McDowell ‘heartbroken’ after crashing out from Talladega lead

Michael McDowell was “heartbroken” leaving Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway empty-handed after leading the field off Turn 4 on the final lap. McDowell spun and crashed in the tri-oval off the front bumper of Brad Keselowski coming to the …

Michael McDowell was “heartbroken” leaving Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway empty-handed after leading the field off Turn 4 on the final lap.

McDowell spun and crashed in the tri-oval off the front bumper of Brad Keselowski coming to the checkered flag. After blocking Keselowski’s run to the outside off Turn 4, the Front Row Motorsports driver went for the second block when the No. 6 dove back to the left toward the yellow line. It was a little too late, and Keselowski got into the back of McDowell, which triggered a multi-car wreck after McDowell spun across the track in front of the field.

Tyler Reddick missed the spinning No. 34 and passed the No. 6 for the race win. Keselowski finished second. McDowell’s damaged car, with its front end torn off, came to rest in the grass yards from the finish line, and he was credited with finishing 31st.

“Just heartbroken, man,” McDowell said. “I pull down a little bit sooner and we win the race. But that’s racing and it’s tough to get to victory lane, and we were close. We’ll be motivated by it. I’m a student of the game; I’m going to go back and watch and study and learn and figure out what I could have done differently and better, and work with my spotter and try to figure it out.

“But I’m super disappointed. I hate that other people that got caught up in my mess. I’m proud of our effort, our speed and our race team. We’ll see what happens.”

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McDowell thought he was going to be clear when pulling down in front of Keselowski, and in the moment didn’t think it was a late block. It was not an “all or nothing” moment for him coming to the checkered flag, and he had no intention of starting a wreck. Keselowski “barely” made contact to send McDowell spinning.

“I hate it because we had a good chance of getting a Dark Horse Mustang in victory lane; we definitely had the speed,” McDowell said. “But on the flip side of that, it’s the last lap at Talladega and you’re going for a win, and so I’ll learn from it, go back and watch it, and see what I could have done differently and better. But Brad’s a tough guy to beat here. He knows what to do on the last lap; he’s won [six] times here, and he did everything right.

“He drug off me, drug back and I drug back to him to try to make sure he didn’t have too big of a run, and then he got connected there with [Gragson] and just surged right before I pulled down. You’re dealing with inches the whole time, and I miscalculated. I apologize to Brad and everybody that was behind that got collected in that. It’s unfortunate. We had such a fast Love’s Travel Stop Ford Mustang. I’m proud of everybody at Front Row. We had so much speed, having both cars up there and controlling the race. We needed a win, and we were going for it.”

McDowell started from the pole in the GEICO 500 and led a race-high 36 laps.

McDowell claims Talladega Cup pole

Michael McDowell will start from the pole at Talladega Superspeedway after earning his second Cup Series pole Saturday morning. McDowell was the final driver to take time in single-car qualifying and went to the top of the leaderboard at 182.022mph …

Michael McDowell will start from the pole at Talladega Superspeedway after earning his second Cup Series pole Saturday morning.

McDowell was the final driver to take time in single-car qualifying and went to the top of the leaderboard at 182.022mph (52.609s). The Front Row Motorsports driver has started on the front row in his No. 34 Ford Mustang Dark Horse in all three superspeedway-style races. He was second in Daytona 500 qualifying and won the pole at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Austin Cindric qualified second at 181.739mph and Todd Gilliland, McDowell’s teammate, qualified third at 181.40mph. Kyle Busch, the defending race winner, qualified fourth at 181.147mph and Austin Dillon qualified fifth at 180.785mph.

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Martin Truex Jr. qualified sixth at 180.707mph, Joey Logano qualified seventh at 180.529mph, and Chris Buescher qualified eighth at 180.274mph. Chase Elliott qualified ninth at 180.264mph and Christopher Bell qualified 10th at 180.007mph.

Ford is represented by five drivers inside the top 10. The manufacturer is still winless going into Sunday’s race.

