of the racetrack and it’s kind of like Bristol used to be – when you’re losing so much time to the guys who are just out of sight, you have to move someone out of the way. That’s what that bottom lane at Bristol promotes.”

ARIC ALMIROLA – 2018 Bristol II Race Advance

This weekend, the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series returns to Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway for “America’s Night Race.” Aric Almirola and the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) earned a solid sixth-place finish at the “Last Great Colosseum” during this year’s spring event and are looking to continue their success there Saturday night.

The stop at Bristol should provide confidence for the 34-year-old Almirola as he was the top finishing SHR driver during the spring race – one of his 10 top-10 finishes this season. In addition to gaining more confidence, Almirola’s No. 10 Ford Fusion will have Smithfield’s Anytime Favorites brand adorning the car.

Almirola has been successful this season at short tracks, in general, completing 99.8 percent of all possible laps and collecting four of his top-10 results at tracks 1.058 miles or less. His lone top-five result this season came on the mile oval at  New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, where he led 42 laps before ultimately finishing third.

Before donning his helmet this weekend, Almirola will first put on his super-dad hat as he prepares his two kids, Abby and Alex, for their first day back to school. And just like he has to be fast on the track, Almirola will have to be fast preparing a protein-packed breakfast in the morning to power up his kids’ day of learning. Luckily, Smithfield has the perfect product line for Almirola to be quick in the morning – Smithfield’s Anytime Favorites. Anytime Favorites will help Almirola make the transition from those slow summer mornings to the rushed, school-day wake-up calls a breeze as all he needs to do is to open the package and add eggs to the contents for an easy family breakfast.

Almirola and Smithfield know that breakfast is important for all kids, and that’s why he and Smithfield are committed to ensuring everyone has access to this essential meal needed to perform successfully in school. Smithfield has once again partnered with No Kid Hungry, doubling its donation to 2 million meals to support the organization’s in-school breakfast programs that help ensure the 1 in 6 American children struggling with hunger can check this item off their list, too. Additionally, Almirola’s No. 10 Ford Fusion will be sporting a unique Anytime Favorites livery at Bristol to highlight the back-to-school favorite while also encouraging race fans to show their breakfast via social media using #BreakfastPower. For every breakfast photo shared with the hashtag, Smithfield will donate 10 meals to No Kid Hungry – helping more kids get access to healthy meals.

As the action heats up Saturday night, know that Almirola and his Smithfield team will also be powered by breakfast at Bristol.

Even though Smithfield is focused on school-day breakfast this weekend at Bristol, summer is still in full swing. Fans have the opportunity to continue celebrating the grilling season by entering Smithfield’s “Hero of the Grill” contest that Almirola and five-time world-champion barbecue pitmaster Tuffy Stone helped launch earlier this year. Fans are encouraged to nominate their favorite grill hero by visiting SmithfieldGetGrilling.com. One “Hero of the Grill” nominee will win $5,000. Plus, the first 10,000 nominees will have the chance to see their name featured on Almirola’s No. 10 Smithfield Ford at Richmond (Va.) Raceway in September. =

Fans can also enter for their chance to win Smithfield’s Smoke Machine Mustang designed by team co-owner Tony Stewart with the help of drifting champion Vaughn Gittin Jr. They helped create a one-of-a-kind Ford Mustang RTR Spec 3 that will be given away to one lucky fan. Fans can register for their chance to win the suped-up Mustang and a trip to November’s Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead by visiting SmithfieldRacing.com, or by texting SMOKE to 82257.

Bristol marks the 21st points-paying event during which the Smithfield livery has adorned Almirola’s No. 10 Ford Fusion. Smithfield, a brand of Smithfield Foods, which is based approximately five hours northeast of SHR headquarters in Smithfield, Virginia, is in its seventh season with Almirola and its first with SHR. Founded in 1936, Smithfield is a leading provider of high-quality pork products, with a vast product portfolio including smoked meats, hams, bacon, sausage, ribs, and a wide variety of fresh pork cuts.

 

ARIC ALMIROLA, Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Anytime Favorites Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What has it been like driving for a high-performance team like Stewart-Haas Racing this season?

“The performance speaks for itself and you can see it week in and week out. The Stewart-Haas Racing cars are a threat. They’re running in the top-five, leading laps and challenging for wins and we’re putting ourselves in position to win races with all four of our cars. It’s been fun. Its fun when you get on the airplane for whatever racetrack you’re going to and you feel like you’re going to have a shot to win.”

