2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

The 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series was the 66th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 43rd modern-era Cup season. The season began at Daytona International Speedway, with the Sprint Unlimited, followed by the Daytona 500. The season ended with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Kevin Harvick, the 2014 Sprint Cup Series champion
Ryan Newman finished 1 point behind Harvick in second place
Denny Hamlin finished 6 points behind Harvick in third place
Joey Logano finished 15 points behind Harvick in fourth place
Kyle Larson, the 2014 NASCAR Rookie of the Year.
Chevrolet won the Manufacturer's championship with 20 wins & 1572 points, their 13th championship in a row. They wouldn't win again until 2021

This season was the final year of broadcasting for both the ESPN family of networks and Turner Sports. ESPN had covered the second half of the Sprint Cup season since 2007 while Turner Sports ended a thirty-one year relationship with NASCAR on TBS and later TNT. For 2015, their portions of the season were divided between Fox Sports and NBC.

Kevin Harvick and Stewart-Haas Racing claimed the drivers' championship and owners' championship, while Chevrolet won the manufacturer's championship. In one of the largest rookie classes in recent history, Kyle Larson was named Rookie of the Year. If NASCAR still had the season long points format in 2014, Jeff Gordon would have won his 7th championship this season.

The 2014 season was the first Cup Series season without NASCAR legend Mark Martin since 1985 after he retired following the end of the 2013 season. Additionally, this was also the first Cup season without Ken Schrader since 2009, Tony Raines since 2001, Scott Riggs since 2003, Elliott Sadler since 1996 (he would return 3 years later in 2017), Scott Speed since 2007, and Kenny Wallace since 1989. However, excluding 2009, this was the first season without Schrader since 1983.

Teams and drivers

edit

Complete schedule

edit

There were 41 full-time teams in 2014.

Manufacturer Team No. Race Driver Crew Chief
Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing 1 Jamie McMurray[1] Keith Rodden[2]
42 Kyle Larson (R)[3] Chris Heroy
Furniture Row Racing 78 Martin Truex Jr.[4] Todd Berrier
Germain Racing[5] 13 Casey Mears[6] Bootie Barker
Hendrick Motorsports 5 Kasey Kahne[7] Kenny Francis
24 Jeff Gordon[8] Alan Gustafson[9]
48 Jimmie Johnson[10] Chad Knaus[9]
88 Dale Earnhardt Jr.[11] Steve Letarte
HScott Motorsports 51 Justin Allgaier (R)[12] Steve Addington[13]
JTG Daugherty Racing[14] 47 A. J. Allmendinger[15] Brian Burns
Richard Childress Racing 3 Austin Dillon (R)[16] Gil Martin
27 Paul Menard[17] Slugger Labbe 31
Justin Alexander 5[18]
31 Ryan Newman[19] Luke Lambert[19]
33 Brian Scott 6 Nick Harrison 7
Mark Hillman 15
Mike Hillman Jr. 14
Ty Dillon 2[20]
Hillman-Circle Sport LLC Timmy Hill 6
David Stremme 12
Alex Kennedy 5[21]
Bobby Labonte 1
Morgan Shepherd 1
Travis Kvapil 3
40 Landon Cassill Mike Abner 19
Mark Hillman 17
Stewart-Haas Racing 4 Kevin Harvick[22] Rodney Childers
10 Danica Patrick Tony Gibson 33
Daniel Knost 3[23]
14 Tony Stewart 33 Chad Johnston[24]
Regan Smith 1[25]
Jeff Burton 2[26][27]
41 Kurt Busch Daniel Knost 33
Tony Gibson 3
Tommy Baldwin Racing 7 Michael Annett (R)[28] Kevin Manion
36 Reed Sorenson Todd Parrott
Ford Front Row Motorsports 34 David Ragan[29] Jay Guy 30
Derrick Finley 6
38 David Gilliland[29] Frank Kerr 30
Jay Guy 6
Go FAS Racing 32 Terry Labonte 4 Dan Stillman 11
Ben Leslie 19
Clinton Cram 6
Travis Kvapil 16
Blake Koch 4
Boris Said 2
Eddie MacDonald 1[30]
J. J. Yeley 3
Joey Gase 4[31]
Timmy Hill 1
Kyle Fowler 1
Richard Petty Motorsports 9 Marcos Ambrose Drew Blickensderfer
43 Aric Almirola Trent Owens[32]
Roush Fenway Racing 16 Greg Biffle Matt Puccia
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Mike Kelley[24]
99 Carl Edwards Jimmy Fennig
Team Penske 2 Brad Keselowski[33] Paul Wolfe 35
Greg Erwin 1[34]
22 Joey Logano Todd Gordon
Toyota BK Racing 23 Alex Bowman (R) Dave Winston
26 Cole Whitt (R)[35] Randy Cox
83 Ryan Truex (R) 26 Dale Ferguson 8
Doug Richert 6
Joe Williams 22
J. J. Yeley 8
Travis Kvapil 2
Identity Ventures Racing 30
Michael Waltrip Racing 6
66 Michael Waltrip 4[36] Chad Walter 6
Scott Eggleston 30
Joe Nemechek 15
Jeff Burton 2[36]
Brett Moffitt 8[37]
Timmy Hill 1
Tomy Drissi 1
Mike Wallace 5
Joe Gibbs Racing 11 Denny Hamlin 35[38] Darian Grubb 30
Mike Wheeler 6
Sam Hornish Jr. 1[39]
18 Kyle Busch[40] Dave Rogers
20 Matt Kenseth[41] Jason Ratcliff[42]
Michael Waltrip Racing 15 Clint Bowyer[43] Brian Pattie
55 Brian Vickers[44] Billy Scott
Ford 5
Chevrolet 31
Phil Parsons Racing[45] 98 Josh Wise[45] Gene Nead

Limited schedule

edit
Manufacturer Team No. Race Driver Crew Chief Round(s)
Chevrolet Beard Motorsports 75 Clay Rogers Darren Shaw 2
HScott Motorsports 52[46] Bobby Labonte[47] Jimmy Elledge 1
Team XTREME Racing 44 J. J. Yeley[48] Walter Giles 1
Joe Lax 1
Steve Lane 8
10
Timmy Hill Peter Sospenzo 2
Tommy Baldwin Racing 37 Bobby Labonte Tommy Baldwin Jr. 1
Dave Blaney[49] Zach McGowan 3
Mike Bliss 6
Ford Front Row Motorsports 35 Eric McClure[50] Todd Anderson 8
Derrick Finley 2
2
Blake Koch 2
David Reutimann 6
Leavine Family Racing 95 Michael McDowell[51] Wally Rogers 22[52]
Randy Humphrey Racing 77 Dave Blaney[53] Peter Sospenzo 12
Nelson Piquet Jr. Steve Lane 1
Joe Nemechek 1
Corey LaJoie 2
Roush Fenway Racing 6 Trevor Bayne[54] Bob Osborne 1
Team Penske 12 Ryan Blaney[55] Jeremy Bullins 2
Juan Pablo Montoya Greg Erwin 2
Wood Brothers Racing 21 Trevor Bayne Donnie Wingo 12
Toyota BK Racing 93 Morgan Shepherd[56] Rick Ren 1
Mike Bliss Doug Richert 2
Johnny Sauter 1
J. J. Yeley 1
Clay Rogers 2
Identity Ventures Racing 49 Mike Wallace Scott Eggleston 1
87 Joe Nemechek 3
Morgan Shepherd 1
Timmy Hill 1
RAB Racing 29 Joe Nemechek Chris Rice 2
Matt Lucas 1
2
Matt Crafton[57] 1
Swan Racing 30 Parker Kligerman Steve Lane 8

Changes

edit

Teams

edit

Drivers

edit

Manufacturers

edit

Changes

edit

In contrast to previous seasons, NASCAR imposed several new rules changes that drastically altered how the circuit operates.

Rules changes

edit

Beginning this year, NASCAR eliminated traditional single car qualifying in its top 3 series for all races except the Daytona 500, the Mudsummer Classic, and non-points events. Qualifying will now be done in a Formula One-style knockout qualifying. For all tracks larger than 1.25 miles in length, qualifying will consist of all entered cars on track for 25 minutes. The fastest 24 move onto a 10-minute session, while the final 12 drivers compete for the overall pole in a 5-minute session. For tracks shorter than 1.25 miles as well as road courses, all entered cars will qualify in a 30-minute session, while the 12 fastest will compete in a final 10 minute session. A similar system involving groups of cars being released at five-second intervals was used at Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International in 2013.

The rule was modified slightly for restrictor plate races (other than the Daytona 500, which maintains its single car pole qualifying and Budweiser Duel qualifying races) beginning at Talladega in the October race. During sessions at restrictor plate tracks, such as at Talladega's spring race, drivers had either ridden around the track at slow speeds or stopped on pit road for several minutes to avoid aiding others in the draft. In an effort to avoid this, a new procedure was implemented:[60]

  • NASCAR will randomly split the field into two groups for session 1. Each group will get 5 minutes of track time. The fastest 24 cars from either group will advance to session 2.
  • These 24 cars will get 5 minutes of track time for session 2. The fastest 12 cars in session 2 will advance to session 3.
  • Session 3 remains unchanged: 12 cars competing for overall pole in a 5-minute session.
  • Statically set car at race ride height—eliminate pre- and post-race front height rules and inspection.
  • The use of a front splitter with a square leading edge.
  • Skirts at 4-inch minimum ground clearance on both the left and right sides.
  • Rear fascia trimmed 1.375 inches higher in current scallop region.
  • The use of a .750-inch higher 8-inch high rear spoiler except at Daytona and Talladega.
  • The use of a 43-inch wide by 13-inch long radiator pan.