Ryan Preece, another Ford driver, qualified 11th. Alex Bowman qualified 12 with William Byron qualifying 13th, former Talladega winner Bubba Wallace qualifying 14th, and Ty Gibbs qualifying 15th.

Shane van Gisbergen qualified 17th. Sunday will be van Gisbergen’s first Cup Series start on an oval.

Ryan Blaney qualified 21st. Denny Hamlin qualified 23rd.

Cody Ware qualified 34th in his return to the Cup Series. Sunday will be Ware’s first start in the series since being reinstated by NASCAR after an indefinite suspension in 2023 following charges of domestic assault. Those charges were later dropped.

Kyle Larson did not make a qualifying lap and will start last. NASCAR pulled the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports car from the grid because of an unapproved adjustment to the roof rails.

 

NASCAR starting lineup for Cup Series race at Talladega in 2024

Check out the NASCAR Cup Series starting lineup for the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway this weekend!

Talladega Superspeedway is next for the NASCAR Cup Series, and Front Row Motorsports will lead the field to the green flag. [autotag]Michael McDowell[/autotag] won the pole for the GEICO 500 at Talladega this weekend. Austin Cindric will join McDowell on the front row for Sunday afternoon’s event. It is a front-row lockout for Ford.

Todd Gilliland and Kyle Busch will follow the two drivers on the second row. Most notably, Ryan Blaney, Brad Keselowski, Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe, Erik Jones, Ross Chastain, and Kyle Larson all qualified 20th or worse for Sunday’s event. Thankfully for these drivers, with it being superspeedway racing, track position isn’t as important as it is on other race tracks.

The full starting lineup is available below.

GEICO 500 starting lineup:

  1. No. 34 Michael McDowell
  2. No. 2 Austin Cindric
  3. No. 38 Todd Gilliland
  4. No. 8 Kyle Busch
  5. No. 3 Austin Dillon
  6. No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
  7. No. 22 Joey Logano
  8. No. 17 Chris Buescher
  9. No. 9 Chase Elliott
  10. No. 20 Christopher Bell
  11. No. 41 Ryan Preece
  12. No. 48 Alex Bowman
  13. No. 24 William Byron
  14. No. 23 Bubba Wallace
  15. No. 54 Ty Gibbs
  16. No. 21 Harrison Burton
  17. No. 16 Shane van Gibsergen
  18. No. 45 Tyler Reddick
  19. No. 31 Daniel Hemric
  20. No. 42 John Hunter Nemechek
  21. No. 12 Ryan Blaney
  22. No. 6 Brad Keselowski
  23. No. 11 Denny Hamlin
  24. No. 62 Anthony Alfredo
  25. No. 99 Daniel Saurez
  26. No. 14 Chase Briscoe
  27. No. 51 Justin Haley
  28. No. 43 Erik Jones
  29. No. 4 Josh Berry
  30. No. 71 Zane Smith
  31. No. 7 Corey LaJoie
  32. No. 1 Ross Chastain
  33. No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  34. No. 51 Cody Ware
  35. No. 77 Carson Hocevar
  36. No. 10 Noah Gragson
  37. No. 78 B.J. McLeod
  38. No. 5 Kyle Larson

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Restarts still a hot topic at Martinsville

Michael McDowell believes the wrong conversation has taken place this week. “What I can’t understand is why y’all aren’t talking about [Kyle] Larson and [Joey] Logano,” McDowell said about the restart discussion that continues from Richmond Raceway. …

Michael McDowell believes the wrong conversation has taken place this week.

“What I can’t understand is why y’all aren’t talking about [Kyle] Larson and [Joey] Logano,” McDowell said about the restart discussion that continues from Richmond Raceway. “They should have been penalized for laying back. Clear as day. They were both a car length back; both of them should have been penalized. There’s no question about that one.”

The conversation has focused mainly on Denny Hamlin jumping the overtime restart at Richmond – Hamlin was the control car and admitted that he rolled before getting to the line that designates the start of the restart zone because he didn’t want to lose his advantage seeing others lagging back.