You’re working with a rookie crew chief this year, Johnny Klausmeier. He’s a wealth of information. What’s it like working with him? 

“Johnny is great. He is new at being a crew chief but he’s a very smart engineer and he’s working his way into the leadership role. As he continues to grow and gets more comfortable in that role, and as we continue to bond as a team and gel, it’s just going to get better and better. That’s one thing that has me really excited – the way we’ve performed already in the first half of the season with a relatively very young, new group all working together. The potential is very high. I don’t feel like we’ve come close to reaching our max potential and yet we’ve run really well.”

Your No. 10 car has a little bit different look this weekend at Bristol. Can you talk about it?

“I’m looking forward to Bristol. We have a really cool paint scheme – Smithfield Anytime Favorites. We use the product all of the time in our house. They’re precooked and ready to go. Breakfast is a big deal in our house and we use it to power up for the day. I love the little diced pieces of ham. I throw them in the pan with some spinach, mushrooms and eggs, and you’re ready to go for the day.”

KURT BUSCH – 2018 Bristol II Race Advance

The folks who cover and follow NASCAR are of course talking about the “Big Three.” Kevin Harvick has seven victories, Kyle Busch has six wins and Martin Truex Jr., has four checkered flags.

They make up the top-three in Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series points. But fourth on the list is Kurt Busch, driver of the No. 41 Monster Energy/Haas Automation Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR).

Busch has 14 top-10 finishes and has been in the top-10 in points for 18 consecutive weeks, his longest such stretch since 2016. But he has yet to score a victory this year.

Fortunately for Busch, the night race at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway is next on the schedule.

Busch has five wins, 10 top-five finishes and 17 top-10s at the .533-mile concrete oval and has led 1,062 laps in 35 career starts there.

He scored his first career NASCAR Cup Series win at Bristol in March 2002. He started 27th and led 89 laps en route to that maiden victory. It was only his third visit to the fast, high-banked oval, making him the only driver to record his first win at Bristol in fewer than four attempts.

His five career Bristol wins – March 2002 and 2003, August 2003, March 2004 and 2006 – is second best among active NASCAR Cup Series drivers at Bristol behind his younger brother Kyle Busch, who has seven wins there.

The elder Busch brother even completed a Bristol Cup Series sweep in 2003, winning both the spring and fall events. He started ninth and led 116 laps in March while starting fifth and leading 121 laps in August. In March 2004, Busch went on to record his third consecutive win at Bristol when he started 13th and led 119 laps on his way to victory lane.

He is one of four drivers to win three or more consecutive Cup Series races at Bristol. Fred Lorenzen won three in a row starting with the fall race in 1963, followed by a sweep of both 1964 events. Cale Yarborough won four in a row with sweeps in 1976 and 1977. Darrell Waltrip won seven in a row, with sweeps in 1981, 1982 and 1983, then a win at the March 1984 race.

Busch has led laps in 15 of his 35 career Cup Series starts at Bristol and he has led more than 100 laps four times, including three consecutive races – 116 in March 2003, 121 in August 2003, and 119 in March 2004. He’s hoping that Bristol will be his first win of the 2018 season with the playoffs just around the corner.

 

KURT BUSCH, Driver of the No. 41 Monster Energy/Haas Automation Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Talk about Bristol Motor Speedway – you’ve won there five times.

“I don’t know what it is about the track. My first couple times there, I was blown away by the speed and intensity of it. When I went back in the spring of 2002, everything slowed down and it was like I had a perfect manual on how to get around there. That was all brought to me by Jimmy Fenning (former crew chief from Roush-Fenway Racing). He really helped calm me down and told me the different points to look for. The biggest key is knowing when to run hard and when not to run hard. If you try to run hard every single lap, you’re not going to make it. There are certain points in the race when you run hard and there are certain points when you’re not necessarily cruising, but just trying to maintain the right pace. You go hard, and then you save a little bit and then you go hard again because you saved a little bit. It’s a matter of applying it at the right time.” 

And changes to Bristol since you starting running there in 2002? You have driven everything there. 

“I haven’t won since they put in the transition banking, the way it goes from the low groove to the high groove. They ground the high groove and that seemed to backfire on what they were trying to accomplish. The outside groove is now the preferred groove. When it heats up with rubber, it’s like glue. But you have to wait for it. You have to wait for that rubber to get warm and grab the tires. In the end, though, it’s still the same characteristics of Bristol. Lap times are still in the 15-second range. The races I’ve won there, we were maintaining good lap times throughout the 100-lap run. And that’s still what it takes to win at Bristol.”

