Junior & Shaq To Kick Off Season Two of “Shaq Vs.” Tuesday Night
Season premiere episode to air at 9 p.m. ET / 8 p.m. CT on ABC

WATCH THE EPISODE HERE

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (August 2, 2010) – It might not be Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s toughest challenge, but by far it is his biggest.

The season premiere of ABC’s primetime television series Shaq Vs. will feature Dale Earnhardt Jr. – NASCAR’s most popular driver and winner of more than 40 NASCAR-sanctioned races – in a one-on-one stock car race against 7-foot-1, 325-pound Shaquille O’Neal. The program will air this Tuesday, Aug. 3, at 9 p.m. ET / 8 p.m. CT on ABC. (Check local listings for further details.)

In the television series, O’Neal matches his skill and athletic ability against the best athletes, entertainers, and pop culture stars in the country by competing in their respective realms. The first season featured epic battles against Albert Pujols in a homerun-hitting contest, Michael Phelps in a swimming race, and Oscar de la Hoya in a boxing match. Tuesday night’s premiere will pit O’Neal against Earnhardt Jr. in a stock car race as well as champion speller Kavya Shivashankar in a spelling bee.

“Having Shaq come to my place in North Carolina was a great experience,” said Earnhardt Jr. “When he walked up to me for the first time, my first thought was it’s 50-50 whether he’ll be able to fit in the car. But that was part of the intrigue, and that alone is why people should watch Tuesday night. It’s a sight to behold.

“I am very appreciative to Shaquille for the opportunity to be on the show. I think NASCAR fans enjoy seeing other stars embrace our sport and display the same passion we have. It proves that NASCAR is still a very powerful and prominent attraction.”

1 12 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
2 1 14 Tony Stewart Office Depot / Old Spice Chevrolet
3 25 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford
4 14 29 Kevin Harvick Shell / Pennzoil Chevrolet
5 3 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Office Toyota
6 4 24 Jeff Gordon DuPont Chevrolet
7 10 5 Mark Martin Hendrickcars.com / GoDaddy.com Chevrolet
8 8 31 Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet
9 28 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Auto Parts Toyota
10 6 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
11 15 77 Sam Hornish Jr. PPG / Olympic Dodge
12 5 39 Ryan Newman U.S.Army Chevrolet
13 23 98 Paul Menard CertainTeed / Menards Ford
14 18 6 David Ragan UPS Ford
15 40 33 Clint Bowyer The Hartford Chevrolet
16 2 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
17 24 00 David Reutimann Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
18 26 17 Matt Kenseth Crown Royal Ford
19 16 9 Kasey Kahne Budweiser Ford
20 11 12 Brad Keselowski Penske Dodge
21 34 78 Regan Smith Furniture Row Racing Chevrolet
22 9 1 Jamie McMurray AXE Twist Chevrolet
23 21 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
24 7 43 A J Allmendinger Insignia HDTV Ford
25 17 20 Joey Logano Home Depot Toyota
26 27 82 Scott Speed Red Bull Toyota
27 20 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. AMP Energy / National Guard Chevrolet
28 22 71 Bobby Labonte TaxSlayer.com Chevrolet
29 32 38 Travis Kvapil Long John Silver’s Ford
30 37 37 David Gilliland Gander Mountain Ford
31 41 34 Kevin Conway # Extenze Ford
32 31 83 Reed Sorenson Red Bull Toyota
33 13 2 Kurt Busch Miller Lite / Vortex Dodge
34 29 19 Elliott Sadler Air Force Ford
35 42 7 P J Jones SpeedFactory.TV Toyota
36 39 36 Casey Mears Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
37 43 64 Todd Bodine FRED’s Hometown Discount Store Toyota
38 30 46 J J Yeley Cash America Dodge
39 19 47 Marcos Ambrose Clorox / Kleenex Toyota
40 33 87 Joe Nemechek NEMCO Motorsports Toyota
41 35 09 Landon Cassill Phoenix Construction Chevrolet
42 38 66 Dave Blaney PRISM Motorsports Toyota
43 36 55 Michael McDowell PRISM Motorsports Toyota

A nasty wreck when Jimmie Johnson tried to bump draft with Kurt Busch.  Kurt hit the outside wall, then back down and skipped off the inside barrier, but it was Elliott Sadler who hit the inside barrier head on hard. Certainly one of the hardest hits in NASCAR history. The engine was even separated from the 19.  Sadler was released from the infield care center and is okay.

http://i.cdn.turner.com/nascar/.element/swf/2.2/sect/video/nascar_embed.swf?context=nascar_viral&videoId=cup/2010/08/01/cup_poc2_high_three.nascar

Late charge powers Biffle to convincing Pocono win

By Reid Spencer
Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service

(August 1, 2010)

LONG POND, Pa.—With his team owner at Mayo Clinic recovering from injuries sustained in a plane crash, Greg Biffle found the remedy for the ills of Roush Fenway Racing and Ford’s racing program.

