RCR Post Race Report — Martinsville Speedway

Race Highlights:

  • Richard Childress Racing teammates finished fourth (Kevin Harvick), sixth (Jeff Burton), 19th (Clint Bowyer) and 24th (Paul Menard) in the TUMS Fast Relief 500.
  • Harvick spent 493 of 500  laps (98.6 percent) in the top 15, ranking him first among all drivers in that category according to NASCAR Loop Data Statistics.
  • Harvick ranked sixth in the NASCAR Loop Data category Average Running Position (6.998), fifth in the category Driver Rating (110.9), was fourth-fastest of all drivers early in a run (92.942 mph) and ranked fifth in the category Green Flag Speed (92.015 mph).
  • The sixth-place finish was Burton’s 16th top-10 showing in 35 races at Martinsville Speedway. The South Boston, Va., native won the home state race in September 1997.
  • Burton ranked first in the NASCAR Loop Data category Closers, picking up 15 positions in the final 50 laps of Sunday’s race.
  • The No. 31 Caterpillar Racing Chevrolet ran 349 of the 500 laps, or 69.8 percent, in the top 15, ranking Burton 13th among all drivers according to NASCAR Loop Data Statistics.
  • Bowyer made 104 green-flag passes, fifth-most in the 43-car field, and passed 53 competitors while running in the top 15 according to NASCAR Loop Data Statistics.
  • Menard started 21st and ran as high as second before finishing 24th, maintaining an average running position of 17.432 that ranked him 18th among all drivers in that category according to NASCAR’s Loop Data Statistics.
  • Menard made 68 green-flag passes and held an average green-flag speed of 91.405 mph according to NASCAR’s Loop Data Statistics.
  • The next NSCS race is the AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday, November 6 and will be televised live on ESPN beginning at 3 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and Sirius XM Satellite Radio beginning at 2 p.m. EDT.
2011 CC Team Icon 27 NSCS Menards

Menard Finishes 24th in Attrition-Filled Martinsville Race

Richard Childress Racing’s Paul Menard and the No. 27 Richmond/Menards team escaped Sunday afternoon’s action-packed short track race at Martinsville Speedway with a top-25 finish. Menard started the 500-lap race from the 21st position after rain throughout the early portion of the weekend caused NASCAR officials to scratch Saturday’s qualifying and set the field according to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series owners point standings. Menard took the green flag in front of an estimated 62,000 people and quickly noted to crew chief Slugger Labbe the No. 27 Chevrolet had a tight-handling condition. With the race slowed by 18 cautions for 108 laps, there were plenty of opportunities to make chassis adjustments during routine pit stops and by the event’s midpoint, handling had improved on the No. 27 machine. Menard was scored15th in the running order and racing for position with Kurt Busch when the two made contact on lap 425, sending the No. 22 machine spinning and leaving Menard’s yellow No. 27 racer with significant right-side damage. Menard immediately brought his Chevrolet to pit road so the RCR team could evaluate the damage. A lengthy pit stop ensued, with the team adding door foam to the right side of the Chevrolet along with four Goodyear tires and Sunoco E15 fuel. Menard lost three laps to the race leaders during the extended pit stop and restarted in the 27th position when green-flag racing resumed on lap 432. The 2011 Brickyard 400 race winner spent the remainder of the race working to secure track position and ultimately earned a 24th-place result.

Start – 21                  Finish – 24                Laps Led – 0                  Points – 21

PAUL MENARD QUOTE:

“I don’t know what to say. That was just dumb racing out there today. I think we would have been okay until that incident with the No. 22. It’s just difficult to recover from three laps down, especially that close to the end of the race.”

