NSCS_Champ4_MD_111915_02By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR News Service

Homestead, Fla. – When you’re a single-car team, competing for NASCAR’s biggest prize, you have to work smart and do things a bit differently.

That’s where Furniture Row’s Cole Pearn comes in. The first Canadian NASCAR Sprint Cup Series crew chief graduated with a mechanical engineering degree from the University of Waterloo (Ontario). A former late model driver and three-time Canadian go-kart champion, his preferred participation sport is beer league hockey. It meshes perfectly with the Rocky Mountain lifestyle of his Denver-based race team.

More importantly, Pearn, 33, has meshed seamlessly as crew chief for Martin Truex Jr., putting the No. 78 in position to challenge the best from Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing and Stewart-Haas Racing for NASCAR supremacy in Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 Championship Round race at Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m. ET on NBC).

Compared to the pit box resume of Jeff Gordon’s crew chief Alan Gustafson or Kyle Busch’s crew chief Rodney Childers, who seeks a second consecutive title with Kevin Harvick, Pearn might seem out of his element. But Furniture Row general manager Joe Garone points out that Pearn is hardly a novice.

In fact, the London, Ontario native was an engineer for Kevin Harvick’s car at Richard Childress Racing before accepting a supporting role at Furniture Row and serving as lead engineer under crew chief Todd Berrier. He’s been part of the steady progression at Furniture Row, galvanizing his team and acting decisively.

“I’m going to take credit for Cole,” Garone says. “Early on, I told Barney (team owner Visser) that this kid could be as good as there is in NASCAR as a crew chief. He’s driven, he’s a mechanical engineer and he just gets it. He understands processes and procedures, but he also understands when you just have to get down in the grease and flog when you have to get a car done. He sees both sides of it. I’m just thrilled to see him take the reins and be able to have success.”

The opportunity presented by Sunday’s Championship Round race, in his rookie season as crew chief, is definitely not lost on Pearn.

“Our shop foreman this week told me that the last time he’d been in this kind of position was 1992 and that really puts it in perspective,” Pearn says. “You never know when the next time (will be). Especially with this (championship) format, anything can happen to take you out. I’m definitely just trying to enjoy the moment, stay focused and make the most of it.”

Adam Stevens, hand-picked by Kyle Busch to become his pit boss, has been on a similar trajectory since his driving career flamed out. He studied mechanical engineering at Ohio University before joining forces with Petty Enterprises in 2002. Lured to Joe Gibbs Racing, he teamed with Busch to win 19 XFINITY Series races (and finish top five in 46 of 52 starts) in 2013-14.

He could never have imagined how his first season as a Sprint Cup crew chief would unfold.

“It’s been a wild year, starting with Kyle’s accident (at Daytona),” says Stevens, 37, who paired with drivers David Ragan, Matt Crafton and Erik Jones before Busch returned to win four of his first nine starts. “We started off with high hopes … then, before we even left Daytona, that was all taken away from us. To battle back from that, with all the wins that we’ve had along the way and good runs in competitive cars, is remarkable at this stage.

“I’ve been to Homestead the last three years in the championship hunt running for (the) XFINITY Series owner’s championship, so I know a little bit about what that’s about. And I had championship experience as a race engineer on the 20 Cup car in 2005 with Zippy (Greg Zipadelli) and Tony (Stewart). I’m not a complete stranger to it, but still, up there on the box and doing it for yourself is a whole different animal.”

Busch knows he might not be racing for a championship if not for Stevens.

“It was tough to be at home, lying in my bed and watching other guys race my car,” he said. “I can’t say enough about Adam Stevens and the teamwork, being able to keep everyone together and focused and motivated for my return.”

While Busch and Stevens may be only 24 races into their Sprint Cup alliance, Alan Gustafson comes at Sunday’s race with a completely different perspective. With 11 years as a Sprint Cup crew chief, he knows Sunday will be his final race with Jeff Gordon.

Gustafson, 40, says there is “added incentive to send Jeff out on top, as we believe he deserves – and we’re working hard to do that. Jeff has been a huge part of the sport … and a huge part of our company and our success.”

