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NASCAR
News And
Notes:
Biggest
Race
Culminates
Retro-Fitted
Speedweeks
Biggest
Race
Culminates
Retro-Fitted
Speedweeks
Speedweeks
2012
has
gone
back
to
school
–
old
school.
Daytona
International
Speedway’s
signature
competition,
pack
racing,
returned
with
a
vengeance
during
last
weekend’s
Shootout
at
Daytona.
The
race
ended
with
another
Daytona
cornerstone,
Kyle
Busch’s
slingshot
pass
of
Tony
Stewart
at
the
start-finish
line.
It
also
marked
the
end
of a
format.
The
Shootout
returns
to
its
roots
in
2013,
primarily
a
battle
among
Coors
Light
Pole
winners.
Carl
Edwards,
set
to
start
on
the
pole
for
Sunday’s
54th
Daytona
500,
is
the
first
to
punch
his
ticket
to
next
year’s
Speedweeks
curtain-raiser.
Speed
also
made
its
reappearance.
Edwards
qualified
at
over
194
mph,
fastest
in
more
than
a
decade.
Thirty-nine
drivers
taking
part
in
time
trials
posted
speeds
faster
than
Dale
Earnhardt
Jr.’s
pole
run
of
2011.
Also
announced:
Next
year’s
Speedweeks
will
dip
into
its
past
for
a
special,
non-points
race
for
NASCAR’s
roots
racers
from
its
touring
divisions
and
Whelen
All
American
Series.
A
0.4-mile
track
will
be
set
up
on
Daytona’s
Super
Stretch,
evoking
memories
of
days
when
drivers
like
NASCAR
Hall
of
Famer
Richie
Evans
converged
on
the
World
Center
of
Racing
to
race
their
modifieds
and
sportsman
stock
cars.
Stewart,
an
old-school
racer,
is
looking
forward
to
Sunday’s
Daytona
500
with
greater
enthusiasm
than
in
seasons
past.
A
three-time
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
champion,
Stewart
hopes
to
fill
one
of
his
few
missing
career
achievements
on
Sunday:
a
Daytona
500
victory.
He,
as
well
as
the
other
42
starters,
recognizes
that
a
Daytona
500
win
is a
career-maker,
as
it
was
for
Trevor
Bayne,
the
surprise
winner
of
last
year’s
Great
American
race.
Questions,
as
always,
abound:
•
Can
Bayne
repeat
in
the
iconic
Wood
Brothers
No.
21
Ford?
•
Can
Danica
Patrick,
the
first
female
driver
to
compete
in
the
Daytona
500
since
2002
and
just
third
in
history,
become
this
year’s
surprise
winner?
•
Will
there
be a
seventh
consecutive
first-time
Daytona
500
winner
of
NASCAR’s
biggest
race?
•
Will
Hendrick
Motorsports
score
its
200th
victory
on
the
sport’s
largest
stage?
The
answers
to
these
and
other
intriguing
storylines
can
be
found
at 1
p.m.
ET
on
FOX.
The
race
also
will
be
broadcast
by
MRN
Radio
and
NASCAR
Sirius
Radio.
Gatorade
Duel
Fulfills
Dreams
But
Also
Breaks
Hearts
For
10
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
drivers,
Thursday’s
Gatorade
Duel
at
Daytona
defines
the
term
working
without
a
net.
The
Duel
is a
pair
of
60-lap,
150-mile
last-chance
races
from
which
the
final
four
Daytona
500
starters
will
be
chosen.
They’re
a
race
within
a
race;
the
top
two
finishers
in
each
among
those
drivers
outside
the
top
35
will
move
on
to
Sunday’s
Great
American
race.
The
others
go
home.
Yet
to
qualify
are
former
Daytona
500
winners
Michael
Waltrip
and
Bill
Elliott.
Also
on
the
outside
looking
in
are
Dave
Blaney,
Michael
McDowell,
Robbie
Gordon,
Kenny
Wallace,
Mike
Wallace,
Joe
Nemechek,
Robert
Richardson
Jr.
and
JJ
Yeley.
Four
drivers
locked
themselves
into
the
race
in
Sunday’s
qualifying
session.
Defending
Daytona
500
winner
Trevor
Bayne,
Tony
Raines
and
David
Stremme
recorded
the
fastest
laps
among
teams
outside
last
season’s
top-35
owners’
standings.
As
the
most
recent
past
NSCS
champion,
Terry
Labonte
also
has
an
insurance
policy.