What do you like about how to approach a Bristol race?

“I like how you can attack the track in certain situations. And then you have to cruise in other situations. You always have to know your surroundings at Bristol. When someone is on your rear bumper, or if you are really trying to pressure somebody hard, is there a reason to be doing that? You have to be one with the track and then just digest where the other cars are around you.”

 

COLE CUSTER – 2018 NXS Bristol II Race Advance

Event:               Food City 300 (Round 22 of 33)
Date:                 August 17, 2018
Location:          Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway    
Layout:             .533-mile oval

 

Cole Custer Notes of Interest:

 

  • Friday’s Food City 300 will mark Cole Custer’s third Xfinity Series start at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.
  • While the Food City 300 will be Custer’s third Xfinity Series start at Bristol, it will also be his eighth overall start at the .533-mile oval in East Tennessee. Custer has three NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts and two NASCAR K&N Pro Series starts at Bristol. Custer’s career-best Bristol finish is sixth in the 2016 Truck Series race.
  • While it wasn’t his best finish, Custer’s most impressive performance at Bristol was in the 2015 Truck Series race. He started fifth and led twice for a race-high 111 laps, holding off a handful of veterans including Matt Crafton, Johnny Sauter and Kyle Busch. But when Custer was coming up on Spencer Gallagher to put him a lap down less than 40 laps from the finish, Gallagher spun in front of Custer. With nowhere to go, Custer collided with him, all but ending his race. He finished 16th.
  • In Custer’s last Xfinity Series start at Bristol, he earned his first career pole award and battled in and around the top-five throughout the race before earning his second-straight top-10 at the track.
  • Custer’s best finish in the 21 Xfinity Series races run this season is second, earned in the 11th event May 26 at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway.
  • Custer has earned four poles, seven top-five finishes, 17 top-10s, and has led 232 laps in the 2018 Xfinity Series season.
  • Custer’s four pole awards this season leads all Xfinity Series regulars – including his first pole award won at Bristol on April 18.
  • Custer is fourth in the Xfinity Series driver standings with 752 points, 19 behind series leader Christopher Bell.
  • Custer is competing for his sixth consecutive top-10 in the Food City 300.
  • For the third year, a chemical compound called VHT has been added to the inside portion of the Bristol track surface to enhance the lower racing groove.
  • There are only five races left until the Xfinity Series playoffs begin Sept. 21 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway. The winner of the regular-season points championship will earn an additional 15 playoff points – equivalent to winning three races.

 

Cole Custer, Driver Q&A

 

What does it take to cross the finish line first at Bristol? 

“I think the biggest thing now is trying to make a good decision on what you think the VHT is going to do in the race and make good adjustments to your car for that. I think your line will change throughout the weekend and in the race as the VHT changes, and it will also depend on how they put it down. Usually, it seems like we start running the top in the race, though.”

How important is it to battle for the regular-season championship?

“In our case it’s very important. We either need to win a few races or win the regular-season championship to match those guys with a lot of playoffs points. We’re still happy with where we are right now, but it would put us in a great spot going into the first round of the playoffs.”

Where would you rank Bristol on your list of favorite tracks? 

“Bristol ranks high on my charts. It’s so much fun to slip and slide around a short track in the Xfinity Series and it’s something different we get to do. The fans obviously love short tracks, so it’s always great to put on a show for them.” 

 

Jeff Meendering, Crew Chief Q&A

 

What will be the key to earning a solid finish at Bristol? 

“Cole’s been great at short tracks his whole career. I like the idea of enhancing the bottom groove so the track has more options for passing. We’re coming back to Bristol with more notes than we had before. As long as we stay out of trouble, I think we’ll have a good shot at it.”

CLINT BOWYER – 2018 Bristol II Race Advance

Every Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver deals with pressure, but Clint Bowyer might be under a little more than usual Saturday night in the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.

Since 2017, Bowyer has driven for owners Gene Haas and three-time Cup Series champion Tony Stewart as part of  Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR.) Driving for Stewart, a future Hall of Fame driver, is one thing, but this weekend Bowyer’s Ford Fusion will also carry the logos of  Rush Truck Centers and Cummins Inc.

Cummins’global headquarters is in Columbus, Indiana – Stewart’s hometown.

“That’s a lot of pressure,” Bowyer said with a laugh. “Not only do I have to continue filling Tony’s seat, now I’ve got his hometown company’s logo on the side of my Ford. He’s going to have high expectations, I’m sure, but it’s going to be a lot of fun and I’m glad Cummins has joined us.”