Of course there’s also Gustafson’s personal quest for his first Cup title.

“It would be a huge thing for me to win a championship,” he says. “It’s been my goal my whole career. I’ve been in this building, the 5/24 shop (at Hendrick) since its inception, and that’s been the goal. I think it would set a nice culture or legacy standard to propel us into the future with Chase (Elliott). You never know if you’ll get a chance to be back in this position again.”

Childers is fortunate enough to have that encore opportunity with Harvick. They won at Homestead to capture the Sprint Cup crown in their first season together at Stewart-Haas Racing, and they’ve been dominant at times in 2015.

“We’ve had fast cars all year,” says Childers, 39, who has finished in the top 10 in more than half (36 of 71) of his races with Harvick. “It’s just been a fun season, and you know, we look forward to the opportunity of going down there and at least having a shot at it and being able to do something special.”

Harvick, who benefitted from Childers’ decision to take four tires late in last year’s title-deciding race, appreciates his crew chief’s judgment in critical situations.

“I think the confidence between myself and Rodney is, obviously, pretty high,” Harvick says. “I believe in what he does. I believe in what my team does and, I think, that in the car, they believe in what I do. The chemistry on this team is so special. Through the Chase, I just believe that every step of the way, it’s been just (a series) of character-building moments that have made us stronger.”

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HM_112015_071 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Ground Toyota 30.568 176.655
2 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford 30.636 176.263
3 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Crispy Toyota 30.671 176.062
4 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet 30.796 175.347
5 24 Jeff Gordon AXALTA Chevrolet 30.806 175.291
6 21 Ryan Blaney(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford 30.832 175.143
7 19 Carl Edwards ARRIS Toyota 30.846 175.063
8 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford 30.849 175.046
9 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Nationwide Chevrolet 30.914 174.678

LISTEN: THE FINAL LAP WEEKLY NASCAR PODCAST #385 – MARTIN TRUEX/MADISON MARTIN/TIM DUERR – HOMESTEAD PREVIEW

10 3 Austin Dillon DOW Chevrolet 30.922 174.633
11 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevrolet 30.946 174.498
12 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet 31.017 174.098
13 4 Kevin Harvick Budweiser/Jimmy John’s Chevrolet 30.779 175.444
14 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Foods Ford 30.786 175.404
15 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet 30.793 175.365
16 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fastenal Chevrolet 30.808 175.279
17 27 Paul Menard Richmond/Menards Chevrolet 30.815 175.239
18 5 Kasey Kahne Great Clips Chevrolet 30.815 175.239
19 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota 30.820 175.211
20 47 AJ Allmendinger Kroger/Scott Products Chevrolet 30.882 174.859
21 16 Greg Biffle Bleacher Report Ford 30.960 174.419
22 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet 30.974 174.340
23 42 Kyle Larson Target Plaid Chevrolet 31.024 174.059
24 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota 31.277 172.651
25 33 Ty Dillon(i) Nexium 24 Hr Chevrolet 30.884 174.848
26 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford 31.014 174.115
27 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet 31.065 173.829
28 9 Sam Hornish Jr. Cheney Brothers Ford 31.084 173.723
29 95 Michael McDowell Thrivent Financial Ford 31.097 173.650
30 51 Justin Allgaier Brandt Chevrolet 31.142 173.399
31 26 JJ Yeley(i) Maxim Toyota 31.178 173.199
32 32 Josh Wise Zak Products Ford 31.244 172.833
33 7 Alex Bowman Nikko RC/Toy State Chevrolet 31.259 172.750
34 40 Landon Cassill(i) Snap Fitness Chevrolet 31.283 172.618
35 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet 31.311 172.463
36 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet 31.345 172.276
37 83 Matt DiBenedetto # Cosmo Toyota Owner Points
38 55 David Ragan Aaron’s Online Dream Machine Toyota Owner Points
39 46 Michael Annett Pilot Flying J Chevrolet Owner Points
40 35 Cole Whitt Speed Stick Ford Owner Points
41 38 David Gilliland Florida Lottery Ford Owner Points
42 34 Brett Moffitt # FR8 Auctions Ford Owner Points
43 98 Ryan Preece East West Marine/Logan’s/FireAde Chevrolet Owner Points

Wood Brothers AnnouncementWood Brothers Racing announced today that it will run a full, 36-race schedule in 2016 with Ryan Blaney continuing as the team’s driver contending for a NASCAR Sprint Cup championship with Motorcraft/Quick Lane and Ford Performance returning as anchor sponsors.