Any
or
all
of
the
four
can
improve
their
Daytona
500
starting
positions
by
finishing
among
the
top
two
unqualified
drivers
in
their
Duel.
That
would
pass
the
"on
speed"
position(s)
to
the
next
fastest
in
time
trials.
Elliott
would
receive
the
past
champion’s
provisional
if
Labonte
transfers
out
of
his
Duel.
SPEED’s
live
coverage
of
the
Gatorade
Duel
at
Daytona
begins
at 2
p.m.
ET.
A
World
of
Bayne:
Repeat
a
Statistical
Longshot
Trevor
Bayne
hopes
to
repeat
as
Daytona
500
champion,
a
feat
that
hasn’t
been
accomplished
in
nearly
two
decades.
In
fact,
only
three
drivers,
Richard
Petty
(1973-74),
Cale
Yarborough
(1983-84)
and
Sterling
Marlin
(1994-95)
have
won
back-to-back
Daytona
500s.
Bayne,
like
Marlin,
is a
Tennessee
native.
He
is
the
youngest
Daytona
500
winner,
last
year’s
victory
coming
a
day
after
his
20th
birthday.
Bayne
turned
21
on
Feb.
19.
A
win
would
extend
2012
NASCAR
Hall
of
Famer
Glen
Wood’s
win
record
at
Daytona
to
16,
giving
him
five
more
than
Petty
Enterprises
and
six
ahead
of
Rick
Hendrick.
They
are
the
only
owners
with
double-digit
victories
at
the
track.
The
Wood
Brothers
have
won
the
Daytona
500
five
times.
•
Perhaps
more
likely
is a
continuation
of a
streak
of
first-time
Daytona
500
winners,
which
reached
six
a
year
ago.
Jeff
Gordon
was
the
last
repeat
winner
posting
his
third
victory
in
2005.
•
The
first
and
second
starting
position
have
accounted
for
the
most
wins
in
Daytona
500
history
with
nine
and
seven
respectively,
combining
for
30
percent
of
the
victories
in
the
53
previous
events.
Jarrett
was
the
last
to
win
the
Daytona
500
from
the
pole
in
2000.
The
winner’s
average
start
since
then
is
17.6.
•
Jimmie
Johnson
was
the
last
winner
of
the
Daytona
500
in a
championship
season
(2006).
Petty
used
the
race
as a
title
springboard
a
record
four
times
in
1964,
1971,
1974
and
1979.
March
to
200:
Hendrick
Stable
Vying
for
Milestone
Win
With
three
Daytona
500
winners
in
the
fold,
this
Sunday’s
race
could
mark
the
200th
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
victory
for
Hendrick
Motorsports.
HMS
has
been
199
and
counting
since
Jimmie
Johnson
went
to
Victory
Lane
at
Kansas
Speedway
on
Oct.
9,
2011.
•
Jeff
Gordon
is a
three-time
Daytona
500
winner.
Should
he
win
Sunday,
he’ll
match
NASCAR
Hall
of
Famer
Cale
Yarborough
for
second-most
500
wins.
•
Johnson
won
the
Daytona
500
in
2006.
Richard
Petty
tops
that
list
with
seven
wins.
•
Dale
Earnhardt
Jr.
is a
master
of
restrictor
plate
racing,
winning
seven
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
races
at
Daytona
and
Talladega.
•
Kasey
Kahne
will
make
his
debut
for
Hendrick
Motorsports
at
Daytona,
hopeful
of
recording
his
first
victory
on
the
2.5-mile
track.
"I
feel
pretty
good.
I’m
frustrated
that
we
didn’t
win
last
year;
we
came
close.
I’m
ready
to
get
back
to
that.
I’m
ready
to
get
chances
again,"
said
Earnhardt,
eager
to
break
a
129-race
winless
streak
that
dates
to
the
2008
season.
EFI’s
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Debut
a
Coup
for
Roush
Yates
Roush
Fenway
Racing,
by
admission,
started
out
behind
the
curve
with
introduction
of
NASCAR’s
"new
car"
in
2007.
Such
isn’t
the
case
with
Electronic
Fuel
Injection
(EFI),
which
made
its
debut
in
the
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
in
last
weekend’s
Shootout
at
Daytona
and
Coors
Light
Pole
qualifying.
Roush
Fenway’s
Carl
Edwards
won
the
pole
at
194.738
mph
–
the
fastest
pole
winner
for
the
Daytona
500
since
1999.
Teammate
Greg
Biffle
will
start
alongside
Edwards
on
the
front
row.