New Chase format

edit

On January 30, 2014, NASCAR announced radical changes to the format for the season-ending Chase for the Sprint Cup.[61]

  • The group of drivers in the Chase will now officially be called the NASCAR Sprint Cup Chase Grid.
  • The number of drivers qualifying for the Chase Grid will expand from 12 to 16.
  • 15 of the 16 slots in the Chase Grid are reserved for the drivers with the most race wins over the first 26 races, provided that said drivers are in the top 30 in series points and have attempted to qualify for each race (with rare exceptions). The remaining spot is reserved for the points leader after 26 races, if that driver does not have a victory. If fewer than 16 drivers have wins in the first 26 races, the remaining Chase Grid spots are filled by winless drivers in order of season points. As in the recent past, all drivers on the Chase Grid have their driver points reset to 2,000 prior to the Chase, with a 3-point bonus for each win in the first 26 races.
  • The Chase will be divided into four rounds. After each of the first three rounds, the four Chase Grid drivers with the fewest season points are eliminated from the Grid and championship contention. Any driver on the Chase Grid who wins a race in the first three rounds automatically advances to the next round. Also, all drivers eliminated from the Chase have their points readjusted to the regular-season points scheme.
    • Challenger Round (races 27–29)
      • Begins with 16 drivers, each with 2,000 points plus a 3-point bonus for each win in the first 26 races.
    • Contender Round (races 30–32)
      • Begins with 12 drivers, each with 3,000 points.
    • Eliminator Round (races 33–35)
      • Begins with 8 drivers, each with 4,000 points.
    • NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship (final race)
      • The last 4 drivers in contention for the season title start the race at 5,000 points, with the highest finisher in the race winning the Cup Series title.

2014 NASCAR realignment

edit

The 2014 schedule had a few changes from the 2013 schedule, all of them among the first fifteen races. The dates for the spring races at Darlington Raceway and Kansas Speedway (Bojangles' Southern 500 and 5-hour Energy 400 respectively) were swapped, giving Kansas its first primetime Sprint Cup race,[62] Texas Motor Speedway's spring race was changed from a Saturday night to a Sunday afternoon race for this year only due to conflicts with the NCAA basketball finals,[62] it and Martinsville Speedway's STP 500 were moved up a week, the new Darlington date moved to Texas's original spot on the schedule, and the spring off-weekend moved to Kansas' original date, to coincide with Easter.[63]

Other changes

edit

NASCAR restructured the penalties and appeals system allowing penalties to be more consistent. The appeals process also makes NASCAR's basis for issuing the penalty public at the first appeal instead of the last.[64] Minor changes were made to the Gen-6 race car. Rules on ride height were loosened, and the top of the rear spoiler is now made of clear material to give drivers more visibility. After a six-hour delay at the first Chase race in 2013 at Chicagoland, NASCAR will now make the Air Titan available at all Sprint Cup Series races and accompanying races at no extra charge. The Air Titan has also been improved to Air Titan 2.0 shortening track drying time even further.

In addition, starting in 2014, drivers have a winner's decal placed behind the driver's name on the side of the car for each race victory they earn during the season.

Schedule

edit

The final calendar was released on October 15, 2013,[62] comprising 36 races, as well as two exhibition races. The schedule also includes two Budweiser Duels, which are the qualifying races for the Daytona 500.

No. Race Title Track Date
Sprint Unlimited Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach February 15
Budweiser Duels February 20
1 Daytona 500 February 23
2 The Profit on CNBC 500 Phoenix International Raceway, Avondale March 2
3 Kobalt 400 Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas March 9
4 Food City 500 Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol March 16
5 Auto Club 400 Auto Club Speedway, Fontana March 23
6 STP 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway March 30
7 Duck Commander 500[65] Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth April 7†
8 Bojangles' Southern 500 Darlington Raceway, Darlington April 12
9 Toyota Owners 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond April 26
10 Aaron's 499 Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega May 4
11 5-hour Energy 400 Kansas Speedway, Kansas City May 10
Sprint Showdown Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord May 16
NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race May 17
12 Coca-Cola 600 May 25
13 FedEx 400 Dover International Speedway, Dover June 1
14 Pocono 400 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond June 8
15 Quicken Loans 400 Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn June 15
16 Toyota/Save Mart 350 Sonoma Raceway, Sonoma June 22
17 Quaker State 400 Kentucky Speedway, Sparta June 28
18 Coke Zero 400[66] Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach July 6†
19 Camping World RV Sales 301 New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon July 13
20 Crown Royal presents the John Wayne Walding 400 Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway July 27
21 Gobowling.com 400 Pocono Raceway, Long Pond August 3
22 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen Watkins Glen International, Watkins Glen August 10
23 Pure Michigan 400 Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn August 17
24 Irwin Tools Night Race Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol August 23
25 Oral-B USA 500 Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton August 31
26 Federated Auto Parts 400 Richmond International Raceway, Richmond September 6
Chase for the Sprint Cup
Round of 16
27 MyAFibStory.com 400 Chicagoland Speedway, Joliet September 14
28 Sylvania 300 New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon September 21
29 AAA 400 Dover International Speedway, Dover September 28
Round of 12
30 Hollywood Casino 400 Kansas Speedway, Kansas City October 5
31 Bank of America 500 Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord October 11
32 GEICO 500 Talladega Superspeedway, Talladega October 19
Round of 8
33 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500 Martinsville Speedway, Ridgeway October 26
34 AAA Texas 500 Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth November 2
35 Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 Phoenix International Raceway, Avondale November 9
Championship 4
36 Ford EcoBoost 400 Homestead-Miami Speedway, Homestead November 16
†: The Duck Commander 500 and Coke Zero 400 were postponed a day because of persistent rain.

Season summary

edit

Race reports

edit

Speedweeks 2014

Speedweeks 2014 kicked off with the 2014 Sprint Unlimited. Denny Hamlin started on pole and won all three segments in a bizarre race that featured 10 of the 18 cars crashing out, along with three more being damaged, and the pace car catching on fire. Hamlin led 27 of the 75 laps and won the race ahead of Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch, and Joey Logano.

Qualifying for the front row took place the next day, with rookie Austin Dillon, fielding the famed No. 3 car, appearing for the first time since the 2001 Daytona 500, winning the pole. Martin Truex Jr. won the outside pole.

During the first practice session on Wednesday, a five-car wreck happened and ended with rookie Parker Kligerman on his roof; several teams had to use back-up cars. The wreck brought out a red flag that prematurely ended the session. The second session was run without major incident.[67]

The 2014 Budweiser Duels were fairly uneventful, with Matt Kenseth winning the first race that ran caution-free, and Denny Hamlin winning the second that had only one caution–a large wreck on the last lap that started when Jimmie Johnson ran out of fuel. Jamie McMurray, Martin Truex Jr., and Michael Waltrip, among others, were involved. Clint Bowyer flipped his car during the accident. This was the first night race in The Duels.

Round 1: Daytona 500

Austin Dillon started on pole, but led only the first lap. The first 35 laps featured Denny Hamlin and Kurt Busch taking turns leading, and Kyle Larson struggling with two flat tires. During the second caution for an engine problem on Martin Truex Jr.'s car, it began to rain, and by lap 39, the red flag was displayed with Kyle Busch as the leader. The red flag lasted over six hours as track-drying was delayed due to ongoing rain showers.[68] The race went back green under the lights, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. dominated the final part of the race. Several minor "big ones" broke out late in the race, but Earnhardt held on to win his second career Daytona 500.

Round 2: The Profit on CNBC 500

Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano took the front row for Team Penske, but Kevin Harvick dominated most of the race. Harvick would hang on to win the race, his first for with his new team, Stewart-Haas Racing. Daytona 500 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished in second.

Round 3: Kobalt 400

Joey Logano took the pole, and after a race with several different strategies and leaders, Dale Earnhardt Jr. found himself in the lead trying to make it to the finish on fuel mileage. However, Earnhardt ran out of fuel with just over half a lap to go, and Brad Keselowski took advantage to win the race. Since they had a sizable lead on the rest of the field, Earnhardt would get back going with what little fuel he had left and finish in second position.

Round 4: Food City 500

The race started on time, but, just like the Daytona 500, rain delayed the race in the early going. The race finally got restarted under the lights several hours later. After many of the frontrunners, including Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, Matt Kenseth, and Jimmie Johnson, suffered from numerous problems, Carl Edwards found himself up front late in the race. Edwards held on as rain caused the race to end under caution after 503 laps (a caution had waved with two to go and the race had not yet been restarted for the green-white-checker).

Round 5: Auto Club 400

Matt Kenseth started on pole, but gave way to Brad Keselowski, who started on the front row and had the fastest car at the beginning. After he led 38 laps. Jimmie Johnson would take over the lead, leading 104 of the race's 200 laps. Many cautions waved during the race because of drivers repeatedly cutting down left side tires. Kenseth had the first pit box and would take advantage of it a few times, coming out in the lead. Kenseth would lead three or four laps after the restarts, then Johnson would pass him as Kenseth's car faded back. With seven laps remaining, Johnson had a left-front tire go down, giving the lead to his teammate Jeff Gordon. Keselowski suffered his third left-rear tire failure a lap later but stayed out of harm's way. The same fate befell Marcos Ambrose on the same lap. Gordon, who had a large lead, slowed his pace and almost made it to the finish, but Clint Bowyer spun with less than three laps to go, thanks to a flat left-rear tire. The caution waved to set up the green-white-checker finish. On the restart, Gordon got shuffled back to finish in 13th. Kyle Busch passed Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch (both of whom only took two tires during pit stops), bringing rookie Kyle Larson with him. Kyle Busch held off Larson to win his first race of the year. Larson finished second and Kurt Busch finished third. Kenseth also passed Stewart on the last lap to finish in fourth. Stewart came home fifth.