2011 CC Team Logo NSCS 29 BUD 150 px

Harvick Finishes Fourth at Martinsville to Climb to Third in Points

In a race mired with 18 cautions, Kevin Harvick and the No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet team avoided trouble and ran solidly in the top 10 for most of Sunday’s TUMS Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway before taking the checkered flag in the fourth position. Harvick started the race from the fifth position as the field was set by owner points after qualifying was cancelled due to persistent rain that fell on Friday and again Saturday morning. At the start of the race, Harvick struggled with a loose-handling No. 29 Chevrolet, and raced anywhere from second to 19th as various pit strategies played through. He noted to crew chief Gil Martin there was “no second groove,” and struggled with restarting in the outside line throughout the race. The Bakersfield, Calif. native fought a tight-handling race car during the middle of the race but remained inside the top 10. Harvick was running eighth when the caution waved for the 11th time and when he came down pit road at lap 399, Martin called for a two-tire stop to gain track position. Harvick took the lead off of pit road and took turns leading with various other Chase contenders for the next 20 laps, never falling below second until lap 438 when the No. 48 Chevrolet got underneath Harvick and pinned him in the outside lane causing the No. 29 team to fall back to sixth position by lap 441. He fell back to 10th after pitting for the final time on lap 459 for four tires and fuel, but was able to survive several late-race cautions and climbed to the fourth position before the caution flag waved for the final time at lap 492. The field took the green with just four laps to go with Harvick once again stuck in the outside line. His Richard Childress Racing teammate, Jeff Burton, let him get down to the bottom quickly and Harvick was able to maintain his position for the closing laps to take the checkered flag in the fourth position.

 

Start – 5                 Finish – 4                 Laps Led – 13                Points – 3

KEVIN HARVICK QUOTE:

It was definitely a battle. Everybody was driving hard. That is what you are supposed to do here at Martinsville (Speedway). I know the guys did a good job making the car better and we got good track position. The No. 31 (Jeff Burton) helped us on that last restart there to get down and I really appreciate that. The top was tough for me to get going on the restarts and the No. 14 (Tony Stewart, race winner) was really the only one that could make any ground up there on the restarts and that’s what won him the race. All-in-all, everybody on our Budweiser Chevy team did a good job”

 

2011 CC Team Logo NSCS 31 CAT

Hard-Earned Top-10 Finish at Martinsville for Caterpillar Racing Team

Jeff Burton and the No. 31 Caterpillar Racing team earned a top-10 finish for the second consecutive week with a scrappy and determined run that resulted in a sixth-place showing at Martinsville Speedway. Rain washed away Friday’s schedule entirely and further precipitation Saturday morning wiped out NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying. Teams were given an hour and a half of practice that afternoon and Sunday’s 43-car field was set based on the owner point standings. Burton, therefore, lined up on the inside of the 12th row for the 500-lap race on Martinsville’s flat half-mile paper clip. The first five of the day’s 18 caution periods occurred in the race’s first 100 laps, including the first after just seven laps that resulted in sheet metal damage to the left-rear corner and TV panel of the No. 31 Chevrolet. The pit crew did yeoman duty to fix the damage and keep Burton on the lead lap. Burton ran as high as seventh on the leader board during the balance of the first 100 laps. The No. 31 Cat Chevy began the second 100 laps in 22nd place but, from gritty driving in cramped quarters and adjustments made under caution on laps 150 and 197, Burton moved into the top 10 by lap 200. The Caterpillar Racing team was ninth at the race’s halfway point and stayed in the top 15 for nearly the next 150 laps. On lap 398, the No. 39 car made contact with the No. 22 car which, in turn, made contact with the No. 31. The Cat Chevy backed lightly into the outside retaining wall but the contact resulted in little further rear-end damage. Burton restarted 16th on lap 405 and pitted again, under caution, on lap 427 for fresh tires and fuel. He restarted 17th on lap 433 and stayed out with the No. 48 car when the balance of the field pitted under caution on lap 457. That move jumped Burton up to second place for the restart on lap 463 and he remained in the top five until being passed by the Denny Hamlin coming off the fourth turn of the final lap.

 

Start – 23                  Finish – 6                  Laps Led – 0            Points – 22

JEFF BURTON QUOTE:

“I can’t be too unhappy with finishing sixth because the Cat Racing team worked their tails off to get us in position at the end to win this thing. Pit stops were good, especially when there was some damage to fix and Luke (Lambert, crew chief) made good calls to help get us up front. That last caution probably didn’t help us but it was another solid finish.”

