The Day

NASCAR moves up today’s starting time

But Hurricane Nate may still spoil the day

- By JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer

Concord, N.C. — Rain has wreaked havoc with NASCAR's opening race for the second round of the playoffs.

All practice was canceled Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and the start of today's race has already been moved up an hour to give NASCAR a bigger window to complete the 500-mile event.

It's not the Chamber of Commerce weekend that Charlotte officials had hoped for when they rearranged the schedule. This event has traditiona­lly been held on Saturday nights but was washed out last year by Hurricane Matthew.

Held the next day, on a gorgeous Carolina afternoon, the race was one of the more competitiv­e events of the season. Drivers felt that running in the afternoon improved the ontrack product, and Charlotte officials adjusted by moving the event to Sunday.

Now, Hurricane Nate is expected to spoil the day.

The track had a different struggle Friday after it discovered it had not properly applied traction compound to the track. It required a second applicatio­n in the turns, but not before it caused Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski and David Ragan to wiggle exiting Turn 4 and hit NASCAR MONSTER CUP BANK OF AMERICA 500 1 p.m., Charlotte Motor Speedway (Chs. 10, 30)

the wall during practice. Both Earnhardt and Busch had to move to backup cars.

Charlotte officials figured out that it had not applied enough of the PJ1 sticky substance in that turn, and drivers had asked about it after the dicey practice session.

"The stuff that they sprayed down, it has had a bad reaction to the sun or something that has made it really slick," Earnhardt said after Friday's accident. "Something has made it to where it doesn't have grip, it's the opposite."

Now the rain will wash some of the substance away, and with all practice canceled Saturday, drivers won't know what to expect when the race does begin. Earnhardt crashed in the opening moments of Friday practice, and said he'd avoid the top line of the track where the compound is until

another driver demonstrat­es there's no danger.

It was little surprise to see a pair of Toyotas sweep the front row in qualifying. The cars, though, weren't the usual suspects.

Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth gave Joe Gibbs Racing the top two starting spots for the race. The stronger Toyotas in qualifying this year had belonged to Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Busch.

For Hamlin, the up-front starting spot is important to getting off to a good start in this round of the playoffs. He's lagging behind Truex, winner of the playoff opener at Chicago, and teammate Busch, winner the last two weeks.

"We're in that kind of a middle spot in the grid right now where we have some decent playoff points, but we're still 40 or so behind Truex and maybe 30 or so behind Kyle, and we can knock a big chunk out of that if we run up front in the first two stages," Hamlin said. "So we've got the starting spot to do it. We need to log all the points we can while we have the track position, and I'm glad we're starting off this round this way, and hopefully our car is good enough to stay there to get those points early on."

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