Round 6: STP 500

Kyle Busch started on pole, and he, Matt Kenseth, and Jimmie Johnson took several turns leading through the first 70 laps as Kasey Kahne, Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch, Austin Dillon, and others were caught up in early accidents. Joey Logano then took over the lead from Kyle Busch for a few laps, but yielded to Johnson and Kenseth. Meanwhile, Kurt Busch and Keselowski would continuously bump and race each other very hard because of an incident on pit road several laps before. This would ultimately lead to a caution for Ricky Stenhouse Jr. running up into the wall after checking up for the ongoing battle between Busch and Keselowski. Kenseth retook the lead during pit stops under the caution, but quickly yielded to Logano after the restart. After another caution and restart, Johnson took over from Logano. Johnson, Logano, Hamlin, and Kenseth all faded soon after, and after lap 165, Greg Biffle, Marcos Ambrose, and A. J. Allmendinger became the new top-three. After another caution for a spin by Casey Mears, Ambrose won the race off of pit road to become the new leader. Kenseth and Johnson would get by Ambrose after several laps, but another caution would wave after Jamie McMurray got bumped into the wall by Dale Earnhardt Jr. After the restart, Kenseth would lose the lead to Johnson, then fade back to tenth after getting stuck on the outside.

Caution number seven waved around lap 220, after David Gilliland turned Alex Bowman into the wall. Earnhardt, Allmendinger, and Kurt Busch stayed out, but everyone else pitted, with Logano coming off of pit road first. After another quick caution and restart for debris, Kurt Busch took the lead from Earnhardt on lap 243, and Johnson took over from Busch two laps later. The ninth caution waved at lap 250 after Ryan Truex go turned into the wall, and all of the leaders made pit stops. Kenseth, however, stayed out and reassumed the lead, with Tony Stewart taking second. Johnson and Earnhardt would come out of pit road first to restart third and fourth, respectively. Earnhardt took the lead on lap 260, Johnson took over once again on lap 265, and then Clint Bowyer charged to the front and took the lead on lap 284 but gave it back to Johnson four laps later and faded back a bit. Meanwhile, Kenseth and Stewart, who both stayed out during the previous caution, would fall back quickly, with Kenseth being lapped on lap 304 and Stewart losing a lap ten laps later. Other drivers had problems as well, with Alex Bowman cutting a tire and Denny Hamlin getting a windshield tear-off stuck over the opening to his left-front brake duct. Lap 315 saw the tenth caution as Joe Nemechek slammed the wall, and all of the leaders pitted and retained their positions. The eleventh caution flew on lap 340 as 20th-place Kyle Larson spun out of turn two, and the leaders pitted once again, with Johnson and Bowyer keeping their first and second-place positions. Bowyer nosed ahead on the restart and led a lap, but Johnson retook the lead the next lap as another caution waved for debris. Edwards would nose ahead on the next restart but fail to lead a lap before Johnson pulled away. The 13th caution flew on lap 411 as Brad Keselowski spun Martin Truex Jr. in turn two, and on the ensuing pit stops, an exiting Edwards hit an entering Matt Kenseth, spinning Kenseth around backwards into his pit stall. Johnson retained the lead on the restart, ahead of Bowyer and Edwards. Kurt Busch would then move up second and challenge Johnson but fell back and was passed by Bowyer. Bowyer then chased Johnson down, and, after a slip by Johnson, took the lead on lap 450. On lap 459, Carl Edwards spun to bring out the 14th caution, and Bowyer fell back to tenth during pit stops, allowing Johnson to retake the lead ahead of Joey Logano. Johnson barely retained the lead on the lap 466 restart, but began to pull away as Kurt Busch slipped into second. Busch would then run down and pass Johnson in about five laps, but Johnson would once again retake the lead on lap 483, with that pass setting a new track record with 32 lead changes. Busch retook the lead on lap 490 (the 33rd lead change) and held off Johnson to break a winless drought dating back to the 2011 AAA 400, ironically another race that Johnson led the most laps in but was beaten late by Busch. Earnhardt finished third, Joey Logano fourth, Marcos Ambrose fifth, and Matt Kenseth sixth.

Round 7: Duck Commander 500

The race's start was delayed due to rain, marking the third time in seven race weekends in 2014 that weather affected a race. Eventually, NASCAR announced that the race would be postponed to Monday, April 7, and started at 12 p.m., marking the season's first rainout.[65] The race started under green-yellow conditions to allow track workers to dry the track from the rain while green flag laps were counted under yellow flag conditions. Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought out the first yellow of the race two laps after it officially went green on Lap 11 when he clipped the wet infield grass on the front stretch, causing the splitter to dig in and damage the front end of his car before it caught fire. Teammate Jimmie Johnson received some damage from the dirt dug up by Earnhardt Jr. Joey Logano made a last lap pass on Jeff Gordon to win the race.

Round 8: Bojangles' Southern 500

Kevin Harvick started on the pole, led the most laps, and passed Dale Earnhardt Jr. with two laps to go to win his second race of the year at Darlington Raceway.

Round 9: Toyota Owners 400

Joey Logano scored his second win of the season after a nine lap battle for the win.

Round 10: Aaron's 499

Denny Hamlin scored his first victory of the season, and first career win at Talladega Superspeedway, after taking the lead from Kevin Harvick with two laps to go.

Round 11: 5-hour Energy 400

Jeff Gordon took the lead with eight laps to go and held off a last lap charge by Kevin Harvick for his 89th career win.

Exhibition: NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race

For the first time, the Sprint Showdown was held the day before the All-Star Race, with Clint Bowyer winning and A. J. Allmendinger finishing second to advance to the All-Star Race. Josh Wise was the winner of the fan vote to be the third driver to advance.

For the main race, Carl Edwards took the pole in a unique qualifying session, but Kyle Busch won the first 20-lap segment. However, he and Joey Logano crashed in the second segment, followed soon after by Allmendinger. Kasey Kahne won the second and third segments, but faded in the fourth after hitting the wall, along with Ryan Newman. Kevin Harvick would later win the fourth segment. On the restart for the last segment, which was ten laps, Jamie McMurray passed Edwards and held off Harvick to win his first All-Star race.

Round 12: Coca-Cola 600

Jimmie Johnson won the pole, led the most laps, and won the race ahead of Kevin Harvick, after the latter was slowed down by pit difficulties late and could not recover in time. Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards, and Jamie McMurray rounded out the top five. Kurt Busch and Danica Patrick both suffered blown engines in the race, with Busch's engine failure ending his chance of completing all 1,100 miles (1,800 km) of the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600, an act known as "Double Duty".

Round 13: FedEx 400

 
Kyle Busch leads the FedEx 400 following the restart from the first caution

Brad Keselowski started on pole, but Kyle Busch led the early part of the race. Jimmie Johnson eventually passed Kyle Busch for the lead. Clint Bowyer got into Kyle Busch, who wound up hitting the wall and ending his day. Greg Biffle and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. collided on the backstretch, also involving Landon Cassill, Ryan Truex, and Justin Allgaier. The race was red flagged in order to clean up. After the race resumed, Kevin Harvick took the lead from Johnson. Jamie McMurray hit a piece of concrete in turn two, which resulted in a second red flag in order to repair the hole in the track. The concrete ended up causing damage to the bridge over the track in that location. Harvick continued to lead after the red flag until having to pit for a flat tire, yielding the lead to Matt Kenseth. Johnson took the lead from Kenseth and dominated the remainder of the race, winning his second consecutive race and his ninth win at Dover.

Round 14: Pocono 400

Denny Hamlin took the pole with a new track record, but Brad Keselowski led the most laps. Jimmie Johnson started 20th and worked up to 5th; however, his progress was stunted by a pit-road collision with Marcos Ambrose. Other contenders Tony Stewart and Kevin Harvick were done in by a pit road speeding penalty and a flat tire, respectively. Kasey Kahne was then taken out after being forced up into the wall by Kyle Busch, causing a crash that also involved Carl Edwards. After the final restart, Keselowski picked up a large piece of debris on his grill and got passed by Dale Earnhardt Jr. while trying to pull up behind the slower Danica Patrick to remove the debris. Earnhardt would continue to lead and pick up his first career victory at Pocono. The win was the fourth in a row for Hendrick Motorsports in 2014, and the fourth in a row for Hendrick at Pocono with four different drivers.[69]

Round 15: Quicken Loans 400

 
Racing action after a restart at the 2014 Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speedway.

