5 Lessons: Team Penske Is Tough in 2015

5 Lessons Learned On The Season By Jared Turner Harvick’s The Man To Beat While the season is still young and there are various scenarios that could stand in the way of Kevin Harvick winning a second consecutive Sprint Cup Series title, there’s no debating the fact that the Stewart-Haas Racing driver has been the driver to beat so far in 2015. Consider this: In six races, Harvick has won twice, led nearly 40 percent of all laps and finished either first or second in all but one outing. He has led the points since the season’s third race. So anyone who…

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NASCAR’s historian: McKim family name prominent in sport

By Ben White Albert “Buz” McKim, historian for the NASCAR Hall of Fame, has enjoyed numerous on-track fender smashing battles for over 60 years. At only two weeks old, he attended his first stock car race at Jersey City, N.J. when his Dad, Bob McKim, co-owned and wrenched a NASCAR Sportsman 1939 Ford. “My Dad had the old NASCAR logo on the rear glass of our family car,” McKim said. “That was one of the very first things I can recall as a human being was seeing that old logo on the back window.” Also in the 1950s, McKim’s father wrote press…

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Impressive combination: Earnhardt’s 1985 paint scheme

By Ben White In 1979, Dale Earnhardt’s Wrangler Jeans Chevrolets and Oldsmobiles were owned by Rod Osterlund and carried solid blue sides with yellow areas on their tops and hoods. When Earnhardt moved to RCR Enterprises for 10 races in 1981, their cars featured yellow V-styled front fenders and blue rear side sections. Earnhardt’s Bud Moore’s Fords of 1982 and ’83 again carried yellow and blue and when he returned to RCR in 1984, the familiar markings, albeit one radical yellow rear quarter panel design was rejected after one race at Talladega, remained. Masking tape stuck in a dozen directions before they…

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Tick-tock: Juniors covets another Martinsville clock

By Jared Turner Dale Earnhardt Jr. was raised around the famous grandfather clocks that Martinsville Speedway awards to winners at the fabled short track. His father, the late seven-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, Dale Earnhardt, took home six of them. So when Junior decided early on that he wanted to follow in his dad’s footsteps and drive race cars for a living, claiming his own Martinsville grandfather clock someday was naturally high on his bucket list. After joining NASCAR’s top series full time in 2000 – a season that, coincidentally, would be his father’s last – Earnhardt Jr. struggled for awhile…

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Smoke, but no fire: Tony Stewart should quiet down

By Jared Turner Tony Stewart had a lot of audacity walking over and lambasting Martin Truex Jr. on pit road for allegedly cutting him off in the closing laps of Sunday’s Auto Club 400. This is the same Stewart – mind you – who, despite competing for one of the sport’s best organizations, entered Sunday’s race having finished no better than 30th in four previous outings this year. Moreover, Stewart hasn’t won a race since June 2, 2013 – an eternity ago by NASCAR standards. Truex, meanwhile, is off to easily the best start of his Sprint Cup career, with five finishes…

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In Focus: Kurt Busch not smiling, just racing

By Jerry Bonkowski I spend a great deal of time scanning wires for photos of NASCAR drivers, seeking the photo that best illustrates the story that I am writing or editing. The past two weekends – particularly the most recent race weekend at Auto Club Speedway – I came upon a rather interesting observation. Since he came back from a NASCAR-imposed three-race suspension to start the season, I’d say that at least 90 to 95 percent of photos of Kurt Busch have shown him without a smile on his face. Big deal, right? But bear with me as I explain further. In…

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