Six
of
the
top-10
qualifiers
were
powered
by
Roush
Yates
engines.
"Doug
Yates
and
Ford
Motor
Company
have
set
the
curve,"
said
Jack
Roush
of
EFI.
"The
fuel
injection
thing
has
been
a
boon
for
us
based
on
our
support
and
partnership
with
Ford
[and]
the
insight
and
inspiration
that
Doug
and
the
guys
have
had."
Edwards
agreed.
"Those
guys
have
done
an
unbelievable
job
of
working
through
the
transition
to
EFI.
It’s
just
amazing,"
he
said.
Edwards
finished
second
a
year
ago
and
was
ninth
in
2010.
"We
have
been
very
pleased
with
the
performance
of
the
Electronic
Fuel
Injection
system
and
what
we
have
on
the
track
so
far
at
Daytona
International
Speedway,"
said
Robin
Pemberton,
NASCAR
vice
president
for
competition.
"As
we
have
said
all
along,
the
manufacturers,
teams
and
engine
builders
have
worked
very
closely
with
our
partners
Freescale
and
McLaren
to
ensure
that
the
transition
to
EFI
would
be
seamless."
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series,
Etc.
The
biggest
race
attracts
the
biggest
celebrities.
Here’s
the
roster
for
Sunday’s
Daytona
500:
Pat
Monahan,
lead
singer
of
the
three-time
Grammy-winning
group
Train,
will
sing
the
national
anthem
for
the
54th
running
of
the
Daytona
500.
To
kick
the
day
off,
four-time
Grammy-award
winner
Lenny
Kravitz
will
perform
at
NASCAR’s
Daytona
500
Pre-Race
Show
(FOX,
noon
ET).
Actress
Jane
Lynch,
best
known
for
her
Emmy
and
Golden
Globe
Award-winning
role
as
the
sarcastic
villain
on
FOX’s
hit
show
Glee,
and
new
Sports
Illustrated
swimsuit
cover
model
and
actress
Kate
Upton,
will
serve
as
Grand
Marshals,
delivering
the
four
most
famous
words
in
motorsports
–
"Drivers,
start
your
engines."
Lynch
and
Upton
co-star
in
the
upcoming
remake
film
The
Three
Stooges.
WWE
Superstar
John
Cena
will
wave
the
green
flag
as
Honorary
Starter.
…
Brad
Keselowski
will
pull
triple-duty
this
weekend,
participating
in
all
three
series
at
Daytona.
…
Roush
Fenway
Racing’s
next
win
– be
it
in
the
NASCAR
Nationwide
or
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
–
will
be
its
300th
in
NASCAR
national
series
competition.
…
Juan
Pablo
Montoya
aims
for
his
milestone
50th
top-10
finish
this
weekend.
He’d
tie
Charlie
Glotzbach
at
114th
on
the
all-time
list.
2012
Nationwide
Season
Has
All
the
Ingredients
for
a
Masterpiece
This
season
boasts
big
names
with
the
likes
of
former
NASCAR
national
series
champions,
open
wheel
stars,
veterans
and
rookies
–
all
of
them
are
contending
for
the
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
championship.
The
season
kicks
off
Saturday,
Feb.
25,
at
Daytona
International
Speedway
for
the
DRIVE4COPD
300.
Roush
Fenway
Racing
is
bringing
another
stout
lineup
to
the
series
this
season.
Ricky
Stenhouse
Jr.,
the
reigning
series
champion,
returns
to
defend
his
title
as
the
favorite.
In a
pre-season
media
poll,
NASCAR’s
media
corps
voted
him
to
repeat
in
2012.
Stenhouse
will
be
joined
by
2011
Daytona
500
champion
Trevor
Bayne
under
the
RFR
umbrella.
Stenhouse
has
made
four
series
starts
at
Daytona,
posting
two
top-10
finishes.
Stenhouse’s
pre-race
Driver
Rating
is
87.0
and
Average
Running
Position
is
15.035
for
this
event.
Bayne
also
has
made
four
series
starts
at
Daytona,
posting
a
best
finish
of
10th
in
this
race
last
season.
Bayne’s
pre-race
Daytona
Driver
Rating
is
80.5.
Not
to
be
outshined,
JR
Motorsports
has
assembled
the
most
talked
about
driver
roster
of
the
season.
Danica
Patrick
will
compete
full-time
in
2012
with
teammate
and
former
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
Series
driver
Cole
Whitt.