HOMESTEAD, Fla., November 20, 2015 – Wood Brothers Racing announced today that it will run a full, 36-race schedule in 2016 with Ryan Blaney continuing as the team’s driver contending for a NASCAR Sprint Cup championship with Motorcraft/Quick Lane and Ford Performance returning as anchor sponsors.

“We are beyond excited to make this announcement about going back to full time competition,” said Eddie Wood, team co-owner, at a press conference at Homestead-Miami Speedway during Ford Championship Weekend. “It has been something we’ve worked toward since 2009 when we started running limited schedules.

“I have to thank Ford’s Dave Pericak and Raj Nair, Edsel Ford, our technical alliance partners Team Penske and Roush Yates Engines, as well as everyone at Motorcraft, for working with us to make this day possible,” Wood continued. “It’ll be fun to see just how good Ryan Blaney, Jeremy Bullins and our team can be over a full season.

“Lastly,” he added, “it’ll be great not to have to worry about rain anymore on qualifying day.”

Due to their limited schedule and the current point system, inclement weather prevented Wood Brothers Racing from qualifying for three races in which they were slated to run this season.

“We are proud to have played a role in helping get the Wood Brothers back on the track full time for 2016,” said Pericak, global director, Ford Performance. “These guys have been Ford’s most-loyal team for 65 years and they deserve the chance to show how they can perform when they are at every race. They’ve earned a full-time slot by running strong all year, even under adversity. We plan on being part of this when they capture their 100th Cup victory.”

“This is a day everyone has looked forward to,” said Edsel B. Ford II, board member, Ford Motor Company. “The Wood Brothers represent everything that is great about this sport – tradition, family, loyalty, competition. When we asked them to regroup and consider going part-time in 2009, it was always with an eye on getting back to this day. And we are thrilled it is finally here.”

Thus far in 2015, the Wood Brothers’ iconic No. 21’s best finishes were fourth in the spring Talladega race, 12th at the Brickyard, 14th in the fall Charlotte race and seventh in the most-recent Kansas race. Even in the four races when the team had engine problems, the Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Fusion was running toward the front of the field when the trouble arose.

“This is every driver’s dream come true,” Blaney said, “Getting a chance to run for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. I’m really looking forward to running a full schedule with this historic Wood Brothers team and hopefully get them their 99th and 100th wins sooner rather than later.”

Motorcraft’s partnership with Wood Brothers Racing began in 2001 and quickly bore fruit by winning the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway with Elliott Sadler behind the wheel. The Motorcraft-Wood Brothers pairing had its greatest triumph in 2011 when rookie driver Trevor Bayne captured the Daytona 500.

“We are thrilled to have been able to work with Ford Performance to make the Wood Brothers’ a full-time race team for the 2016 NASCAR season,” said Mary Lou Quesnell, director of marketing for Ford Customer Service Division. “Wood Brothers Racing has been an excellent representative of our brands for 15 years and we look forward to seeing the famous No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Fusion on the track week after week.”

In addition to Motorcraft and Quick Lane Tire and Auto Centers, the team will look to add additional sponsors to the roster during the 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup season.

Wood Brothers Racing was formed in 1950 in Stuart, Va., by Hall of Famer Glen Wood. Wood Brothers Racing is the oldest active team and one of the winningest teams in NASCAR history. Since its founding, the team won 98 races (including at least one race in every decade for the last seven decades) and 117 poles in NASCAR’s top-tier series. Fielding only Ford products for its entire history, the Wood Brothers own the longest association of any motorsports team with a single manufacturer. Glen’s brother, Leonard, who still can be found in the team’s pit, is known for inventing the modern pit stop.

kyle_busch_chicagoBy Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. – There’s no telling where a younger, less mature Kyle Busch might have been this week.

