Ryan Newman's No. 39 U.S. Army Chevrolet Impala featured the faces of more than 350 military veterans during the Veterans Day weekend race. As a Veterans Day tribute, the U.S. Army Racing cars for drivers Tony Schumacher in the NHRA and Ryan Newman w...

PHOENIX (Nov. 13, 2011) -- Ryan Newman came from the rear of the field to claim a fifth-place finish in Sunday's Kobalt Tools 500k Sprint Cup race at Phoenix International Raceway.

Newman, whose Number 39 U.S. Army Chevrolet was carrying more than 350 faces of Vietnam Soldiers as a Veterans Day tribute, started the 312-lap race from the 30th position. He muscled his way through the field to post his ninth top-five finish of the season and his 17th top-10.

Newman's Soldier-like true-grit performance lifted him three spots in the point standings from 12th to ninth. He is actually tied for eighth with Kurt Busch, but Busch beats him on the tiebreaker for most wins.

Newman's teammate, Tony Stewart, finished third and heads into next week's final race three points behind Chase leader Carl Edwards.

Despite a poor starting position on a tricky, newly-paved track surface, Newman's savvy driving skills came into play as he managed to aggressively gain track position without any incidents on the one-mile oval.

"Our goal was to give our Army Strong Vietnam Veterans the recognition that they deserve and I hope we made them proud with our come-from-behind performance today," said Newman. "I want to personally thank every one of those Vietnam Veterans on our car for the inspiration they provided our U.S. Army team this weekend. I was born after the conflict in Southeast Asia ended, but history tells us the adversity these Soldiers went through in the fight for democracy was nothing but heroic."

Vietnam Army veterans, along with their families, friends and loved ones, were given the opportunity to submit photos to the www.goarmy.com website. Images were collected through Sept. 16.

"Each picture, each face, is a reminder of the sacrifice and service of the millions who have made our Army strong and our nation free," said John Myers, director, Strategic Communications and Outreach, U.S. Army Accessions Command.

NASCAR's post-race lap summary chart tracked Newman's steady progression. After starting 30th, he was running in 25th place on Lap 45, 15th on Lap 105, eighth on Lap 180 and fifth on Lap 240.

"That was an amazing comeback for us to come from 30th to fifth," Newman said. "I'm really proud of that. We had a good day on pit road and to come back from where we started to end up talking to you (media) is a good day. This is what our brave Soldiers do every day -- they never quit and keep on fighting until the mission is completed."

The race winner was Kasey Kahne. Rounding out the top five in order were: Edwards, Stewart, Jeff Burton and Newman.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup season finale is slated for Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.