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NASCAR didn’t make a call to penalize Hamlin, saying it was ‘awful close’ after initially reviewing the restart. NASCAR senior vice president of competition Elton Sawyer admitted that Hamlin had gone early, and further said it’s a call that would have been looked at differently had it occurred earlier in the race.

Earlier this week, Stewart-Haas Racing teammates Josh Berry and Ryan Preece spoke adamantly about the leader needing to keep their advantage on restarts. Neither driver felt Hamlin necessarily did anything wrong.

On Saturday at Martinsville Speedway, the conversation continued with more Cup Series drivers. McDowell, like Berry and Preece, seemed unfazed by what happened.

“Because the leader should have the advantage,” the Front Row Motorsports driver said.

McDowell pointed to other forms of motorsports, where the leader can restart wherever they want. He pointed to how restarts work in the NTT IndyCar series and Formula 1. However, in NASCAR, McDowell said it’s about the entertainment of the field being two and three-wide and putting on a show at the end of the race.

“I listened a little bit to different podcasts and Race Hub, and social media, and I think for the fans it’s probably a bit confusing because there is a hard line (on the racetrack),” McDowell said. “For me, it wasn’t. I think if you’re the leader, you should have the advantage under every circumstance. There should never be a situation where the leader doesn’t have the advantage on a restart. Do we need to change the line, the box, the rules, all these things? I don’t know. I just don’t want to take away the leader’s opportunity to win the race by putting so many parameters around everything.

“I’m a fan of the leader just goes whenever he wants to go and there not be any box. Whether that’s the middle of the back straightaway or the front straightaway.”

Two-time Cup series champion Kyle Busch acknowledged if Hamlin’s jump had been earlier in the race, it likely would have been reviewed and called. But Busch said NASCAR is prone to let things go at the end of a race.

“We look at bump and runs, dump and runs,” Busch said. “A guy blatantly takes out another guy and gets to score the win because they aren’t going to strip that for rough driving or something else. I feel like that’s their mentality, a little bit of not wanting to be involved in a finish that strips a win.”

NASCAR implemented a restart zone in 2009, which was the same year double-file restarts were introduced. Previously, the race leader lined up on the outside of the front row with lapped cars to their inside. It was at the leader’s discretion to restart the race between Turn 4 and the start/finish line.

The restart zone is clearly defined on each racetrack. There are also orange neon markings on the top of the outside wall to help the driver’s sightlines and usually, in blue, ‘GEICO Restart Zone’ is painted on the wall.

“I’m not surprised by the call,” Ross Chastain said. “I’m not surprised by the move, by the cars involved at the front of the field. Not saying I’m going to do the same thing because if everyone just goes early, then there is no advantage. So, the advantage is doing what your competitors beside you and behind you don’t expect. I don’t expect all restarts to fire in Turn 3 this weekend by any means. But there are two lines for a reason and we all know that.

“The scary part is when do the reactionary calls change. When is that a penalty at the end of the race or lap 10 or 30 or 300? Being that first guy who gets called for going the same distance early would be tough to swallow.”

A driver pushing their luck in the restart zone is not new, and something Kyle Larson said everyone does, especially at the end of a race. Hamlin was not the first driver Larson had seen go before the restart zone.

“It’s always been a game,” he said. “I don’t really know how I necessarily view it. I can see all sides of it. There are lines on the racetrack, so this could be your line that you have to go by. But also, as the leader, you need to have full control of the lead, and the zones are so small that the leader, most times or at least half of the time, I feel like, is at a disadvantage because that zone is so small and easy to predict and time when they go.”

Larson would like to see NASCAR go back to a larger restart zone. An expanded restart zone (by 50 percent) was something NASCAR did briefly implement at the beginning of last season, which gave the leader more time to decide when to hit the gas. It made restarts less predictable.

“I think that helps the leader, and you see less games outside the zone,” Larson continued. “I think you get more strategy going within the zone, which is fair. But Fontana, everybody behind [Joey] Logano, tried predicting when he was going to go, and he just waited until the end of the zone, which was legal. And they all crashed and then NASCAR thought it was a zone length issue when it really was just a competitor issue.