For all his talent, he probably wouldn’t have been at Thursday’s Championship 4 Media Day session in preparation for Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBC) and his shot at a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.

Team owner Joe Gibbs sees the difference in his driver, who has overcome extreme adversity to put himself in position to battle defending champion Kevin Harvick, four-time champ Jeff Gordon, and Martin Truex Jr. for the title – about the only crown that’s eluded Busch during his career.

At 30, Busch owns 153 career victories in NASCAR’s three national series, including 33 in Sprint Cup competition. But he’s never finished higher than fourth (2013) in the final standings. Sometimes, equipment has let him down. Other times, he’s been his own worst enemy, letting emotions get the better of him.

“Kyle, for the last couple of years … reacts in the car differently,” Gibbs says. “He seems to have more of a patience and is willing to think things through. He’s still very aggressive, but the way he deals with things are much more even now. I think he’s definitely in a different place than he was 10 years ago.

“I think he’ got the talent (to win a title). … You see it in the NFL. I think everybody looks at championships as the way you’re judged. I think (a Cup title) would be a big deal and a big statement for him.”

In some ways, Busch has already delivered that statement. That he’s even positioned to race for a championship is a minor miracle and a tribute to his own and his team’s perseverance. Busch broke his right leg and left foot in a crash during the season-opening XFINITY Series race at Daytona in February and missed the first 11 Sprint Cup races of the season.

“I wouldn’t say that I could have (imagined being here),” Busch said. “(After the crash) we were trying to figure out whether or not I was going to be eligible, when I was able to return, and whether or not I could make up enough points to get myself in contention to be Chase-eligible come Richmond (the final race of NASCAR’s regular season).”

Busch remembers NASCAR Vice Chairman Mike Helton visiting him in his hospital room the day after his Daytona crash, still uncertain what waiver process, if any, the JGR driver might have at his disposal. For a time, even after he returned to the cockpit of the No. 18 Toyota Camry, it didn’t look like it would matter.

“After Michigan, when I crashed out there and finished dead last, we were like: ‘OK, we’ve got to reboot here and figure out what we’re going to do to make the Chase,’” Busch said. “But things went well. We won at Sonoma and won four out of five weeks and it just turned us around and put us where we needed to be.”

Needing to not only register a victory but earn enough points to crack the top 30 of the driver standings in order to qualify for the Chase, Busch reeled off four victories in a five-race stretch during the summer, including consecutive victories at Kentucky, New Hampshire and Indianapolis.

“He came back, roaring,” Gibbs says.

Now, Busch says he feels like he’s playing with “house money.” But did his comeback peak too early?

Although he’s posted five top-five finishes in the first nine Chase races, Busch hasn’t won a race since his July 26 victory in the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

“I feel like we’ve done some good things through this Chase,” he says. “We’ve run up front, we’ve run strong and we also had a couple mishaps. Fortunately they weren’t big enough that they eliminated us.”

Busch and JGR have already posted one significant victory this week, announcing that the team has finalized a multi-year deal with Mars, Inc.to keep Busch in a candy-coated Camry for the next several seasons.

But nothing would be sweeter than a victory on Sunday. Busch’s best run at Homestead came in 2012 when he led 191 laps but settled for fourth.

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Harvick 4Nov. 19, 2015

By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. – Experience tells Kevin Harvick that there’s only one sure way to lock up his second consecutive NASCAR Sprint Series title. That’s to win Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m. ET on NBC).

Experience is also why his team owner, Tony Stewart, thinks Harvick is the favorite to do just that.

“I do (think he’s the favorite), mainly from the standpoint that he’d been through this scenario and through this week last year,” said Stewart at Thursday’s Championship 4 Media Day.

