Christopher Bell finished fourth in the Pocono Organics 325 in partnership with Rodale Institute at Pocono Raceway on Saturday.

Bell’s top five finish, the first time he has achieved that result this year, added 33 points to his season total.

Bell started in 36th position. The first-year driver has three top-10 finishes in his career.

The Norman, Oklahoma native began the race 11 spots behind his career mark of 25.4, but finished 17 places ahead of his career average of 21.

Bell competed against 40 other drivers on the way to his fourth-place finish. The race endured six cautions and 21 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag there were 10 lead changes.

Kevin Harvick took the checkered flag in the race, followed by Denny Hamlin in the No. 2 spot and Aric Almirola in third. Bell took fourth in front of Kyle Busch’s No. 5 finish.

After Joey Logano won the first stage, Almirola drove the No. 10 car to victory in Stage 2.

Christopher Bell Driver Page | Get Bell Gear | Race Center

Clint Bowyer finished seventh in the Pocono Organics 325 in partnership with Rodale Institute at Pocono Raceway on Saturday.

The top 10 finish for Bowyer, his fourth of the year, added 30 points to his season total.

Bowyer started in 18th position. The 16th-year driver has piled up 10 career victories, with 82 top-five finishes and 217 results inside the top 10.

In his career at Pocono Raceway, Bowyer has compiled three top-five finishes and his seventh-place result marks the 11th top 10.

The Emporia, Kansas native began the race one spot behind his career mark of 17.4, but finished nine places ahead of his career average of 16.1.

Bowyer competed with 40 other drivers on the way to his seventh-place finish. The race endured six cautions and 21 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag there were 10 lead changes.

Kevin Harvick took the checkered flag in the race, and Denny Hamlin followed in second. Aric Almirola placed third, Christopher Bell secured fourth, and Kyle Busch grabbed the No. 5 spot.

After Joey Logano won Stage 1, Almirola drove the No. 10 car to victory in Stage 2.

Clint Bowyer Driver Page | Get Bowyer Gear | Race Center

Michael McDowell finished eighth in the Pocono Organics 325 in partnership with Rodale Institute at Pocono Raceway on Saturday.

The top 10 finish for McDowell, his first of the year, added 29 points to his season total.

McDowell started in 26th position and led one lap in the race. The 13th-year driver has earned three top-five and eight top-10 finishes in his career.

Saturday was McDowell’s 15th career start at Pocono Raceway.

The Glendale, Arizona native’s starting and finishing positions compared favorably to his career averages, starting three spots higher than his career mark of 28.9 and completing the race 23 places ahead of his 31 career average finish.

McDowell battled against a field of 40 drivers on the way to his eighth-place finish. The race endured six cautions and 21 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag there were 10 lead changes.

Kevin Harvick earned the win in the race, and Denny Hamlin followed in second. Aric Almirola crossed the finish line third, Christopher Bell took fourth, and Kyle Busch finished off the top five.

After Joey Logano won Stage 1, Almirola drove the No. 10 car to the win in Stage 2.

Michael McDowell Driver Page | Get McDowell Gear | Race Center

After Kevin Harvick beat out Denny Hamlin to take victory in the first race on Saturday for his third victory of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season, it was Hamlin and the No. 11 team who used strategy to reverse the roles in Sunday’s Pocono 350 at Pocono Raceway.

Harvick dipped on pit road earlier than Hamlin as the laps dwindled in the final stage, but it was Hamlin who was able to stretch out a lead while Harvick was forced to work his way through traffic. Hamlin then gave up the lead to pit for two tires, the exact move Harvick’s team made to triumph in Saturday’s 325-miler at the 2.5-mile Pennsylvania track.

RELATED: Official Pocono-2 results | Hamlin turns table on Harvick for Pocono win

Surprisingly, Harvick felt his No. 4 machine was even stronger than the race-winning setup roughly 24 hours before. Despite coming up one spot short of a doubleheader sweep on Sunday, Harvick stopped short of disappointment with a second-place finish.

“Our car was actually better today than it was yesterday, just the way the end worked out,” Harvick said in his post-race media availability. “That’s kind of the way it goes, right? You win the one that you don’t think you have the better car. You finish second in the one you think you have the best car.

“Overall, you can’t be dissatisfied with a first and second. I’d feel childish if I sat here and nit-picked that apart,” he added.

But what Hamlin and Harvick have been able to accomplish so far this year is no child’s play. While Hamlin notched his fourth win and third since the sport’s return from the COVID-19 stoppage, Harvick’s three victories since Darlington Raceway has landed the pair in Victory Lane in six of the 11 races so far.