“I would just like to see the zone a lot bigger; even bigger than it used to be or was early last year because then I think you get those – I hate to call it games – strategical moves within the zone. I think you’d see less jumping the start if the zone was longer.”

The debate will likely continue, as will questions from drivers on what’s legal and not. But for Sunday at Martinsville Speedway, there seems to be a consensus that NASCAR will be closely watching restarts, and no driver is likely to try to get away with something like Hamlin did, as Austin Cindric said, “all I know is, you’d be really dumb to try and jump it this week.”

McDowell and FRM are fast, so now it’s about finding consistency

Michael McDowell and Front Row Motorsports have had a fast Ford Mustang Dark Horse early in the NASCAR Cup Series season, but they’re still working to put together consistent performances and results. “I think the speed has been great; I think our …

Michael McDowell and Front Row Motorsports have had a fast Ford Mustang Dark Horse early in the NASCAR Cup Series season, but they’re still working to put together consistent performances and results.

“I think the speed has been great; I think our execution just hasn’t been very good,” McDowell said at Phoenix Raceway. “And that’s on me. Last week we didn’t execute well, [but] less on me last week. The good news is we have speed, and speed makes up for a lot of things. We’ve just got to keep that speed up throughout the year and then clean up some of the things that we’ve had troubles with and I think we’ll be in a good spot to contend for wins.”

No team wants to be searching for speed. It’s far easier to be fighting for finishes.

McDowell has started no worse than 12th in the first three races. After earning a front-row starting spot in the Daytona 500, McDowell earned his first career pole at Atlanta Motor Speedway. An eighth-place finish at Atlanta is his best finish of the season; his average finish is 23rd going into Sunday’s race in his home state.

“I think that’s the good thing — we’re pretty close with everything,” McDowell said. “We just have a few little areas to clean up and I think we’ll be able to put ourselves in a better position, especially as we get into the summer months.”

The 39-year-old McDowell is amid a career breakout. Since NASCAR introduced its Next Gen car in 2022, McDowell has enjoyed career numbers by quickly adapting to its feel and driving characteristics. He’s earned 21 top-10 finishes driving the Next Gen car, which is more than he had in his previous 14 seasons as a Cup Series driver (17).

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Front Row Motorsports is primed for even more success going forward with a new alliance with Team Penske. The technical partnership gives the small organization access to more information, like engineering support, but McDowell stressed it will take time for that to truly show results.

“Being able to lean on them more on that technical side for sure will help us to make better game day decisions and changes,” he said. “But all that, like I’ve been talking about, is going to take a process of being able to go through the information, understand it and then apply it, obviously. It’s still early, but I feel like…this week we made really big gains at home, at the shop, on how well we were able to utilize the information. We’re making gains, and I think it’ll get better and better every week.”

The next step for McDowell is turning their existing speed into top-five speed. It’s there where wins will come.

“Somewhere you’re going to get it right, you’re going to execute, get it all right, and you’re going to win a race,” McDowell said. “And winning a race, there’s such an emphasis on that in our series because it gets you in the playoffs and all the things it does. So, for me, it’s more about having those days of top-five speed than it is having top-15 speed throughout the entire year, if that makes sense.

“I think they go together, for sure, but I think just having more of that top-five speed is what’s going to allow us to contend for more wins.

McDowell earns first Cup pole, alongside Logano again in Atlanta

Michael McDowell and Joey Logano have flip-flopped starting positions from a week ago with McDowell earning his first career NASCAR Cup Series pole Saturday at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The Front Row Motorsports driver went to the top of the …

Michael McDowell and Joey Logano have flip-flopped starting positions from a week ago with McDowell earning his first career NASCAR Cup Series pole Saturday at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The Front Row Motorsports driver went to the top of the leaderboard in single-car qualifying at 178.844mph (30.999s). He was the final competitor to get on track in the final round of qualifying after setting the pace in the first round.