LISTEN: THE FINAL LAP WEEKLY – HOMESTEAD MIAMI SPEEDWAY PREVIEW

“Even Jeff (Gordon’s) championships were not in a format like this. They didn’t have the pressure that he faces this week. The 18 (Kyle Busch) and 78 (Martin Truex Jr.) have never been in this scenario before. Having a driver who has been through this, knows how to handle it and what to expect, that’s a big advantage in a week like this.”

Beyond that, Stewart drew comparisons between Harvick and two of the sport’s greats.

“I kind of compare him as a cross between Dale Earnhardt (Sr.) and Terry Labonte,” Stewart said. “You’ve got a guy that the circumstances don’t rattle him. It doesn’t matter what task is ahead. It doesn’t matter if they’ve had pit strategy that’s got him in the back. It just doesn’t faze him. He’s someone who has that calm, cool nature like Terry Labonte but has that aggressive nature like Dale Sr., as well.”

In reality, all Harvick has to do is finish in front of the three remaining championship contenders – Gordon, Busch and Truex – to claim his second consecutive series title. But he knows that racing to win at Homestead-Miami Speedway takes the ambiguity out of the process.

“I think that’s definitely the way you have to approach this race,” Harvick said. “Last year, you saw all four (contenders racing) 1-2-3-4 at certain points in the race. Jeff led a lot of this race and ran really well. I just believe you’re going to have to win the race to win the championship.”

Harvick did just that in 2014 to fend off Ryan Newman for the title. Strategy played a huge role, as Harvick and crew chief Rodney Childers opted for four tires on the final pit stop, enabling Harvick to surge from 12th place with 16 laps to go to the lead with seven laps left.

“That was a very quick call from Rodney, on radio. He said: ‘Pit, take four tires,’” Harvick recalled. “We came out something like 14th and I’m like, ‘Man, I don’t know if I can make up all that ground.’ But, at that point, you reboot and refocus on the things you need to focus on. We got a good restart and we were able to have it all line up.”

Harvick has been rock solid throughout his 2015 season, pacing all Sprint Cup drivers with 12 second-place finishes, 2,248 laps led, and a career-high 27 top-10 finishes in addition to his three race victories. He’s the first driver to lead 2,000 laps in consecutive seasons since Gordon in 1995-96.

He’s beaten all of the remaining challengers in 17 of the season’s first 35 races and, of the four championship-eligible drivers, only Truex owns a better driver rating at HMS (106.6-102.5).

Moreover, Harvick is making a habit of coming up big when he needs it most. In the Chase, he overcame a 42nd at Chicagoland by delivering in a must-win situation at Dover (leading 355 of 400 laps). He advanced to the Championship 4 with the 15th he needed at Talladega and nailed down his spot in the race for the championship with another dominant performance at Phoenix. Even though he didn’t win, he led 143 of 219 laps.”

No matter how it turns out, Harvick and Stewart both have a sense of the history involved in Sunday’s race, with Gordon racing for a potential fifth Sprint Cup title in his final season.

“For me, it’s an honor,” said Harvick, careful not to throw any barbs Gordon’s way on Thursday, when all four drivers shared the Diplomat Hotel stage for questions and answers. “Forever, you’ll be part of Jeff Gordon’s last race. Obviously, you want to be the guy that wins the championship, but in the end, this is a big moment when you look at what Jeff’s meant to our sport, the things he’s done and things he’s accomplished. For this to be his last race, that’s a big deal.”

For that reason, Harvick isn’t expecting to see anyone spin Gordon out of the way if it comes down to a last-lap battle for the title.

“I think a lot of guys racing in this series grew up Jeff Gordon fans in some way, shape or form,” Harvick said. “From a competitor’s standpoint, looking at the things he’s done and doors he’s opened, we’re lucky to be in this spot. I want to win the race, but you also want to be very respectful to what is one of the legends of our sport.”

Stewart, who intends to conclude his own remarkable NASCAR career next season, said he was glad that Gordon will be among those battling his driver for the title.

“It makes you feel good for Jeff and everything that he’s done for the sport to be able to go out on his terms and to be able to go into his last race with an opportunity to race for a championship,” Stewart said. “That’s what you dream of.”

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