Jimmie Johnson took the lead with ten laps remaining to take his first win at Michigan International Speedway. This was his first career win at Michigan, after numerous unsuccessful attempts that ended with crashes, engine failures, or running out of fuel. "We had figured out every way to lose this race," Johnson said after winning at Michigan for the first time in 25 tries. "And today we were able to get it done. "We really were in a win-win situation," he added. "Those guys still had to come to pit road to make it to the end. Once I got an idea of how the race was unfolding, I knew we were in the catbird seat and were able to take advantage of it. When it came down to strategy in the end, which we all knew it would at Michigan, Chad nailed the strategy."[70]

Round 16: Toyota/Save Mart 350

Carl Edwards held off a last lap charge from Jeff Gordon to win the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway. “Real tough. That last lap was ugly. I grew up watching Jeff Gordon do well here so to have him in my mirror is special," Edwards said. "This team has been working very hard. The whole group has. It's very special to be a part of something like this.”[71]

Round 17: Quaker State 400

In what was an absolutely dominating performance from Team Penske, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski combined to lead 236 of the 267 laps and Keselowski led 199 laps to win the Quaker State 400 at Kentucky Speedway. He described his car as "awesome" and that his crew did a "great job."[72]

Round 18: Coke Zero 400

Aric Almirola scored his first career victory in the rain-shortened Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. He said he could not "dream" of a better place to get his first win.[73] Kurt Busch was penalized 10 points for a technical infraction following post-race inspection.[74]

Round 19: Camping World RV Sales 301

Brad Keselowski staved off a green-white-checker charge by Kyle Busch to win. "I think it is definitely good for when we come back here in September but past success doesn't guarantee future success," he said. "We have to keep working and plugging away. I am sure a lot of guys will be stronger and hopefully we will be too."[75]

Round 20: Brickyard 400

Jeff Gordon scored his record 5th win in the Brickyard 400 after passing Kasey Kahne on a restart with 17 laps to go. The race was dominated by a variety of pit strategies. Kasey Kahne led the most laps in the race with 70 as Hendrick powered cars led 127 of the 160 laps. "Those emotions take over. There's nothing better, especially in a big race, coming to Victory Lane with your family here," said an emotional Gordon. "I was trying so hard with 10 to go not to focus on the crowd. I didn't want to think about it too much, but you can't help it." "Looking back, I should have chosen the (outside lane)," Kahne said. "They pretty much let Jeff control that restart. I took off and never spun a tire and the inside had been more grip throughout the race and I started on the inside and I thought it was a great decision. But I didn't spin a tire and Jeff drove right by me before we were even got to the second (restart line)."[76]

Round 21: Gobowling.com 400

Despite having Kevin Harvick filling his rearview mirror, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was able to maintain the lead to complete the first Pocono sweep since Denny Hamlin did it in 2006. "We definitely went home from the last race and made our car better," Earnhardt Jr. said "That's what I'm proud of this team for. It takes a really, really smart guy to understand what to do to take those gambles. Sometimes they pay off, sometimes they don't." "This hasn't been one of my better race tracks and the cars have been fast both races here," Harvick said after finishing runner-up. "Today we were able to capitalize on it and get a good finish." We had a fast car all day. Steve's strategy was perfect at the end. I don't know if anyone knew what was going on there, but it was pretty awesome."[77]

Round 22: Cheez-It 355 at The Glen

A. J. Allmendinger held off a hard charging Marcos Ambrose with two laps remaining to score his first career Sprint Cup Series victory. "My gosh, I can't believe we've won a NASCAR Sprint Cup race," Allmendinger said. "With this whole 47 team, [team owners] Tad Geschickter, Jody Geschickter, Brad Daugherty, all the great sponsors we have, our first Cup victory together, my first victory...I love these guys. I just wanted it so bad for them and this team. They work so hard. I wasn't gonna let Marcos take that from me." "First of all, congratulations to AJ and the 47 team," Ambrose said. "They deserved that win. I left nothing on the table. I tried to rattle his cage and couldn't shake him. We raced fair and square to the end there. It was a tough couple laps but it was fair. We were both giving it to each other pretty hard. No harm, no foul. We just came up a little short."[78]

Round 23: Pure Michigan 400

Jeff Gordon took the lead from Joey Logano on the final restart and sailed to victory lane for the 91st time in his career. Gordon had this to say, "I got a really good restart, and I got to his quarter panel in Turn 1 and I was able to drag him back and it allowed me to get the momentum and get by him." "I had (Gordon) cleared," Logano said. "I should have pulled down in front of him. He got next to me, and I couldn't get away."[79]

Round 24: Irwin Tools Night Race

 
The start of the Irwin Tools Night Race.

Joey Logano took the lead with 45 laps to go and had to hold off a late race charge by Brad Keselowski to score his third win of the 2014 season. "It's awesome," Logano said in Victory Lane. "I've never won more than one race in a season, and now I've won three." "Joey just ran a great race and we were really strong in that midsection and ... we got it back a little bit on that last run," Keselowski said. "Our car was just about equal to Joey's but he just had better track position than on us."[80]

Round 25: Oral-B USA 500

Kasey Kahne took the lead on the second Green-White-Checker attempt and held off Matt Kenseth to score his first win of the season. "Yeah, man, it took a lot," said Kahne. "We were all over the place during the race but the guys stayed with me and worked hard. On those restarts – I didn't know what would happen because I had great restarts all night and I struggle with restarts a lot. That's big, because that is one of the things you have to be good at and it worked really well tonight. Yeah, we are locked in and I hate it comes down to this Atlanta or Richmond just about every year for me," said Kahne. "Sometimes we are in, sometimes we are out. But thankful that now at HMS I have been in all three years now." "Those last two laps were really intense," Kenseth said. "Things are looking up. I'm looking forward to the next 11." "I couldn't capitalize, couldn't get the restarts and couldn't accelerate," Denny Hamlin said. "We just came up short. Third is about the place car we had tonight."[81]

Round 26: Federated Auto Parts 400

Brad Keselowski led 383 laps on his way to his fourth win of the season. "What a night," said Keselowski. "Part of me, I pulled into victory lane and I pinched myself once to make sure I wasn't dreaming. These are nights you don't forget as a driver and you live for. The Miller Lite Ford Fusion was just flying, and this is I'm couldn't ask for a better way to enter the Chase than to win and take the first seed. We're ready. We want to run for another Cup. We really feel like this team has it." "You know, it's definitely frustrating not making that Chase, but like I said, when you do make the Chase, you want it to be for a championship, not just ride around in it," said a disappointed Clint Bowyer.[82]

Round 27: MyAFibStory.com 400

The Chase-Opening race at Chicagoland Speedway started with qualifying being rained-out and Kyle Busch starting on Pole for being the fastest in first practice, and Chase Seed #1 Brad Keselowski wound up starting 25th for the 267 lap event. Busch led 46 laps early on, but the race saw comers and goers as it saw only a few cautions for the first 3/4 of the event. Jeff Gordon, Jamie McMurray, Keselowski, and Kevin Harvick (who led a race-high 79 laps) took turns at the front over the course of 100 laps of green. Keselowski and Harvick both suffered loose wheels and had to start at the tail-end of the lead lap. Chase driver Aric Almirola was leading on series of green flag pit stops with 37 to go when his engine blew and was forced to retire. Rookie Kyle Larson wound up taking the lead in the late going with a superior machine, battling Harvick, Gordon, and Keselowski in the late going with Keselowski making a three-wide move in between Larson and Harvick, taking the lead for good. With 10 laps to go, the final caution came out after Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Danica Patrick got together in Turn 4. On the final restart, Keselowski got away easy, Harvick fell to 5th, and Keselowski the #1 seed scored his 5th win of the season and second at Chicagoland. Gordon beat Larson for 2nd, and Joey Logano blew up out of Turn 4, but streaked across the finish line up in smoke to finish 4th. “I don’t really know what happened," Keselowski said. "I just know we got to the lead. I saw Kyle and Kevin racing each other really hard, they were aggressively side drafting and I was waiting for an opportunity to strike and it came. The car stuck and everything came together."[83]

Round 28: Sylvania 300

Joey Logano took off on the first Green-White-Checker attempt to score his fourth victory of the season. “It feels good to go into the next one,” Logano said. “We’ve got to keep doing what we’re doing though. We’ve got to keep our eye on the prize and think about the big trophy at the end.”[84]

Round 29: AAA 400

 
The AAA 400 from turn 3

Kevin Harvick started on pole and dominated most of the first half of the race. Cautions flew for debris on lap 62, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. brushing the wall on lap 75, and debris again on lap 125. Brad Keselowski took the lead from Harvick on lap 148. After a caution for J. J. Yeley scraping the wall on lap 171, Harvick regained the lead. After a round of green flag pit stops, Harvick cut a tire and brought out the caution on lap 254. Keselowski took over the race lead. Jeff Gordon took the lead from Keselowski on lap 305 and continued on for the win, the 92nd of his career. Following this race, A. J. Allmendinger, Kurt Busch, Greg Biffle, and Aric Almirola were eliminated from the Chase.[85]

Round 30: Hollywood Casino 400

On the final restart with 28 laps to go, Ryan Newman lost the lead to Joey Logano and he held off a hard-charging Kyle Larson to score his fifth win of the season. “It was a crazy race, and I had such a fast Pennzoil Ford," said Logano. "It is awesome to be back in victory lane. When the top opened up, the car just took off. Me and the No. 42 (Kyle Larson) were the only ones that seemed to be able to run up there. We had a cat and mouse (with Larson) during portions of the late run. I just had to be able to work the traffic and keep my momentum up. We just have to keep capitalizing going forward.”[86]

Round 31: Bank of America 500

Kevin Harvick shot ahead of Jeff Gordon on the final restart with two laps remaining to win the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.[87] “Oh, we came here and tested thinking that this was going to be the hardest round to get through because of Talladega,” Harvick said. “There’s so much that you can’t control there. We wanted to try to control the things that we could control. We felt like Kansas and here (Charlotte) were playing to our strengths; and just see where it fell after that once we get to the next round. So I’m really proud of everybody at SHR. I’m really proud of all my guys on this team. I just can’t thank everybody enough.”[87] "I'm really proud of that finish, really proud of that effort," Gordon said. " ... Kevin was tough. I knew he was going to be tough once he got out there."[87]