33 American Ethanol

Last Lap Spin Costs Bowyer Top-10 Finish at Martinsville

Climbing his way back into the top 10 after an early pit road speeding penalty, Clint Bowyer was spun out in the last turn of the race and finished 19th in the TUMS Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway. Starting from the 13th position after NASCAR and track officials were forced to postpone Saturday’s qualifying session due to rain, the Richard Childress Racing driver immediately moved up into the top 10 before suffering minor damage in a lap-nine multi-car pileup. The damage was not significant enough to warrant an immediate pit stop as crew chief Shane Wilson chose to wait until a lap-30 competition caution period to repair damages to the No. 33 Chevrolet. Once the black, silver and green Chevrolet was repaired, the Emporia, Kan. native worked his way back into the top 10 while fighting with a loose-handling machine. Over the next 100 laps, Bowyer ran in the top 20, providing feedback to Wilson and giving the “Helping Hands” pit crew an opportunity to make chassis and air pressure adjustments to improve the balance and handling on the car. After a strong pit stop just past the halfway point of the 500-lap marathon vaulted the 32-year-old driver into the top 10, NASCAR officials penalized Bowyer for exiting pit road too fast and forced the No. 33 Chevrolet to return to pit road and serve a pass-through penalty. The penalty dropped Bowyer to the 25th position and required Bowyer to restart at the tail end of the longest line. The next caution flag wasn’t displayed until 99 laps later, easily the longest green-flag run of the afternoon and Bowyer fell one lap down to the leader. Not until a caution flag on lap 399 was the RCR driver awarded the “Lucky Dog Award”, allowing him to rejoin the lead lap. Once back on the led lap, the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race winner steered clear of many accidents and eventually worked his way into the top 10 yet again. Working with a loose-handling condition that plagued him for most of the day, Bowyer maintained a top-12 running position for the latter part of the event before a caution on lap 494 set up a final three-lap dash for the checkered flag. On the final lap going into turn four, Bowyer was spun out by another competitor and forced to settle for a disappointing 19th-place finish. Bowyer remains 13th in NSCS driver championship point standings.

Start – 13                     Finish – 19                      Laps Led – 0                Points – 13

CLINT BOWYER QUOTE:

“It was just a long day for us today and you can see that by looking at the shape this No. 33 Chevrolet is in. We were given a speeding penalty on pit road and it trapped us deep in the field and it is just so hard to pass here on this tire. We were in position for a top 10, but I got taken out in the last turn. It is just frustrating. I want to thank American Ethanol for being a great partner for this race and the entire season. I wish we could have got them in victory lane today.”

 

 

 

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

RACE: Kroger 200

TRACK: Martinsville Speedway

DATE: October 29, 2011

Race Highlights:

  • RCR teammates finished third (Austin Dillon) and fifth (Joey Coulter).
  • Dillon spent 98 percent of the race running in the top 15 and led 45 laps.
  • Coulter and Dillon were ranked third and fifth, respectively, in NASCAR’s Loop Data category for Quality Passes (passing a car while running in the top 15 under green flag conditions) with Coulter making 34 passes and Dillon making 30.
  • Combined, the RCR entries posted the fastest lap of the race for 22 circuits (15.6 percent of the race), with Dillon posting the fastest lap 12 times and Coulter doing so 10 times.
  • Coulter regained control of the Sunoco Rookie of the Year point standings with his fifth-place finish at Martinsville.
  • Dillon leads the NCWTS standings by 11 points over James Buescher with two races remaining in the 2011 season.
  • Coulter moved up one position, to eighth, in the NCWTS standings, just one marker outside of seventh.
  • Denny Hamlin earned his first NCWTS victory and was followed to the finish line by Ron Hornaday, Dillon, Johnny Sauter and Coulter.
  • The next scheduled NCWTS race is the Winstar World Casino 350k at Texas Motor Speedway on Friday, November 4 which is scheduled to be televised live on SPEED beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and Sirius XM Satellite Radio beginning at 7:45 p.m.