McDowell’s first pole comes in his 467th start.

“That’s awesome,” McDowell said. “I’m just really proud of all the men and women at Front Row Motorsports — two weeks in a row we’ve sat on the front row. We’ve got a really fast Benebone Ford Mustang. That was a good lap but it really comes down to team and execution and they’ve done a really good job.

“We need to back that up with a good result tomorrow, but I’m really proud of everybody at Front Row. It’s a big effort for us; got both cars in the top five, which is awesome.”

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Logano, who bested McDowell last weekend for the pole in the Daytona 500, will start second and is the defending race winner at Atlanta. His fastest lap was 178.424mph

Kyle Busch qualified third (178.235mph), Todd Gilliland fourth (178.080mph), Kyle Larson fifth (177.829mph), Ryan Blaney sixth (177.658mph) and Chris Buescher seventh (177.176mph).

Austin Cindric qualified eighth (177.147mph), Chase Briscoe ninth (177.125mph) and Austin Dillon completed the top 10 (177.102mph).

There were seven Ford drivers who advanced into the final round of qualifying. The other three drivers were from the Chevrolet camp.

Daytona 500 champion William Byron qualified 11th with a lap of 176.853mph.

There are 37 drivers qualified for the Ambetter 400. Erik Jones ended up last at 164.554mph after fighting to keep the car from spinning in Turns 3 and 4 in the first round of qualifying.

Saturday’s session was the only on-track activity for the Cup Series prior to the green flag just after 3 p.m. ET Sunday.

RESULTS

NASCAR starting lineup for Ambetter Health 400 at Atlanta

Check out the NASCAR Cup Series starting lineup for the Ambetter Health 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend!

Atlanta Motor Speedway is next for the NASCAR Cup Series, and Front Row Motorsports will lead the field to the green flag. [autotag]Michael McDowell[/autotag] won the pole for the Ambetter Health 400 at Atlanta this weekend. Joey Logano will join McDowell on the front row for Sunday afternoon’s event. In the 2024 Daytona 500, both drivers were also on the front row.

Kyle Busch and Todd Gilliland will follow the two drivers on the second row. Busch is the highest Chevrolet in Cup Series qualifying at Atlanta, while Martin Truex Jr. is the highest Toyota driver in 12th place. It is similar to the Daytona 500 qualifying session, as Ford dominated due to its fast one-lap speed. However, the race speed will be necessary for a hard-handling track.

The full starting lineup is available below.

Ambetter Health 400 starting lineup:

  1. No. 34 Michael McDowell
  2. No. 22 Joey Logano
  3. No. 8 Kyle Busch
  4. No. 38 Todd Gilliland
  5. No. 5 Kyle Larson
  6. No. 12 Ryan Blaney
  7. No. 17 Chris Buescher
  8. No. 2 Austin Cindric
  9. No. 14 Chase Briscoe
  10. No. 3 Austin Dillon
  11. No. 24 William Byron
  12. No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
  13. No. 11 Denny Hamlin
  14. No. 4 Josh Berry
  15. No. 10 Noah Gragson
  16. No. 21 Harrison Burton
  17. No. 48 Alex Bowman
  18. No 23 Bubba Wallace
  19. No. 45 Tyler Reddick
  20. No. 41 Ryan Preece
  21. No. 1 Ross Chastain
  22. No. 20 Christopher Bell
  23. No. 99 Daniel Suarez
  24. No. 6 Brad Keselowski
  25. No. 54 Ty Gibbs
  26. No. 31 Daniel Hemric
  27. No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  28. No. 9 Chase Elliott
  29. No. 71 Zane Smith
  30. No. 16 Josh Williams
  31. No. 51 Justin Haley
  32. No. 7 Corey LaJoie
  33. No. 15 Kaz Grala
  34. No. 42 John Hunter Nemechek
  35. No. 77 Carson Hocevar
  36. No. 78 B.J. McLeod
  37. No. 43 Erik Jones

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Front Row Motorsports signs B’laster as a primary sponsor in 2024

Front Row Motorsports signs B’laster as a primary sponsor for Michael McDowell in 2024. Check out McDowell’s new paint scheme and schedule!