Round 32: GEICO 500

Brad Keselowski held off hard-charging Ryan Newman and Matt Kenseth to win the GEICO 500.[88] “I can’t believe it,” Keselowski said. “Talladega is such a wild card and to be able to win here you have to catch breaks and make your own breaks, a little of both. I can’t believe we won at Talladega. This race is the scariest of the three in the bracket. To be able to win here is really a privilege, it really is.”[89] Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne and Jimmie Johnson were the four drivers who were eliminated.[90] "We had a real good car most of the day," Earnhardt said. "Got real loose, kind of shuffled out. ... It's just hard racing. That's the way it goes at the end of these races. We weren't in good position."[91]

Round 33: Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500

Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the lead from Tony Stewart with four laps to go and held off a hard charging Jeff Gordon to score his first career win at Martinsville Speedway.[92] “Oh, man, been trying to win here for so many years,” Earnhardt said. “Real emotional win. I can’t believe we won here. We’re going to drink a lot of beer tonight. It’s a real emotional win. This team on pit road was great and Steve (Letarte, crew chief) and the guys did a real good job all day. They gave me a great shot at it there with the call at the end to take tires. I can’t believe we won here. This means so much to all of us. It’s just real emotional.”[92] "That means so much to Hendrick Motorsports," Gordon said. "That's the best way you can possibly pay tribute to those that we lost 10 years ago. To have a 1-2 finish, that's pretty awesome. I would have loved to have gotten that win to move on to Homestead, but this is certainly a great start for us."[93] "I thought we had the car to beat," Gordon said. "Those last couple of laps were just wild. This means so much to Hendrick Motorsports. It's the best way to pay tribute to everyone we lost 10 years ago. I would have loved to get that win to move on to Homestead. But I'm real happy for Dale. I know this means so much to him."[94]

Round 34: AAA Texas 500

Jimmie Johnson held off Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick to score his 70th career win.[95] “It’s a testament to this team and the fact that we’ll never give up,” said Johnson. “We’ll always keep fighting and keep trying to make our cars better. We’re not in the Chase and not where we want to be - fighting for the championship.”[96]

There was a brawl on pit road involving Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick.[96] Keselowski and Harvick were parked in the post-race impound area where the cars that finished second through sixth are held for post-race inspection. Gordon pulled his car and parked it right beside Brad's car. He got out and had a level-headed conversation with the driver of the No. 2 Ford that seemed to make him more angry. As Keselowski was putting on his Miller Lite cap, Kevin proceeded to shove him towards Gordon and all hell broke loose. Multiple pit crews from the three racing stables as well as Paul Menard's crew were involved (Keselowski's spot in the impound area was in the pit stall of the No. 27 car). ESPN's Jamie Little was caught in the middle of it. “We’re racing for the win,” said Keselowski of the on track contact. “[Wasn't trying] to wreck him, just racing hard. He left a hole and you know, everything you watch in racing, you leave a hole, you’re supposed to go for it. It closed back up and we made contact. I don’t want to ruin anyone’s day. I want to win the race and that was our opportunity. Just didn’t come together.”[96] “I spun the tires a little bit but I got a pretty decent start and we went down into one and I just wanted to get to the outside of the 48 [Johnson] and out of nowhere, I got slammed by the 2 and it cut my left rear tire.[96] He's just a dipshit," Gordon said in a nationally televised interview on ESPN. "I don't know how he's ever won a championship. I'm just sick and tired of him. ... That was a huge race for us. I'm proud of Jimmie Johnson for winning that race. I didn't want that you-know-what (Keselowski) to win that race. ... (Keselowski) gets himself in this position himself and as far as I'm concerned he's got to pay the consequences. … It's total crap. The kid is just doing stuff way over his head."[97] “I'm not trying to sit here and sugarcoat it and try to be The Intimidator,’’ Keselowski said. “That's not what I'm trying to say. My expectation is if there's a gap, they'll go for it. If there's a gap, I'll go for it. If it closes up, there's contact, then that's racing. And that's what happened today. Will those guys race me hard or harder than others? Absolutely, I'm certain they will. But that's just part of it. I can't fault them for that. I just feel like I have to go for the gap if it's there, and I have to race the way I race or I won't even be in NASCAR. I'd rather have enemies in NASCAR than have friends and be sitting at home.’’[98] “If you’re going to drive like that, you better be willing to fight,’’ Harvick said he told Keselowski. “He was going to stand behind his guys. Jeff Gordon deserved to at least have a face-to-face conversation with him. I wasn’t standing up for anybody. (Keselowski) just ran over (Gordon). He was standing back behind all his guys, not wanting to defend what he did. I said, ‘You’re the problem, get in your own fight.’ ‘’[98] Robin Pemberton, NASCAR's senior vice president of competition, said that series officials will review what took place to determine what, if any, penalties will be issued.[98] “Holding onto each other and grabbing… that's one thing. When punches are landed, it's a different scenario," Pemberton said.[99]

Round 35: Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500

Kevin Harvick dominated the race to score the victory.[100] "Wow. I guess that's what it feels like to hit a walkoff in extra innings. I mean this thing -- both races here -- has been bad to the bone," Harvick said after winning his fourth race at this 1-mile oval in the last five tries. Harvick would not have made the final four to race for the title without a win. I could tell that we were going to have to win because everybody was running in the front of the pack that we were racing against. I think this says a lot about our team. We had our backs against the wall. We're in victory lane and we get to go on."[101] In the final turn, Ryan Newman sent Kyle Larson into the wall to secure his place in the championship race.[102] “I just gave it my all,” Newman said. “I wasn’t proud of it but did what I had to get to this next round. That little boy has got a lot of things coming in this sport and he used me up like that in a truck at Eldora a couple years ago. From my standpoint, I call it even but I think if he was in my position, he’d have done the same thing.”[103] "Coming to the finish, there were a lot of cars racing really hard,” said Larson today. “I knew (Newman) was right around me and knew he needed to gain some spots to keep from getting eliminated from the Chase. It's a little upsetting he pushed me up to the wall, but I completely understand the situation he was in,” said Larson, “(I) can't fault him for being aggressive there. I think a lot of drivers out here would have done something similar if they were in that position."[104] Kevin Harvick (with the much-needed win), Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, and Ryan Newman were the four drivers who will race for the championship, which also meant that NASCAR will be having a new Sprint Cup Series champion. Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards, Brad Keselowski, and Matt Kenseth were the four drivers eliminated.

  • This was Jeff Gordon's final Second place finish.

Round 36: Ford EcoBoost 400

Jeff Gordon won the pole for the race and dominated. Kevin Harvick took the lead from Denny Hamlin with 8 laps to go, but a late caution forced the race to have a 3 lap shootout. Harvick and Ryan Newman, who were the top of the 4 championship contenders, restarted on the front row. Harvick held off Newman to score his fifth win of the season and take the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup title. “I was just holding the pedal down and hoping for the best,’’ Harvick said. "This new format has been so stressful. I’m going to go sleep for a week." We didn't have quite enough,” Newman said. “That's disappointing, but like I said, it was an awesome team effort, and I think, again, this is a great racetrack to have a race like this, and I thought there was some amazing passing, and we don't get that at every racetrack.”

Results and standings

edit

Races

edit
No. Race Pole position Most laps led Winning driver Manufacturer Report
Sprint Unlimited at Daytona Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Denny Hamlin Toyota Report
Budweiser Duel 1 Austin Dillon Matt Kenseth Matt Kenseth Toyota Report
Budweiser Duel 2 Martin Truex Jr. Brad Keselowski Denny Hamlin Toyota
1 Daytona 500 Austin Dillon Dale Earnhardt Jr. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet Report
2 The Profit on CNBC 500 Brad Keselowski Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Report
3 Kobalt 400 Joey Logano Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Ford Report
4 Food City 500 Denny Hamlin Matt Kenseth Carl Edwards Ford Report
5 Auto Club 400 Matt Kenseth Jimmie Johnson Kyle Busch Toyota Report
6 STP 500 Kyle Busch Jimmie Johnson Kurt Busch Chevrolet Report
7 Duck Commander 500 Tony Stewart Joey Logano Joey Logano Ford Report
8 Bojangles' Southern 500 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Report
9 Toyota Owners 400 Kyle Larson Jeff Gordon Joey Logano Ford Report
10 Aaron's 499 Brian Scott Greg Biffle Denny Hamlin Toyota Report
11 5-hour Energy 400 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Report
NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race Carl Edwards Jamie McMurray Jamie McMurray Chevrolet Report
12 Coca-Cola 600 Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
13 FedEx 400 Brad Keselowski Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
14 Pocono 400 Denny Hamlin Brad Keselowski Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet Report
15 Quicken Loans 400 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
16 Toyota/Save Mart 350 Jamie McMurray A. J. Allmendinger Carl Edwards Ford Report
17 Quaker State 400 Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Ford Report
18 Coke Zero 400 David Gilliland Kurt Busch Aric Almirola Ford Report
19 Camping World RV Sales 301 Kyle Busch Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Ford Report
20 Brickyard 400 Kevin Harvick Kasey Kahne Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Report
21 Gobowling.com 400 Kyle Larson Jeff Gordon Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet Report
22 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen Jeff Gordon A. J. Allmendinger
Jeff Gordon
A. J. Allmendinger Chevrolet Report
23 Pure Michigan 400 Jeff Gordon Joey Logano Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Report
24 Irwin Tools Night Race Kevin Harvick Jamie McMurray Joey Logano Ford Report
25 Oral-B USA 500 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Kasey Kahne Chevrolet Report
26 Federated Auto Parts 400 Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Brad Keselowski Ford Report
Chase for the Sprint Cup
Challenger Round
27 MyAFibStory.com 400 Kyle Busch Kevin Harvick Brad Keselowski Ford Report
28 Sylvania 300 Brad Keselowski Kevin Harvick Joey Logano Ford Report
29 AAA 400 Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Report
Contender Round
30 Hollywood Casino 400 Kevin Harvick Joey Logano Joey Logano Ford Report
31 Bank of America 500 Kyle Busch Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Report
32 GEICO 500 Brian Vickers Jimmie Johnson Brad Keselowski Ford Report
Eliminator Round
33 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500 Jamie McMurray Jeff Gordon Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet Report
34 AAA Texas 500 Matt Kenseth Jimmie Johnson Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Report
35 Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 Denny Hamlin Kevin Harvick Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Report
Championship
36 Ford EcoBoost 400 Jeff Gordon Jeff Gordon Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Report