The
tandem
will
have
the
spotlight
fixed
on
them
due
to
popularity
of
the
two
drivers,
but
also
their
car
owner
Dale
Earnhardt
Jr.
"I’ve
raced
here
[Daytona]
more
than
any
other
track,
and
I
did
that
on
purpose
because
I
want
to
do
well
in
the
big
races
and
Daytona
is a
big
race,"
Danica
Patrick
said.
"The
more
experience
I
have
at a
place
like
this
the
better
off
I
am."
Patrick
started
fourth
and
finished
14th
in
last
season’s
February
race
at
Daytona.
Her
pre-race
Daytona
Driver
Rating
is
81.4.
Coming
off
a
strong
championship
season
in
the
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
Series,
Austin
Dillon
has
graduated
to
the
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
full-time
for
Richard
Childress
Racing.
Dillon’s
teammate,
and
runner-up
in
the
2011
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
championship,
Elliott
Sadler
joins
RCR
after
the
closing
of
Kevin
Harvick
Inc.
at
the
end
of
last
season.
Sam
Hornish
Jr.,
Justin
Allgaier,
Brian
Scott,
Michael
Annett
and
Kenny
Wallace
are
also
in
the
discussion
as
championship
contenders.
What’s
In a
Number:
Nos.
3
and
43
Have
Something
Special
Every
sport
has
famous
or
iconic
numbers
that
symbolize
a
driver/athlete
that
connects
the
fan
to
that
athlete
on
another
level.
It’s
almost
like
a
badge
in
some
cases,
or a
coat
of
arms
for
the
athletes.
Some
could
argue
the
number
can
become
even
more
famous
than
the
athlete.
In
NASCAR,
numbers
are
adorned
everywhere
–
the
cars,
pit
boxes,
team
hats
–
and
none
are
more
recognized
than
the
No.
3
and
No.
43
made
famous
by
NASCAR
Hall
of
Famers
and
seven-time
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
champions
Dale
Earnhardt
and
Richard
Petty.
This
season,
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
fans
will
see
both
iconic
numbers
affixed
to
the
side
of
two
title
contending
hotrods.
Richard
Childress
Racing
will
be
fielding
the
No.
3
with
driver
(and
grandson)
Austin
Dillon,
the
reigning
NCWTS
champion.
Michael
Annett
has
the
distinction
of
bringing
the
No.
43
Ford
Mustang
into
the
series
for
the
first
time
on a
full-time
basis.
Annett
finished
a
career-best
ninth
in
the
driver
standings
last
year.
The
culmination
of
Bayne’s
comeback
came
at
Texas
when
he
claimed
his
first
career
series
victory
in
the
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series.
Double-Duty
Field
Packed
for
Daytona
Fifty
cars
are
on
the
entry
list
for
the
2012
DRIVE4COPD
300
at
Daytona
International
Speedway,
which
includes
nine
full-time
NSCS
drivers
and
four
full-time
NCWTS
drivers.
Heading
that
list
is
three-time
and
defending
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
champion
Tony
Stewart,
who
has
won
six
out
of
the
last
seven
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
season
openers,
including
the
last
four.
Stewart
leads
the
series
in
pre-race
Driver
Rating
with
114.6
heading
to
Daytona.
Also
entered
is
two-time
series
champion
and
current
team
owner
Dale
Earnhardt
Jr.,
who
dominated
this
event
for
three
successive
years
from
2002-04.
His
pre-race
Driver
Rating
is
106.0.
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
champions
Brad
Keselowski
(2010)
and
Kyle
Busch
(2009)
are
also
on
the
list
with
Denny
Hamlin,
Kurt
Busch,
Joey
Logano,
David
Ragan
and
Kasey
Kahne.
None
of
these
seven
drivers
have
won
the
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
season
opener
at
Daytona
before.
Erik
Darnell,
Johnny
Sauter,
Josh
Wise
and
James
Buescher
make
up
the
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
Series
drivers
entered
in
Saturday’s
race.
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series,
Etc.
Austin
Dillon
and
Cole
Whitt
will
be
joined
by
three
other
Sunoco
Rookie
of
the
Year
candidates
at
Daytona
–
Jason
Bowles,
Joey
Gase
and
Johanna
Long.
Timmy
Hill,
the
2011
Sunoco
Rookie
of
the
Year,
will
run
at
Daytona
but
soon
after
will
make
the
jump
to
the
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series,
where
he’ll
attempt
to
lock
up
consecutive
rookie
of
the
year
awards.