Cummins makes its first appearance on the No. 14 Ford Fusion Saturday night, but it is a household name to most motorsports fans.

Its lineage dates back to the inaugural Indianapolis 500 in 1911, when company founder Clessie Cummins was on the pit crew of the race-winning Marmon Wasp of driver Ray Harroun. Since its founding in 1919, the company now employs approximately 58,600 people and serves customers in about 190 countries and territories through a network of some 500 company-owned and independent distributor locations and approximately 7,500 dealer locations.

While Cummins is a corporation of complementary business segments that design, manufacture, distribute and service a broad portfolio of power solutions, it is best known for its diesel truck engines. At Bristol, Cummins will share space on the No. 14 with Rush Truck Centers, the nation’s largest provider of premium products and services for the commercial vehicle market, with the largest truck inventory in North America.

Rush Truck Centers has used Bowyer and the team to appeal to NASCAR fans as one way to recruit the technicians it needs to operate the largest network of commercial truck and bus dealerships in the country, with locations in 22 states. According to Rush Truck Centers, the trucking industry is expected to need 200,000 diesel technicians over the next 10 years to keep up with maintenance demands. Rush Truck Centers wants to make NASCAR fans aware of these opportunities.

Rush Truck Centers and Cummins are accustomed to working with each other. When a Cummins customer is in need of maintenance at a Rush Truck Centers location, RushCare Service Connect automatically provides information to Cummins, expediting and facilitating Cummins support and engagement when necessary. All correspondence is captured and can be viewed on the Service Connect portal, allowing customers and service advisors to see the entire maintenance history associated with any vehicle in the system.

Rush Truck Centers has integrated its RushCare Telematics Solution and its Service Connect platform with Cummins Connected Diagnostics to improve its service program, making maintenance decisions and service tracking easier for shared customers.

Cummins and Rush Truck Centers also help SHR get its racecars to the track each weekend. SHR’s Peterbilt Model 389 haulers are equipped with Cummins engines and RushCare Telematics and supported by the RushCare team, which monitors and reports critical fault codes, vehicle performance and driver habits. This ensures the haulers remain in peak condition while traveling thousands of miles from race to race each season.

Bowyer hopes to put both Rush and Cummins in victory lane Saturday night. Although he hasn’t won at Bristol, he’s often near the front when the checkered flag falls there. He owns seven top-five finishes and 12 top-10s at Bristol and has led 137 laps in 25 starts. He finished second in this race in 2017, trailing winner Jimmie Johnson across the finish line by 1.199 seconds.

“The Bristol night race is such a party,” Bowyer said. “The fans are right on top of you. They’ve been there all day so, by the time we take the green flag Saturday night, the place is rocking,”

Bowyer arrives at Bristol after a 12th-place finish Sunday at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn. The finish kept Bowyer fifth in the regular-season points race. Bowyer owns the fourth-most playoff points as the season winds down with just three races remaining before the 2018 playoffs.

Playoff time certainly turns up the pressure for the Cup Series drivers. The pressure of driving for one of the businesses in Stewart’s hometown this weekend in Bristol might make for a good tune-up for Bowyer.

 

CLINT BOWYER, Driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What is it like to race at Bristol?

“There is no way to describe 500 laps at Bristol. If your car is handling well, it’s manageable. If it’s loose and you are midpack and there is someone in front of you who is erratic, you are tense and not breathing. You haven’t made it 10 laps and you are out of breath. You think, ‘There’s no way in hell I’m going to make it these 500 laps.’ Next thing you know, it’s lap 450 and you’re wishing it was 600 laps.” 

What would a victory celebration at Bristol be like? 

“I want to celebrate in front of all those wild and crazy fans. There’s no better atmosphere. They’re so close to you that you feel that environment. I’m telling you, during driver intros, you’re walking down there and it’s just the feeling that comes over you before you get in that car. It’s just something you don’t feel anywhere else. It’s because of the closeness of the fans to you. They’re all breathing down on you and expecting big things out of you, and you can’t wait to go out there and get in that coliseum and go to battle.”

How do you make your car go fast at Bristol? 

“That baby’s got to turn in the middle, man. It is so hard to get your car freed up enough to turn in the center of the corner but not be too loose in, and then not smoke the tires up and off the corner. At Bristol, you have to have the total package, a lot like I did in Martinsville.”