Drivers' championship

edit

(keyBold – Pole position awarded by time. Italics – Pole position set by final practice results or owner's points. * – Most laps led.
. – Eliminated after Challenger Round . – Eliminated after Contender Round . – Eliminated after Eliminator Round

Pos. Driver DAY PHO LVS BRI CAL MAR TEX DAR RCH TAL KAN CLT DOV POC MCH SON KEN DAY NHA IND POC GLN MCH BRI ATL RCH CHI NHA DOV KAN CLT TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts.
1 Kevin Harvick 13 1* 41 39 36 7 42 1* 11 7 2* 2 17 14 2* 20 7 39 30 8 2 7 2 11 19* 5 5* 3* 13* 12 1* 9 33 2 1* 1 5043
2 Ryan Newman 22 7 7 16 20 20 16 10 8 18 11 15 31 7 15 11 3 24 5 11 8 41 11 13 7 9 15 18 8 6 7 5 3 15 11 2 5042
3 Denny Hamlin 2 19 12 6 INQ 19 13 19 22 1 18 22 5 4 29 26 42 6 8 3 9 24 7 40 3 21 6 37 12 7 9 18 8 10 5 7 5037
4 Joey Logano 11 4 4 20 39 4 1* 35 1 32 4 12 8 40 9 16 9 17 40 5 3 6 3* 1 14 6 4 1 4 1* 4 11 5 12 6 16 5028
Chase for the Sprint Cup cut-off
Pos. Driver DAY PHO LVS BRI CAL MAR TEX DAR RCH TAL KAN CLT DOV POC MCH SON KEN DAY NHA IND POC GLN MCH BRI ATL RCH CHI NHA DOV KAN CLT TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts.
5 Brad Keselowski 3 3 1* 14 26 38 15 17 4 38 13 10 2 2* 3 22 1* 18 1* 12 23 35 8 2 39 1* 1 7 2 36 16 1 31 3 4 3 2361
6 Jeff Gordon 4 5 9 7 13 12 2 7 2* 39 1 7 15 8 6 2 6 12 26 1 6* 34* 1 16 17 2 2 26 1 14 2 26 2* 29 2 10* 2348
7 Matt Kenseth 6 12 10 13* 4 6 7 4 5 37 10 3 3 25 14 42 4 20 4 4 38 9 38 3 2 41 10 21 5 13 19 2 6 25 3 6 2334
8 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1* 2 2 24 12 3 43 2 7 26 5 19 9 1 7 3 5 14 10 9 1 11 5 39 11 12 11 9 17 39 20 31 1 6 8 14 2301
9 Carl Edwards 17 8 5 1 10 13 14 13 9 30 6 4 14 41 23 1 17 37 13 15 29 5 23 7 5 22 20 17 11 5 8 21 20 9 15 34 2288
10 Kyle Busch 19 9 11 29 1 14 3 6 3 12 15 9 42 12 41 25 2 28 2 2 42 40 39 36 16 14 7 8 10 3 5 40 11 4 34 39 2285
11 Jimmie Johnson 5 6 6 19 24* 2* 25 3 32 23 9 1* 1* 6 1 7 10 42 42 14 39 28 9 4 4 8 12 5 3 40 17 24* 32 1* 39 9 2274
12 Kurt Busch 21 39 26 35 3 1 39 31 23 33 29 40 18 3 13 12 12 3* 17 28 13 3 31 5 13 7 8 36 18 42 11 7 36 8 7 11 2263
13 A. J. Allmendinger 26 26 18 25 8 11 23 15 6 5 30 23 21 21 22 37* 22 43 18 18 34 1* 13 14 40 23 22 13 23 11 12 23 9 14 16 40 2260
14 Greg Biffle 8 17 22 12 40 18 6 5 15 2* 16 21 38 16 20 9 14 29 15 13 5 8 10 10 10 19 23 16 21 15 18 25 13 13 9 41 2247
15 Kasey Kahne 31 11 8 8 41 22 11 37 14 8 3 14 19 42 5 6 8 27 11 6* 10 12 16 35 1 17 13 23 20 22 10 12 40 38 21 12 2234
16 Aric Almirola 39 15 25 3 43 8 12 24 17 13 8 11 12 22 31 23 39 1 23 21 35 18 20 41 9 10 41 6 28 31 22 39 21 24 18 19 2195
17 Kyle Larson (R) 38 20 19 10 2 27 5 8 16 9 12 18 11 5 8 28 40 36 3 7 11 4 43 12 8 11 3 2 6 2 6 17 30 7 13 13 1080
18 Jamie McMurray 14 10 15 38 6 42 17 16 13 29 39 5 13 10 12 4 37 30 16 20 7 14 14 8* 12 4 9 4 22 25 3 35 16 5 14 5 1014
19 Clint Bowyer 42 13 23 15 16 9 8 12 43 3 23 17 4 11 10 10 23 9 6 16 4 27 6 17 38 3 39 14 9 18 43 3 7 28 40 8 979
20 Austin Dillon (R) 9 24 16 11 11 15 21 11 27 15 19 16 20 17 30 17 16 5 14 10 15 16 22 28 24 20 16 11 24 8 13 13 12 21 38 25 958
21 Paul Menard 32 23 3 21 9 10 9 41 24 6 17 8 10 26 4 5 15 16 19 34 33 32 4 9 18 18 21 15 16 9 42 36 14 17 23 4 944
22 Brian Vickers 30 25 13 9 7 16 4 26 12 4 14 6 43 19 42 14 26 2 21 19 37 10 19 21 15 13 24 10 15 10 37 20 27 16 19 23 921
23 Marcos Ambrose 18 21 24 5 30 5 20 14 18 19 24 29 16 24 25 8 13 10 27 22 14 2 12 34 42 27 25 24 26 20 25 8 23 27 10 27 870
24 Martin Truex Jr. 43 22 14 36 23 21 18 27 10 17 21 25 6 9 37 15 19 15 12 25 32 13 36 20 23 25 14 12 7 4 14 27 38 19 12 17 857
25 Tony Stewart 35 16 33 4 5 17 10 9 25 43 20 13 7 13 11 19 11 40 7 17 36 QL 41 15 18 30 14 17 21 34 4 11 20 43 799
26 Casey Mears 10 14 28 27 15 24 28 18 19 14 26 24 25 23 24 13 20 4 38 33 12 15 17 26 22 31 26 22 27 28 31 10 37 18 35 20 782
27 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 7 18 27 2 34 40 26 20 38 10 22 26 41 15 27 31 25 41 9 24 18 20 15 6 20 26 17 39 19 19 24 DNQ 15 23 17 22 757
28 Danica Patrick 40 36 21 18 14 32 27 22 34 22 7 39 23 37 17 18 21 8 22 42 30 21 18 27 6 16 19 19 25 16 26 19 34 36 22 18 735
29 Justin Allgaier (R) 27 30 31 17 28 23 24 23 21 27 36 37 26 27 16 33 24 25 37 27 16 17 42 19 26 28 27 20 29 41 15 DNQ 17 20 37 15 636
30 David Gilliland 36 29 30 22 38 26 22 28 20 40 37 43 29 28 26 21 30 35 24 36 17 22 21 25 28 29 34 27 33 30 32 29 22 34 24 31 554
31 Cole Whitt (R) 28 27 36 40 18 29 31 38 41 21 28 27 27 30 28 27 28 34 28 32 21 43 25 30 30 30 30 38 30 23 28 15 18 26 42 26 532
32 David Ragan 34 28 32 31 27 28 35 32 30 35 38 31 36 18 38 36 31 22 25 35 19 19 24 23 27 33 31 42 31 27 34 30 10 32 25 30 531
33 Michael Annett (R) 37 34 29 26 19 31 29 42 33 16 25 28 35 20 21 30 18 21 32 31 22 31 40 38 21 37 40 29 41 24 33 37 24 22 26 35 531
34 Reed Sorenson 16 31 34 28 21 34 33 39 42 34 32 42 24 34 32 32 27 33 33 38 27 23 27 24 29 24 29 31 32 26 27 14 35 33 28 24 516
35 Alex Bowman (R) 23 41 37 32 22 36 32 29 28 28 35 33 40 31 40 29 36 13 31 40 31 36 26 32 35 38 35 28 34 32 30 43 29 42 32 33 412
36 Josh Wise 24 DNQ 42 23 37 35 36 21 39 20 33 41 28 35 33 40 29 23 29 29 24 38 28 29 33 32 33 33 42 38 41 28 25 41 41 32 405
37 Michael McDowell DNQ 33 43 37 37 30 DNQ 36 30 24 7 26 42 18 DNQ 32 35 29 41 30 31 21 255
38 Travis Kvapil 38 39 33 33 33 37 33 36 34 29 43 34 39 25 32 39 38 32 38 6 41 214
39 Ryan Truex (R) DNQ 35 35 42 31 30 DNQ 40 31 31 43 38 32 32 DNQ 41 33 32 36 41 20 39 INQ 37 36 42 42 193
40 Terry Labonte 20 24 11 33 88
41 Jeff Burton 17 20 37 15 87
42 Michael Waltrip 41 25 19 16 76
43 David Stremme 39 DNQ 36 35 37 39 35 DNQ 31 36 40 37 75
44 Timmy Hill 38 43 40 36 QL 41 35 43 33 36 42 35 62
45 Brett Moffitt 22 34 DNQ 42 34 40 40 36 60
46 Bobby Labonte 15 26 37 54
47 Parker Kligerman (R) 29 42 40 34 42 41 40 30 54
48 Juan Pablo Montoya 18 23 47
49 Alex Kennedy 39 39 28 33 34 47
50 Dave Blaney Wth DNQ DNQ DNQ Wth Wth 41 43 DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ 33 43 Wth 26 33 43 46
51 David Reutimann DNQ 29 DNQ 38 DNQ 29 37
52 Boris Said 35 25 28
53 Nelson Piquet Jr. 26 18
54 Eddie MacDonald 35 9
55 Tomy Drissi 38 6
56 Clay Rogers DNQ 43 43 DNQ 2
David Mayhew QL 0
Ineligible for Sprint Cup driver points
Pos. Driver DAY PHO LVS BRI CAL MAR TEX DAR RCH TAL KAN CLT DOV POC MCH SON KEN DAY NHA IND POC GLN MCH BRI ATL RCH CHI NHA DOV KAN CLT TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts.
Landon Cassill 12 DNQ DNQ 30 25 25 34 25 26 11 42 36 34 33 35 43 32 31 34 30 41 29 29 22 31 34 28 25 35 21 23 4 19 43 29 29
Sam Hornish Jr. 17
Trevor Bayne 33 20 19 41 20 19 38 43 41 DNQ 32 39 42
Ryan Blaney 27 QL 22
Ty Dillon 25 27
Brian Scott 25 32 35 42 32 28
Mike Wallace 34 40 34 38 26 36
Kyle Fowler 28
J. J. Yeley DNQ DNQ 40 DNQ 41 DNQ 39 38 36 34 30 33 32 43 39 29 38 42 39 31 30 37
Joe Nemechek DNQ 40 DNQ 41 32 43 DNQ 34 37 DNQ 31 34 38 DNQ 40 30 35 37 40 36 DNQ
Blake Koch 37 DNQ 35 30 39 38
Joey Gase 37 37 37 33
Mike Bliss 41 43 43 35 43 36 43 43
Corey LaJoie 41 35
Regan Smith 37
Morgan Shepherd DNQ 43 39
Johnny Sauter 43
Eric McClure DNQ DNQ
Matt Crafton QL DNQ QL
Pos. Driver DAY PHO LVS BRI CAL MAR TEX DAR RCH TAL KAN CLT DOV POC MCH SON KEN DAY NHA IND POC GLN MCH BRI ATL RCH CHI NHA DOV KAN CLT TAL MAR TEX PHO HOM Pts.