[autotag]Front Row Motorsports[/autotag] has been a popular organization for releasing paint schemes and sponsor schedules for the 2024 season. This continued following the Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum. On Tuesday morning, Front Row Motorsports announced that it has signed B’laster as a primary sponsor during the 2024 NASCAR season.

B’laster will sponsor [autotag]Michael McDowell[/autotag] and the No. 34 team in a multi-race agreement. McDowell will run the company’s colors at Pocono Raceway on July 14 and continue into the fall months of the 2024 season. As of now, Pocono is the only announced race for B’laster; however, it will feature select brands from the company’s portfolio later in the year.

This will be B’laster’s debut for the 2024 NASCAR season, and McDowell is a great choice. Despite a 19th-place finish at the Busch Light Clash due to a wreck, the No. 34 team has made strides in the right direction. McDowell is currently in his driver’s prime, winning at least one race in two of the last three years. Now, B’laster hopes it will be on one of those winning entries.

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Michael McDowell’s schedule, paint scheme for Benebone in 2024 revealed

Michael McDowell’s schedule and paint scheme for Benebone in 2024 has been revealed. Check out McDowell’s scheme and schedule for 2024!

Front Row Motorsports has started to ramp up its efforts when it come to releasing paint schemes and sponsorship schedules for its drivers in 2024. On Thursday morning, Front Row Motorsports announced that Benebone will return for [autotag]Michael McDowell[/autotag] and the No. 34 team this season. Benebone was on the No. 34 car once last season at Pocono Raceway.

McDowell’s paint scheme with Benebone does look different compared to 2023, as the car has more light green and a different design on the hood. The company will be on the No. 34 car for two races during the 2024 NASCAR season at Atlanta on February 25 and Watkins Glen on September 15. Overall, it is a good partnership, as McDowell has a dog in his family.

Benebone will hope that McDowell can bring the No. 34 car to victory lane at Atlanta or Watkins Glen. Luckily for them, the 2021 Daytona 500 winner has two wins between a road course and superspeedway in his NASCAR Cup Series career. McDowell should improve going into 2024, and Benebone is taking more stock by upping its sponsorship by one race.

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McDowell leads playoff-heavy Cup speed charts in Texas practice

Michael McDowell (185.771mph, 29.715s) laid down the quickest lap in practice for Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway. He turned 19 total laps in the session with his quickest one coming just two laps in. Joey Logano …

Michael McDowell (185.771mph, 29.715s) laid down the quickest lap in practice for Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.

He turned 19 total laps in the session with his quickest one coming just two laps in.

Joey Logano (185.764mph, 29.068s), Kyle Busch (185.592mph, 29.069s), Aric Almirola (185.305mph, 29.096s) and Kyle Larson (185.293mph, 29.141s) rounded out the top five speeds, while Erik Jones (185.236mph), William Byron (185.204mph), Denny Hamlin (185.140mph), AJ Allmendinger (185.083mph) and Ross Chastain (185.071mph) completed the top 10.

Larson topped the 10 lap average category (184.279mph), followed by Hamlin, Chastain, Allmendinger, Busch, Truex, Justin Haley, Ty Gibbs, Carson Hocevar, and Chase Elliott.

Larson was also fastest in 10, 15 and 20-lap averages, while Hamlin topped the 25-lap average. Chastain and Gibbs turned 27 laps, the most in the field.

As far as other playoff drivers that turned laps in the session, Chris Buescher ended up 11th, Ryan Blaney 13th, Bubba Wallace 14th, Brad Keselowski 15th, Martin Truex Jr. 17th, Tyler Reddick 21st and Christopher Bell 23rd.

Bell spun off Turn 2 with about five minutes remaining in Group A’s session, bringing out a brief stoppage. It was the only incident in the afternoon’s dual sessions.

There are 36 drivers entered for Sunday’s race (3:30 p.m. ET on USA).