Pulling away from the rest of the field after a rain delay of more than 17 minutes, Biffle beat polesitter Tony Stewart to the finish line by 3.598 seconds to win Sunday’s Pennsylvania 500 at Pocono Raceway.

The victory, Biffle’s 14th in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series, was his first since 2008 and the first for Ford and owner Jack Roush since Jamie McMurray won at Talladega last November.

“I wish he was here, and I’m sure he’s watching, and this one’s for him,” Biffle said of Roush, who suffered injuries to his face and eye when he crash-landed his plane Tuesday night in Oshkosh, Wis.

The rain was exactly what Biffle needed to win the race.

“I felt like we didn’t have the best car today,” he said. “For some reason, when it cooled down, this car just took off—that’s all there was to it. The temperature cooled down, we really didn’t make any adjustments, and the thing just started going on the restarts and got in clean air, and the thing just took off. I don’t know what happened.”

Carl Edwards came home third, series points leader Kevin Harvick fourth and Denny Hamlin fifth. Sixth-place finisher Jeff Gordon saw his bid for his first victory since April 2009 disappear when a four-tire stop under caution on Lap 167 of 200 left him mired in traffic behind cars that took two tires or fuel only.

Gordon led 39 laps, second only to teammate Jimmie Johnson’s 96. Gordon, second in the standings, is 189 points behind Harvick with five races left before the field for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup is set Sept. 11 at Richmond.

The rain delay was the second time the race was red-flagged. After a stoppage of nearly 29 minutes to clear the debris from a horrific crash involving Kurt Busch, Elliott Sadler and Clint Bowyer on Lap 165, the race took a bizarre turn. All of the lead-lap drivers—except Sam Hornish Jr.—came to pit road for four tires, two tires or fuel only.

Hornish stayed on the track, inherited the lead and ran 11 laps under yellow before NASCAR stopped the field on pit road with 23 laps remaining. But, after the rain delay, Biffle went to the front on the restart on Lap 180 and never looked back. Hornish raced hard over the last 21 laps but faded to 11th at the finish.

Gordon was fourth when the field restarted on Lap 151 after a debris caution. Juan Pablo Montoya, who had short-pitted before the leaders came to pit road under caution on Lap 146, had the lead by virtue of staying on the track. Dale Earnhardt Jr., who took two tires under caution, was second.

Though Gordon passed three cars to take the top spot on Lap 151, Montoya regained the lead on Lap 152, only to surrender it at the stripe a lap later. Gordon finally cleared Montoya through Turn 3 on Lap 154 and pulled away before two quick cautions slowed and ultimately stopped the race.

Earnhardt spun off Turn 1 to cause the fourth yellow on Lap 158, but no one near the front of the field came to pit road, being outside the pit window that would allow them to finish the race without another stop.

On Lap 165, Johnson attempted to bump-draft Kurt Busch as the cars approached Turn 2 and instead turned the No. 2 Dodge sideways. After twice turning across the nose of Clint Bowyer’s Chevrolet, Busch slammed into the inside fence.

Busch’s analysis of the incident was succinct. “I got wrecked on the straightaway,” he said. “Jimmie Johnson drove straight through us.”

Elliott Sadler got the worst of the melee, as his No. 19 Ford slowed and then spun after contact from behind. Sadler’s car plowed nose-first into the inside guardrail and berm behind it with enough force to rip the engine from the car.

When safety trucks removed the debris from the infield, Sadler’s car rode on one wrecker, the engine on another. Despite the severity of the impact, Sadler later walked out of the infield care center.

“I’m fine. I’m OK,” he said. “I’m a little sore, I think, from where the belts grabbed me. It knocked the breath out of me pretty good, but it’s definitely the hardest hit I’ve ever had in a racecar.

“I’m not sure what happened. I know some guys got spun out and moved up in front of us, and I saw some smoke. Everybody started checking up, and I checked up, but whoever was behind did not—and ran in the back of us and knocked me down through the grass.”

NASCAR stopped the race for nearly 29 minutes to clear the debris and repair the guardrail.