2011 CC Team Logos NCWTS 3 BPS 150 px

 

Dillon Pads Points Lead with Third-Place Finish at Martinsville

Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon finished third in the No. 3 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet at Martinsville Speedway to post his ninth top-five finish of the 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season and extend his lead to 11 points in the championship standings with two races remaining in the season. Dillon started the race from the 10th position and broke into the top-five just before the race’s halfway mark. He was running fourth when a caution flag was displayed on lap 103 and although most teams opted to stay out on the racetrack, Dillon, teammate Joey Coulter and Kevin Harvick, Inc.’s Kevin Harvick made a trip down pit road where Dillon received four Goodyear tires and Sunoco E15 fuel for his black No. 3 racer. Dillon restarted the race from the 16th position when green-flag racing resumed on lap 108 and with fresh tires, quickly began to climb in the running order. He was scored in the 10th position when a lap-131 caution flag prompted the teams who did not pit on lap 103 to service their vehicles, positioning Dillon in second place when green-flag racing resumed on lap 137. He made a pass for the lead on lap 141 and was in position to earn his third race win of the 2011 season when the caution flag was displayed on lap 179, bunching up the field for the race’s finale. The 21-year-old NCWTS sophomore led the field to the green flag for a lap-187 restart but slipped up the racetrack going into the first turn, making slight contact with another competitor as veteran NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Denny Hamlin slid past him to take control of the race lead and earn the win. Dillon settled for a third-place finish and remains the point leader.

Start -10                       Finish – 3                     Laps Led – 45               Points – 1

AUSTIN DILLON QUOTE:

“We pretty much gave the race to Denny Hamlin. I just couldn’t make the first turn and ran into Ron Hornaday and that is how Denny got by us. I really need to figure out how to get the brakes right on these short tracks because I feel like that is where I lost the race. My Achilles heel is normally the restarts, but my restarts were good all day. That last restart was good but then I couldn’t get the brakes right going into the first turn so I slid up the track and that is where Denny Hamlin got past me and Ron Hornaday.”

2011 CC Team Logos NCWTS 22 RCR 150 px

Coulter Takes Control of Sunoco Rookie of the Year Standings with Hard-Fought Top-Five Finish at Martinsville

Joey Coulter used patience and pit strategy during Saturday afternoon’s Kroger 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway to earn his fourth top-five finish of the 2011 season. The finish propelled the rookie driver to the lead in the Sunoco Rookie of the Year point standings and increased his place in the driver’s point standings one position, to eighth, with just two races remaining this season. Coulter started the 200-lap race from the 12th position and noted to crew chief Harold Holly the No. 22 Richard Childress Racing entry was good but it was difficult to pass on the outside groove. That statement became evident on a lap-92 restart, when the rookie driver went from seventh in the running order to 18th in just one lap as he got shuffled to the outside groove on the restart. Pit strategy came into play soon after, as the caution flag was displayed on lap 103 and all but a handful of teams stayed out on the racetrack. Coulter was one of three drivers who pitted during the caution, taking four Goodyear tires, Sunoco E15 fuel and a chassis adjustment. Positioned in 21st for the lap-108 restart, Coulter was good on fuel for the rest of the race and did not need to pit when other teams began making pit stops on lap 114, propelling him to ninth in the running order for the lap-119 restart. Coulter spent the remainder of the race showcasing his short track racing roots, moving up in the running order by battling for position. He nearly made a pass for the fourth spot on the last lap before finishing fifth in the No. 22 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

Start -12                       Finish – 5                     Laps Led – 0                 Points – 8

JOEY COULTER QUOTE:

“We had a great truck right from the get-go. We got messed up on a restart there towards the middle of the race because I wasn’t good on restarts in the outside groove at all. We got shuffled back and it put us in a bad situation but the guys did a really great job on pit road and that helped us get some track position back. My spotter did an awesome job of keeping me out of trouble. I was almost in a few wrecks. My crew chief, Harold Holly, made a great call to free us up at the end and that gave us the speed we needed to get up to fifth.”