Blake
Koch,
runner-up
to
Hill
in
the
2011
rookie
race
and
now
his
teammate
at
Rick
Ware
Racing,
will
be
the
lone
full-time
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
car
for
the
organization
in
2012.
…
Ford
won
the
manufacturers’
championship
last
season
for
the
first
time
in
eight
years.
Can
it
do
it
again?
Chevrolet
leads
the
series
in
Manufacturers’
championships
with
14,
Ford
and
Toyota
are
tied
with
three
each
and
Oldsmobile
has
one.
Experts
Tap
Sauter
in
David
vs.
Goliath
Championship
Battle
Statistically
speaking,
Thorsport
Racing
vs.
Richard
Childress
Racing
would
hardly
seem
a
fair
fight
– a
classic
case
of
David
and
Goliath.
RCR
has
won
180
NASCAR
national
series
races
and
11
owner
championships.
ThorSport,
the
longest
continuously
competing
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
Series
team,
has
visited
Victory
Lane
just
seven
times
with
a
pair
of
runner-up
points
finishes.
Media
members,
however,
say
David
will
dethrone
Goliath
perhaps
because
the
battle
will
pit
veteran
–
Johnny
Sauter,
last
year’s
championship
runner-up
–
against
RCR
Sunoco
Rookie
of
the
Year
contender
Ty
Dillon.
Dillon,
19,
won
the
2012
Automobile
Racing
Club
of
America
(ARCA)
title
and
hopes
to
follow
his
older
brother
Austin
as a
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
champion.
Sauter
came
close
to
winning
his
first
NASCAR
national
series
championship
a
year
ago,
finishing
just
six
points
behind
the
elder
Dillon,
who
moves
to
the
NNS
this
season.
He
held
the
points
lead
after
10
of
25
races
and
finished
strong,
winning
the
2012
finale
at
Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
ThorSport,
based
near
Sandusky,
Ohio,
will
field
a
truck
in
its
348th
consecutive
series
race
–
one
fewer
than
the
record
held
by
Roush
Fenway
Racing.
Sauter
will
have
a
pair
of
teammates
in
2012:
veteran
Matt
Crafton,
the
NCWTS
runner-up
finisher
in
2009
and
Sunoco
Rookie
of
the
Year
contender
Dakoda
Armstrong.
Thorsport
made
its
first
of a
record
365
starts
in
1996
and
has
been
a
full-time
team
since
1997.
RCR
won
the
inaugural
series
title
with
Mike
Skinner
in
1995.
The
team
counts
24
victories.
Glory
Rather
Than
Points
Makes
These
Veterans
Dangerous
Not
every
competitor
hoping
to
win
Friday
night’s
NextEra
Energy
Resources
250
has
sights
set
on a
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
title.
Some
–
like
last
year’s
winner
Michael
Waltrip
–
have
elected
to
chase
points
in
another
national
series
or
plan
a
part-time
schedule.
And
that
makes
them
doubly
dangerous:
chasing
the
prize
with
no
driver
points
on
the
line
(owner
points
will
still
be
earned).
Among
them
are:
•
Brad
Keselowski,
who
needs
a
NCWTS
victory
to
complete
a
sweep
of
all
three
national
series.
He’ll
run
all
three
races
this
weekend.
•
Ward
Burton,
the
2002
Daytona
500
winner
•
David
Reutimann,
a
former
series
rookie
of
the
year
•
Travis
Kvapil,
who
won
the
series
championship
in
2003
•
Brendan
Gaughan,
a
regular
in
2011
who’s
set
to
run
partial
schedules
in
trucks,
the
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
and
NASCAR
Nationwide
Series
for
Richard
Childress
Racing.
Two
former
champions
–
one
a
two-time
Daytona
winner
–
may
or
may
not
fit
into
that
category.
Todd
Bodine
has
confirmed
this
week’s
race
on
his
’12
schedule
but
hopes
a
third
victory
to
go
with
wins
in
2008-09
will
bring
a
full-time
schedule.
In
the
same
category
is
Skinner,
the
’97
Daytona
500
pole
winner.
Sunoco
Rookie
Class
Faces
Daytona
Challenge
Rookies,
rookies,
we’ve
got
rookies.
After
a
half-dozen
freshman
candidates
chased
the
Sunoco
Rookie
of
the
Year
title
in
2011,
a
whopping
11
drivers
have
filed
for
official
status
–
most
of
the
three
NASCAR
national
series
this
season.