Manufacturers' championship

edit
Pos Manufacturer Wins Points
1 Chevrolet 20 1572
2 Ford 14 1530
3 Toyota 2 1406

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Pockrass, Bob (August 30, 2013). "Jamie McMurray gets contract extension from Earnhardt Ganassi". SportingNews. Archived from the original on November 24, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  2. ^ Spencer, Lee (November 18, 2013). "Rodden named McMurray's crew chief". Fox Sports. Retrieved November 18, 2013.
  3. ^ Bianchi, Jordan (August 30, 2013). "Kyle Larson named driver of No. 42 Cup car for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing". SBNation. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  4. ^ Spencer, Lee. "Truex to join Furniture Row team". Fox Sports. Retrieved November 11, 2013.
  5. ^ Pearce, Al (October 11, 2013). "Germain Racing switches to Chevrolet". Archived from the original on October 12, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  6. ^ "BUSY WEEK FOR MEARS AND COMPANY: GEICO 400 AND SPONSORSHIP EXTENSION". caseymearsracing.com. GEICO Racing. September 13, 2012. Archived from the original on October 19, 2013. Retrieved September 13, 2012.
  7. ^ Smith, Marty (April 14, 2012). "Kahne signs deal with Hendrick Motorsports". ESPN. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  8. ^ Newton, David (November 20, 2009). "Gordon not retiring any time soon". ESPN. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  9. ^ a b "Hendrick re-signs Gustafson, Knaus". ESPN. Associated Press. April 30, 2010. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  10. ^ Aumann, Mark (November 20, 2009). "Johnson, Lowe's sign extension with Hendrick". NASCAR. Turner Sports. Archived from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  11. ^ Ryan, Nate (September 1, 2011). "NASCAR's Dale Earnhardt Jr. signs with Hendrick through 2017". USA Today. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  12. ^ "Allgaier To Make Sprint Cup Series Debut; Full Time Ride in 2014". Yardbarker. Fox Sports. August 29, 2013. Retrieved November 18, 2013.
  13. ^ Fryer, Jenna (November 21, 2013). "Steve Addington to lead Phoenix Racing". Yahoo! Sports. Archived from the original on November 25, 2013. Retrieved November 21, 2013.
  14. ^ "JTG Daugherty Racing forms technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series beginning in 2014". Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved November 25, 2013.
  15. ^ Peltz, Jim (August 31, 2013). "A. J Allmendinger to drive full-time in Sprint Cup in 2014". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  16. ^ Racing, RCR (December 11, 2013). "RCR announces lineup for 2014". Richard Childress Racing. Archived from the original on December 11, 2013. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
  17. ^ Gluck, Jeff (May 24, 2013). "Paul Menard re-signs with Richard Childress Racing". USA Today. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  18. ^ "RCR Announces Personnel Changes to their No. 27 Cup Team". Richard Childress Racing. October 1, 2014. Archived from the original on October 23, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  19. ^ a b Spencer, Lee. "Ryan Newman will drive for Richard Childress Racing in 2014". Fox Sports. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  20. ^ Estrada, Chris (July 15, 2014). "Report: Ty Dillon to make Sprint Cup debut next month at Atlanta". NBC Sports. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  21. ^ "Alex Kennedy Joins Circle Sport's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Driver Lineup". Circle Sport. June 3, 2014. Archived from the original on June 7, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
  22. ^ Newton, David. "Kevin Harvick moving to Stewart-Haas Racing to rejuvenate career". ESPN. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  23. ^ "Stewart-Haas Racing Announces Personnel Swap Between Nos. 10 and 41 Teams". Stewart-Haas Racing. October 22, 2014. Archived from the original on October 25, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  24. ^ a b "Stewart-Haas, Roush Fenway, make changes to teams for 2014". November 19, 2013. Archived from the original on November 19, 2013. Retrieved November 19, 2013.
  25. ^ Gluck, Jeff (August 10, 2014). "Team: Tony Stewart will not race; Regan Smith will sub". USA Today. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  26. ^ Jensen, Tom (August 14, 2014). "Tony Stewart will not race this weekend in aftermath of Ward Jr. death". Foxsports.com. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  27. ^ "TONY STEWART OUT FOR BRISTOL RACE". NASCAR. August 20, 2014. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014. Retrieved August 20, 2014.
  28. ^ "CORNELIUS, N.C.: Michael Annett lands Sprint Cup ride with TBR - Motor Sports - MiamiHerald.com". www.miamiherald.com. Archived from the original on November 15, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  29. ^ a b "Ragan and Gilliland to Build on Front Row Motorsports' Successes in 2014". Front Row Motorsports. October 16, 2013. Retrieved October 16, 2013.
  30. ^ "MacDonald To Make Sprint Cup Series Debut". NASCAR Home Tracks. June 26, 2014. Archived from the original on July 1, 2014. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
  31. ^ Caldwell, Clayton (August 27, 2014). "Joey Gase to Make NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Debut at Chicagoland Speedway for Go Fas Racing". Sports Media 101. Archived from the original on September 3, 2014. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  32. ^ Estrada, Chris (December 2, 2013). "Trent Owens in as Almirola's crew chief at Petty". NBC Sports. Retrieved December 2, 2013.
  33. ^ "Penske Racing inks Brad Keselowski, Miller Lite, until 2017". Associated Press.
  34. ^ Bonkowski, Jerry (March 2, 2014). "Updated: Brad Keselowski will be without crew chief Paul Wolfe for Sunday's Sprint Cup race in Phoenix". NBC Sports. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
  35. ^ "Swan Racing sells 2 cars, keeps Kligerman in fold". usatoday.com. April 23, 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  36. ^ a b Williams, Heather (December 2, 2013). "Jeff Burton will drive part-time for MWR in 2014". KWCH. Wichita, KS. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved December 2, 2013.
  37. ^ "Brett Moffitt to make Sprint Cup debut at Dover". NASCAR.com. May 27, 2014. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
  38. ^ Blount, Terry (June 30, 2012). "Hamlin inks extension with JGR". ESPN. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  39. ^ Bromberg, Nick (March 23, 2014). "Denny Hamlin to miss race at Auto Club, Sam Hornish Jr. to fill in". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  40. ^ Ganguli, Tania (January 19, 2010). "Joe Gibbs Racing signs Kyle Busch to multi-year contract extension". Orlando Sentinel. Concord, North Carolina. Archived from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  41. ^ Fryer, Jenna (September 4, 2012). "Kenseth makes move to Gibbs official". NBC Sports. Archived from the original on September 6, 2012. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  42. ^ Hembree, Mike (September 4, 2012). "CUP: Kenseth Joins Joe Gibbs Racing". Speedtv.com. Archived from the original on September 5, 2012. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
  43. ^ Pockrass, Bob (September 27, 2013). "5-Hour Energy returning as Clint Bowyer, MWR sponsor in 2014". Sporting News. Archived from the original on December 9, 2014. Retrieved November 11, 2013.
  44. ^ "Vickers intent on Cup racing in '14". Fox Sports. October 28, 2013. Retrieved November 11, 2013.
  45. ^ a b "Wise to drive for Phil Parsons". Spire Sports and Entertainment. Jayski. December 4, 2013. Archived from the original on November 16, 2013. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  46. ^ "SPRINT CUP DRIVER ROSTER FOR PRESEASON THUNDER". NASCAR. January 7, 2014. Retrieved January 8, 2014.
  47. ^ Gluck, Jeff (December 17, 2013). "2014 Daytona 500: Bobby Labonte to drive for Phoenix Racing". USA Today. McLean, VA. Retrieved December 17, 2013.
  48. ^ "J.J. Yeley lands Sprint Cup Series ride". NASCAR. February 13, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
  49. ^ "Pocono Entry List". Jayski's Silly Season Site. Archived from the original on October 13, 2014. Retrieved July 29, 2014.
  50. ^ "Eric McClure Wants 1 Shot to Run the Daytona 500". ABC News. January 29, 2014. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  51. ^ DiZinno, Tony (October 28, 2013). "NASCAR notes: McDowell switches teams, Schrader to retire from Cup". NBC Sports. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  52. ^ "The Official Website of Michael McDowell Racing Schedule". Mmcdowell.com. Archived from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  53. ^ Spencer, Lee (January 8, 2014). "Dave Blaney reviving No. 77 Ford for Sprint Cup team owner Humphrey". Fox Sports. Retrieved January 8, 2014.