 

KEVIN HARVICK – 2018 Michigan II Race Report

Event:               Consumers Energy 400 (Round 23 of 36)
Series:               Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
Location:          Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn (2-mile oval)
Format:             200 laps, broken into three stages (60 laps/60 laps/80 laps)
Start/Finish:      3rd/1st(Running, completed 200 of 200 laps)
Point Standing:  2nd(924points, 62out of first)

Race Winner:    Kevin Harvick of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 1 Winner:Kevin Harvick of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: Kevin Harvick of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)

Stage 1 Recap (Laps 1-60): 

  • Kevin Harvick started third, finished first, collecting 10 bonus points and one playoff point.
  • The Busch Light/Mobil 1 driver stayed out during the first two cautions on lap eight and lap 15.
  • The No. 4 Ford came to pit road during the competition caution on lap 25 for two tires and fuel.
  • Harvick restarted second on lap 27 and stayed in the lead for the remainder of the stage.
  • He came to pit road for four tires and fuel at the end of the stage and came out fifth as the top-four cars opted to stay out.

Stage 2 Recap (Laps 61-120): 

  • Started fifth, finished first, earning 10 bonus points and an additional playoff point.
  • Harvick raced his way back up to the second position by lap 75, when he came to pit road under caution for fuel only.
  • The Busch Light/Mobil 1 Ford raced up to third by the following caution on lap 85. The team chose to stay out under caution.
  • Harvick restarted second on lap 86 and raced to the lead by lap 109 after a long battle with the No. 78.
  • The Busch Light/Mobil 1 Ford won the stage and came to pit road for four tires and fuel at the conclusion of Stage 2. 

Final Stage Recap (Laps 121-200): 

  • Started first and finished first.
  • Harvick stayed out under caution on lap 140 to remain the leader.
  • The No. 4 Ford surrendered the lead to come to pit road for a final time under green-flag conditions for four tires and fuel on lap 171.
  • Harvick took the lead for good on lap 190 after the remainder of the field cycled through its final scheduled pit stops.
  • Harvick’s margin of victory over second-place Brad Keselowski was 3.233 seconds. 

Notes:

  • This was Harvick’s 44thcareer Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win, and it ties him with Bill Elliott for 17thon the all-time NASCAR Cup Series win list.
  • This was Harvick’s 21stMonster Energy NASCAR Cup Series victory since joining Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) in 2014.
  • Harvick became the first driver since 2008 to win seven of the first 23 races in a season. Kyle Busch scored all eight of his 2008 victories in the season’s first 22 races.
  • This was Harvick’s series-leading seventh victory of 2018. It was also his 17thtop-five and 19thtop-10 finish of the season.
  • Harvick earned his second victory in 36 career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series starts at Michigan. It was also his 12thtop-five and 17thtop-10 at the track.
  • Harvick finished first in Stage 1 to earn 10 bonus points and one playoff point, and first in Stage 2 to earn an additional 10 bonus points and one more playoff point.
  • Harvick led five times for a race-high 108 laps to increase his laps-led total at Michigan to 480.
  • Harvick’s victory in the Consumers Energy 400 marked the 53rdoverall win for SHR. It was the organization’s 48thpoints-paying Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win and its third at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn.
  • SHR swept the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races at Michigan in 2018. Clint Bowyer won in the series’ June visit to the track.
  • Harvick’s win marked SHR’s series-leading ninth points-paying victory 23 races into the 2018 season. SHR also won the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race via Harvick.
  • This was SHR’s 12thMonster Energy NASCAR Cup Series victory with Ford. The team won its first race with Ford when Kurt Busch captured the 2017 Daytona 500.
  • There were eight caution periods for a total of 37 laps.
  • Twenty-one of the 40 drivers in the Consumers Energy 400 finished on the lead lap. 

Kevin Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Busch Light/Mobil 1 Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing: 

“(Son) Keelan is saving me some work (retrieving the checkered flag after the race). Usually when I get home the next day, we have to mock up a victory lane celebration. For him to be here and able to do that and be a part of NASCAR and bring your son to work and do all the things that we get to do with our kids – I have had him with me by myself the last three weeks, and we have had a ball. I couldn’t be happier to be a dad and be a part of NASCAR where they let your family come to the racetrack and be a part of it. Gotta thank everyone from Busch Light, Mobil 1, Ford, Jimmy John’s, everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing and all these fans for coming out today and supporting everything we do here in Michigan.” 

Next Up: 

The next event on the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race on Saturday, Aug. 18 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway. The race starts at 7:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by NBCSN beginning at 6 p.m.