The
award
is
based
upon
a
contender’s
best
17
finishes
under
a
point
system
separate
from
overall
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
points.
Among
them
are
the
aforementioned
Dillon,
the
ARCA
champion;
2012
K&N
Pro
Series
East
champion
Max
Gresham
and
Paulie
Harraka,
a
Whelen
All-American
Series
track
champion,
K&N
Pro
Series
West
rookie
of
the
year
and
graduating
senior
at
Duke
University.
Armstrong
and
Cale
Gale
both
have
top-10
finishes
in
abbreviated
previous
competition
in
the
series.
No
rookie
ever
has
won
the
series
championship,
although
2004
NASCAR
Sprint
Cup
Series
champion
Kurt
Busch
came
close
in
2000
as
the
runner-up
to
teammate
Greg
Biffle.
Other
series
rookies
of
note
include
Biffle,
Kvapil,
Daytona
500
pole
winner
Carl
Edwards
and
Austin
Dillon.
J.R.
Fitzpatrick
has
the
most
recent
top-five
finish
at
Daytona
by a
rookie,
fourth
in
2009.
NASCAR
Camping
World
Truck
Series,
Etc.
No
Daytona
winner
in
the
race’s
11
years
has
gone
on
to
capture
that
season’s
championship.
…
Former
NextEra
Energy
Resources
250
winners
among
the
44-competitor
entry
list:
Bodine,
Rick
Crawford
(2003)
and
Timothy
Peters
(2010).
… A
Chevrolet
has
never
won
a
NCWTS
race
at
Daytona.
Neither
has
Ron
Hornaday
Jr.,
a
51-time
series
winner
who
opens
his
bid
for
a
record-extending
fifth
series
championship.
…
Jason
Leffler
returns
to
the
series
in
the
Kyle
Busch
Motorsports
No.
18
Toyota.
Busch
finished
second
in
2009.
…
Crafton,
who
finished
a
disappointing
eighth
in
points
a
year
ago,
will
have
former
engine
specialist
Carl
Joiner
Jr.
calling
the
shots
on
pit
road
in
2012.
|
|
2011
Camping World Truck Series schedule
Feb. 18
Daytona International Speedway
Feb. 25 Phoenix International Raceway
March 12 Darlington Raceway
April 2 Martinsville Speedway
April 22 Nashville Superspeedway
May 13 Dover International Speedway
May 20 Charlotte Motor Speedway
June 4 Kansas Speedway
June 10 Texas Motor Speedway
July 16 Iowa Speedway
July 22 Nashville Superspeedway
July 29 O’Reilly Raceway Park at Indianapolis
Aug. 6 Pocono Raceway
Aug. 20 Michigan International Speedway
Aug. 24 Bristol Motor Speedway
Sept. 2 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Sept. 16 Chicagoland Speedway
Sept. 24 New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Oct. 1 Kentucky Speedway
Oct. 15 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Oct. 22 Talladega Superspeedway
Oct. 29 Martinsville Speedway
Nov. 4 Texas Motor Speedway
Nov. 18 Homestead-Miami Speedway
One additional race will be added at a
track and date to be determined
2011
Nationwide Series schedule
Feb. 19 Daytona
International Speedway
Feb. 26 Phoenix International Raceway
March 5 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
March 19 Bristol Motor Speedway
March 26 Auto Club Speedway
April 8 Texas Motor Speedway
April 16 Talladega Superspeedway
April 23 Nashville Superspeedway
April 29 Richmond International Raceway
May 6 Darlington Raceway
May 14 Dover International Speedway
May 22 Iowa Speedway
May 28 Charlotte Motor Speedway
June 4 Chicagoland Speedway
June 18 Michigan International Speedway
June 25 Road America
July 1 Daytona International Speedway
July 8 Kentucky Speedway
July 16 New Hampshire Motor Speedway
July 23 Nashville Superspeedway
July 30 O’Reilly Raceway Park at Indianapolis
Aug. 6 Iowa Speedway
Aug. 13 Watkins Glen International
Aug. 20 Circuit Gilles Villeneuve Montreal
Aug. 26 Bristol Motor Speedway
Sept. 3 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Sept. 9 Richmond International Raceway
Sept. 17 Chicagoland Speedway
Oct. 1 Dover International Speedway
Oct. 8 Kansas Speedway
Oct. 14 Charlotte Motor Speedway
Nov. 5 Texas Motor Speedway
Nov. 12 Phoenix International Raceway
Nov. 19 Homestead-Miami Speedway
|
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