  54. ^ "ROUSH, BAYNE BRINGING BACK NO. 6 CAR FOR CHARLOTTE". NASCAR. October 6, 2014. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  55. ^ "Ryan Blaney to start 2 Cup races". ESPN. January 29, 2014. Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  56. ^ "Shepherd in for Daytona qualifying". ESPN. February 5, 2014. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
  57. ^ "Indianapolis Entry List". Jayski's Silly Season Site. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  58. ^ "Richard Childress Racing - About Us". www.rcrracing.com. Archived from the original on March 12, 2016. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  59. ^ "12 Dec 2013, Page C6 - at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  60. ^ "NASCAR revises qualifying format at Talladega". NASCAR.com. NASCAR news release. September 4, 2014. Retrieved October 21, 2014.
  61. ^ "NASCAR Announces Chase for the Sprint Cup Format Change" (Press release). NASCAR. January 30, 2014. Archived from the original on August 13, 2014. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  62. ^ a b c Glendenning, Mark (October 15, 2013). "NASCAR opts for largely-unchanged 2014 Sprint Cup calendar". Autosport. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  63. ^ "2014 NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED". NASCAR. October 15, 2013. Retrieved October 24, 2013.
  64. ^ Long, Dustin (February 4, 2014). "NASCAR Enhances Penalty Structure". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on April 23, 2014. Retrieved April 21, 2014.
  65. ^ a b Hawkins, Stephen (April 6, 2014). "Rain postpones NASCAR race at Texas Motor Speedway". Yahoo! Sports. Archived from the original on April 8, 2014. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
  66. ^ Long, Dustin (July 5, 2014). "Daytona Race Postponed". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on July 9, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
  67. ^ Owens, Jeff (February 20, 2014). "Parker Kligerman takes wild ride in big crash in practice at Daytona". Sporting News. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
  68. ^ Pistone, Pete (February 23, 2014). "NASCAR Sprint Cup Series News: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Wins 56th Daytona 500". MRN.com. Archived from the original on February 28, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  69. ^ Pistone, Pete (June 8, 2014). "First Pocono Win for Earnhardt". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on June 12, 2014. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  70. ^ Oreovicz, John (June 15, 2014). "Johnson, Knaus hit right strategy". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
  71. ^ Pistone, Pete (June 22, 2014). "Edwards Sonoma Road Warrior". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on June 27, 2014. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  72. ^ Knight, Chris (June 28, 2014). "Keselowski conquers Kentucky again". NASCAR.com. NASCAR Wire Service. Retrieved June 29, 2014.
  73. ^ Long, Dustin (July 6, 2014). "Almirola Scores First Win". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on July 12, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2014.
  74. ^ "No. 41 team penalized for Daytona infraction". NASCAR.com. Official NASCAR release. July 8, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2014.
  75. ^ Pistone, Pete (July 13, 2014). "Keselowski Sweeps New Hampshire". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 14, 2014.
  76. ^ Pistone, Pete (July 27, 2014). "Indy High Five for Gordon". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved July 29, 2014.
  77. ^ Pistone, Pete (August 3, 2014). "Earnhardt Jr. Sweeps Pocono". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on August 5, 2014. Retrieved August 3, 2014.
  78. ^ Pistone, Pete (August 10, 2014). "Allmendinger Breaks Through". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on June 20, 2017. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  79. ^ Long, Dustin (August 17, 2014). "Gordon Triumphs At Michigan". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on August 19, 2014. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  80. ^ Pistone, Pete (August 23, 2014). "Logano Wins Bristol Battle". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  81. ^ Pistone, Pete (September 1, 2014). "Kahne Clinches with Atlanta Win". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on September 3, 2014. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  82. ^ Pistone, Pete (September 6, 2014). "Keselowski Grabs No. 1 Seed". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on September 7, 2014. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  83. ^ Long, Dustin (September 14, 2014). "Keselowski Strikes First". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on September 15, 2014. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
  84. ^ Long, Dustin (September 21, 2014). "Logano Triumphs at New Hampshire". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on September 22, 2014. Retrieved September 23, 2014.
  85. ^ Pistone, Pete (September 28, 2014). "Gordon Back at Dover". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on October 1, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  86. ^ Spencer, Lee (October 5, 2014). "Logano wins his way into next round after late-race duel with Larson". Motorsport.com. Motorsport.com, Inc. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  87. ^ a b c Pistone, Pete (October 11, 2014). "Harvick Advances with Charlotte Win". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on October 14, 2014. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
  88. ^ Utter, Jim (October 19, 2014). "Brad Keselowski wins GEICO 500 at Talladega to advance in Chase". ThatsRacin.com. The Charlotte Observer. Archived from the original on October 19, 2014. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
  89. ^ Pistone, Pete (October 19, 2014). "Keselowski Scores Must Win". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
  90. ^ Fryer, Jenna (October 19, 2014). "Keselowski keeps title hopes alive at Talladega". racing.ap.org. The Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 19, 2014. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
  91. ^ Ryan, Nate (October 19, 2014). "Keseloskwi wins at Talladega; Earnhardt, Johnson out of Chase". usatoday.com. Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
  92. ^ a b Pistone, Pete (October 26, 2014). "Earnhardt Jr. Masters Martinsville". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on October 27, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  93. ^ Fryer, Jenna (October 26, 2014). "Earnhardt wins at Martinsville Speedway". racing.ap.org. The Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 27, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  94. ^ Ryan, Nate (October 26, 2014). "Dale Earnhardt Jr. wins at Martinsville". usatoday.com. Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  95. ^ Fryer, Jenna (November 2, 2014). "Johnson wins at Texas, Gordon irate at Keselowski". racing.ap.org. The Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  96. ^ a b c d Pistone, Pete (November 2, 2014). "Johnson Takes Texas Thriller". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  97. ^ Ryan, Nate (November 2, 2014). "Jimmie Johnson wins at Texas as another fight breaks out". usatoday.com. Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  98. ^ a b c Long, Dustin (November 2, 2014). "Gordon, Keselowski Scrap After Race". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  99. ^ Moody, Dave (November 3, 2014). "COMMENTARY: A Few Random, Tongue-In-Cheek Thoughts In The Aftermath Of Last Night's AAA 500". GodfatherMotorsports.com. Godfather Motorsports. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  100. ^ Fryer, Jenna (November 9, 2014). "Newman's late pass dooms Gordon at Phoenix". racing.ap.org. The Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 24, 2014. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  101. ^ Ryan, Nate (November 9, 2014). "Harvick, Logano, Newman, Hamlin advance to race for NASCAR title". usatoday.com. Gannett Satellite Information Network, Inc. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  102. ^ Peltz, Jim (November 9, 2014). "Kevin Harvick advances to NASCAR Chase final with win in Phoenix". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  103. ^ Pistone, Pete (November 9, 2014). "Clutch Phoenix Win by Harvick". MRN.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on November 10, 2014. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  104. ^ Moody, Dave (November 10, 2014). "Larson On Newman: "I Completely Understand The Situation He Was In"". GodfatherMotorsports.com. Godfather Motorsports. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy