DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 7, 2010) – NASCAR has announced that NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams will use carburetor restrictor-plate openings of 1 1/32 inches for the July 3 event at Daytona International Speedway. The previous plate at Daytona last February was 63/64-inch.

Monday’s announcement pertains only to next month’s Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola – the last NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event on the current Daytona asphalt. The 2.5-mile, high-banked superspeedway will be repaved prior to the 2011 Daytona 500.

2010 Plate - Click for larger

Each restrictor plate contains four openings which restrict air flow to the engine, thus slowing cars. Larger openings mean more air, and more speed.
“We think this will be a needed boost due to the additional drag we’ve picked up since switching from a rear wing to a rear spoiler,” said NASCAR Vice President of Competition Robin Pemberton.

Rule changes, announced Jan. 21, mandated switching from a wing mounted on the rear deck lid of NASCAR’s new car, back to a more traditional stock-car spoiler. The March event at Martinsville Speedway marked the first race for the new spoiler.
Carburetor restrictor plates are used only at Daytona and 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway. Events at those tracks are famous for their close competition.
The 1 1/32-inch size openings will be the largest since the one-inch mandate in 1988, the first year the horsepower-reducing plates were mandated for yearly use in NASCAR Sprint Cup competition at Daytona.

Teams used openings of 15/16-inch for this season’s spring race (April 25) at Talladega. That size was determined following a March 16 test at Talladega that helped answer several mechanical questions, among them, spoiler height and the restrictor-plate openings.

1 5 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota
2 1 18 Kyle Busch M&Ms Pretzel Toyota
3 6 14 Tony Stewart Old Spice/Office Depot Chevrolet
4 22 29 Kevin Harvick Shell/Pennzoil Chevrolet
5 25 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
6 4 2 Kurt Busch Miller Lite/Vortex Dodge
7 13 31 Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet
8 7 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
9 2 33 Clint Bowyer Cheerios/Hamburger Helper Chevrolet
10 17 43 A J Allmendinger Coleman Natural Foods Ford
11 19 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Mobil 1 Dodge
12 26 99 Carl Edwards Kellogg’s/Cheez-It Ford
13 12 20 Joey Logano Home Depot Toyota
14 9 39 Ryan Newman Haas Automation Chevrolet
15 29 00 David Reutimann Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
16 33 98 Paul Menard Pittsburgh Paints/Menards Ford
17 15 17 Matt Kenseth Crown Royal Black Ford
18 24 78 Regan Smith Furniture Row Racing Chevrolet
19 3 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard/AMP Energy Chevrolet
20 31 82 Scott Speed Red Bull Toyota
21 11 12 Brad Keselowski No. 12 Penske Dodge Dodge
22 38 38 Travis Kvapil Long John Silver’s/Ice Flow Lemonade Ford
23 23 83 Casey Mears Red Bull Toyota
24 43 26 David Stremme Air Guard Ford
25 27 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Toyota
26 35 6 David Ragan UPS Ford
27 8 9 Kasey Kahne Budweiser Ford
28 28 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
29 14 5 Mark Martin Hendrickcars.com/GoDaddy.com Chevrolet
30 16 47 Marcos Ambrose Little Debbie Toyota
31 21 19 Elliott Sadler Stanley Ford
32 10 24 Jeff Gordon DuPont Chevrolet
33 37 37 David Gilliland Taco Bell Ford
34 20 13 Max Papis GEICO Toyota
35 42 34 Kevin Conway # Extenze Ford
36 18 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet
37 36 46 JJ Yeley Whitney Motorsports Dodge
38 41 71 Bobby Labonte TRG Motorsports Chevrolet
39 32 55 Michael McDowell PRISM Motorsports Toyota
40 34 66 Dave Blaney PRISM Motorsports Toyota
41 40 36 Geoff Bodine Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
42 39 64 Chad McCumbee Little Joe’s Autos Toyota
43 30 87 Joe Nemechek NEMCO Motorsports Toyota

LONG POND, PA. — Denny Hamlin won his fourth NASCAR Sprint Cup race of the season Sunday at Pocono Raceway.

The 30-year-old driver from Chesapeake, Va., took the lead from three-time Indy Racing League champion Sam Hornish, Jr., and a green-white-checker restart set up by a three-lap-to-go crash between Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano to win the Gillette Fusion ProGlide 500 at Pocono Raceway.

Harvick and Logano touched going into Turn 3, causing Logano to spin. Harvick went on to finish fourth, and Logano wound up 13th.

Hamlin’s teammate, pole sitter Kyle Busch, was second and Tony Stewart third.

Harvick was fourth and Jimmie Johnson, apparently back in his old form of coming on
strong in the latter stages of a race, was fifth.

A multi-car melee on the backstretch as the field headed for the checkered flag demolished a number of cars, many of which had been contenders. Included were Kasey Kahne, who skidded across the track in front of a wide-open pack sending debris scattering everywhere. Also involved were Greg Biffle, Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan Newman, Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon, Elliott Sadler and Marcos Ambrose.

Hamlin, who led on numerous occasions throughout the race, appears poised to make a solid run for the championship. The win also gives Hamlin forty bonus points going into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. He won earlier this season at Martinsville, Texas and Darlington, and he won one of the two races at the Pocono track last year.

Logano added a few fireworks to the post-race environment when he had some heated words with Harvick.

The weather can be a factor at Pocono because it changes often in the mountain climate. In fact, it was overcast most of Sunday morning before the sun popped out just a few minutes before honorary starter WWE star and action film star John Cena was waiting to wave the green starting flag on the 43-car field.

Five of the sport’s hardest-charging drivers were lined up in the first five starting spots, Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Kyle’s brother Kurt, and Kyle’s teammate Denny Hamlin. Two of the sport’s fiercest veterans lined up right behind them, Tony Stewart and Juan Pablo Montoya.

The field also included sentimental favorite Geoff Bodine, who at 61 was the oldest driver in the field and making his first NASCAR Sprint Cup start since Dover in 2004.
However, Mother Nature postponed the start with a downpour after the cars made several laps under the caution.

After a couple of hours delay while jet dryers blew the track dry, the 200-lap race was underway a few minutes after three o’clock.

Kyle Busch wasted no time getting out front, and Hamlin quickly moved into the No. 2 spot. Bowyer was third, Stewart fourth and Kahne fifth. Hamlin took the lead from Kyle on lap six.

NASCAR threw a competition caution at lap 15 to let teams check tire wear after the heavy rain washed all the rubber off the track. The top 10 when the caution waved were Hamlin, Kahne, Bowyer, Kyle Busch, Gordon, Stewart, Montoya, Burton, Earnhardt Jr. and Kurt Busch.

After the restart, Kyle Busch took the lead again with Hamlin on his bumper. Bowyer was next with Gordon and Montoya behind him. Kenseth, Biffle, Burton, Earnhardt and Harvick rounded out the top 10. Bodine’s run ended on lap 31 with rear gear problems.

On the move at this stage of the race was Johnson, who started 25th. By lap 38, the four-time champion had moved into eighth position. Bowyer also chose lap 38 to make a move, passing Kyle for the lead.

Bowyer maintained his lead during the next round of green flag pit stops and Allmendinger cracked the top 10 for the first time of the day.
At lap 60, it was still Bowyer, followed by Kyle, Hamlin, Gordon, Harvick, Burton, Kahne, Montoya and Allmendinger.

Green flag pit stops started again at lap 78 with leader Bowyer. He was first out and Kyle was right behind him. Montoya was penalized for being too fast on exit.
When all the frontrunners had completed their stops, it was Bowyer, Kyle, Hamlin, Gordon. Harvick, Kahne, Johnson, Burton, Allmendiner and Biffle. Montoya dropped to 17th after his penalty. Earnhardt, who ran up front early in the race, was 13th.

A caution, only the second of the race, fell on lap 98 for debris in the tunnel turn. When the green flag waved at the halfway mark (100 laps), it was Kyle out front but Harvick made a daring move on the inside to make it four abreast going into one. He was leading when they came out of Turn one with Hamlin running second. Kyle was third, followed by Burton, Bowyer, Johnson, Allmendinger, Kahne, Gordon and Logano.

RACE RECAP | POCONO
10 A.J. Allmendinger
9 Clint Bower
8 Juan Pablo Montoya
7 Jeff Burton
6 Kurt Busch
5 Jimmie Johnson recovered from a slow pit stop
4 Kevin Harvick
3 Tony Stewart 2nd top 5 this season
2 Kyle Busch

VICTORY LANE

1 Denny Hamlin wins his 4th at Pocono, and 4th win of the season picking up the most bonus points so far this season

OTHER STORIES ON THE DAY

-Kevin Harvick spun the 20 of Joey Logano to bring out the Green-White-Checkered finish. Fireworks on pit road after the race when Joey parked his car next to the 29 and started yelling at Kevin and crew.

Kevin Tweeted: Well after his tv comment I don’t know if he wants to fight me or @delanaharvick

-There was a violent wreck on The Final Lap as AJ Allmendinger put the block on his teammate Kasey Kahne and sent the 9 into the rest of the field. Involved were David Ragan, Jeff Gordon, Marcos Ambrose, Greg Biffle, Mark Martin, Elliott Sadler, Martin Truex Jr., and Ryan Newman