PHOTOS: See the 2020 race winners so far

Harvick pinpointed the leadership on both the pit boxes of the Nos. 4 and 11 with crew chiefs Rodney Childers and Chris Gabehart as major keys to both teams’ success.

“It takes that chemistry between crew chief and driver and team,” Harvick said. “You just never know when it’s going to be like that. … I know Rodney and Gabehart, they’re good acquaintances, I guess you could say. Both of our crew chiefs are just really old-school racers that do a good job in the engineering era of being able to look at the car, come at it from a driver’s perspective.”

With the regular season over halfway complete and Hamlin and Harvick putting a whooping on the rest of the field this weekend in Long Pond, is it safe to say both drivers are championship favorites?

“I think so,” Harvick said. “We’re winning races, doing the things we need to do right now, running up front. I think obviously when you look at the win column, as long as you’re winning races, that’s what it takes to win championships.”

Denny Hamlin turned the tables on Kevin Harvick on Sunday at Pocono Raceway.

Staying out on old tires and building a lead while Harvick battled traffic late in the Pocono 350, Hamlin won the second race of the historic NASCAR Cup Series doubleheader by 3.068 seconds over Harvick, reversing the finishing order of the two drivers from a day earlier.

RELATED: Official race results | Stage recaps
SHOP: Denny Hamlin gear

For the first time in its history, NASCAR ran two Cup Series events on the same weekend at the same track.

Hamlin achieved several milestones with the win. He picked up his sixth victory at the 2.5-mile triangular track, tying NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon for most all-time. The triumph was the 41st of Hamlin’s career, 19th most in NASCAR history, breaking a tie with another NASCAR Hall of Famer, Mark Martin.

And a day after Harvick tied Hamlin for a series-best three wins this season, Hamlin broke the deadlock with his fourth victory of the year.

Harvick made his last pit stop on Lap 105, surrendering the lead to Hamlin. Instead of pitting shortly thereafter, Hamlin, at the direction of crew chief Chris Gabehart, stayed on the track and built his advantage over Harvick from 30 to more than 33 seconds, as Harvick fought through heavy race traffic.

Hamlin finally came to pit road on Lap 120, handing a short-lived lead to his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, Martin Truex Jr. But Hamlin held a two-second edge over Harvick in the exchange. Hamlin took the lead to stay on Lap 126 when Truex made his final stop after staying out five laps longer than Hamlin had.

“I was hoping for no caution,” Hamlin said of the final 51-lap green-flag run and the winning strategy. “I knew we had the car, and I was just kind of maintaining my gap right there — didn’t want to make any mistakes like I did at Bristol and gave that win away.

“I just tried to work through the traffic the best I could, and obviously, Chris was paying attention to the strategy there and made the right call.”

Despite his second-place finish, Harvick felt he had a better setup in the No. 4 Ford than the one he drove to victory on Saturday.

“He (Hamlin) just did the opposite of what we did,” Harvick said. “We didn’t want to get caught with a caution and then wound up losing a little bit too much time in lapped traffic with all the cars that hadn’t pitted.

“He was out there running clean laps and waited till right to the very end (to pit) and wound up in front of us. I’m proud of everybody on our team. Yesterday, (strategy) won us the race, and today we finished second.”

JGR driver Erik Jones ran third, posting his best finish of the season. Chase Elliott and Aric Almirola were fourth and fifth, respectively, followed by Matt DiBenedetto, William Byron, Clint Bowyer, Alex Bowman and Truex.

Saturday’s fourth-place finisher, Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Christopher Bell, ran third in Stage 1 of Sunday’s event. Then his race fell apart. Bell spun out of control in the Tunnel Turn on Lap 39, backed hard into the outside wall in the short chute and shortened his car by about three feet.

“I was kind of rolling out there by myself, and I had a good gap between the guy in front of me and behind me, and it just stepped out getting into Turn 2 there,” said Bell, who retired from the race and finished 39th.

“It’s disappointing, but I’m really happy with the speed that we’ve had these last couple weeks. Obviously, yesterday here we were really fast, and we had another great car today, so these guys keep bringing really fast Rheem Camrys to the race track, and we’ll have good shows.”

As the race approached the end of Stage 2, Kyle Busch spun in Turn 2 after contact from Ryan Blaney’s Ford. Busch’s No. 18 Toyota nosed into the inside wall, destroying the car. The accident kept Busch winless — and frustrated — through 15 races of the 2020 season.

EXCLUSIVE: See the contact between Kyle Busch and Ryan Blaney 

“The guys did an amazing job from yesterday to today,” said Busch, who finished fifth on Saturday but never contended for the win. “I guess it proves that, if you get a little practice time in, we are going to be a force to be reckoned with, so hopefully life gets back to normal eventually.

“But we are in 2020, so it doesn’t surprise me getting crashed out of the lead. The M&M’s Camry was pretty fast today. Adam (Stevens, crew chief) and the guys did a great job. It’s just very frustrating and unfortunate. I know what happened, but it doesn’t make any sense to talk about it. It will just come across in a bad way.”

The Cup Series’ next race is scheduled July 5 (4 p.m. ET, NBC, IMS, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Notes: There were no major issues in post-race inspection in the Cup Series garage. Two cars were found with one unsecured lug nut each in a post-race check: The No. 4 of Harvick and the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 of Truex. … It was a better day for Chevrolet — three Camaros, all fielded by Hendrick Motorsports, finished in the top 10. In Saturday’s first leg of the unprecedented doubleheader there were no Chevys in the top 10. … Harvick increased his series lead to 52 points over 22nd-place finisher Blaney… Almirola posted his fourth straight top 10… Kurt Busch won the 30-lap first stage wire-to-wire. Brad Keselowski won Stage 2… The start of the race was delayed by lightning, and rain interrupted the first stage after six laps were complete.

Contributing: Staff reports

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find NBCSNGet the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

RELATED: How to follow races on NASCAR.com | NASCAR Live Stream

Monday, June 29
Midnight, NASCAR Cup Series: Pocono Organics 325 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
3 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Pocono 350 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Pocono Green 225 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Pocono Green 225 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
9 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Pocono 350 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, June 30
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
10 p.m., NASCAR Auto Racing Classics: 2005 Daytona 500 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

Wednesday, July 1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7 p.m., NASCAR Auto Racing Classics: 2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., Glory Road: NASCAR’s Lost Tracks (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7:30 p.m., Glory Road: Stock Car Evolution (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
8 p.m., Glory Road: IROC (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
8:30 p.m., Glory Road: Controversial Finishes (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App

Thursday, July 2
3:30 a.m., NASCAR Truck Racing: 1998 Federated Auto Parts 250 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., One Hot Night: The NASCAR 1992 All-Star Race (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., Glory Road: The Inaugural Brickyard (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7:30 p.m., Glory Road: Modified to Cup (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
8 p.m., Glory Road: Controversial Finishes (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
8:30 p.m., Glory Road: The Winston Million (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App

Friday, July 3
2:30 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West: Race 1 at Utah Motorsports Campus (tape delay), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3:30 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West: Race 2 at Utah Motorsports Campus (tape delay), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download: Bubba Wallace (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Auto Racing Classics: 2002 NAPA Auto Parts 500 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
7 p.m., Dale Jr. Download: Will Power (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
9:30 p.m., NASCAR Truck Racing: 1998 Auto Parts 250 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

Saturday, July 4
2 p.m., Countdown to Green, NBC/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Pennzoil 150 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NBC/NBC Sports App

On PRN
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Pennzoil 150 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS RADIO)

Sunday, July 5
3 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3:30 p.m., Countdown to Green: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
4 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NBC/NBC Sports App
8 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Post-Race Show: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

On PRN
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS RADIO)

 

Brad Keselowski won Stage 2 in the second NASCAR Cup Series race of the weekend at Pocono Raceway, taking control on a restart with two laps to go in the 55-lap portion.

The Team Penske driver took the green flag in his No. 2 Ford alongside Stewart-Haas Racing’s Aric Almirola in the No. 10 Ford. Almirola ended up second at the start-finish line, followed by Ryan Newman in his No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford. Martin Truex Jr. and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. were then fourth and fifth, respectively.

Kevin Harvick (Saturday’s winner), Austin Dillon, Kurt Busch (Stage 1 winner), Matt DiBenedetto and Denny Hamlin completed the top 10.

RELATED: Stage 2 results

Keselowski is credited with four laps led through the first two stages — all of which he did toward the end of the second stage. The in-race mini victory marks Keselowski’s third this season.

The late-stage restart was set up after Chris Buescher crashed into the inside wall with five laps remaining in the stage. That came one lap after a separate restart.

With 10 laps to go, Kyle Busch spun while battling Ryan Blaney for position and slid into the inside wall.

Rookie Christopher Bell — placed third in Stage 1 — hit the wall early into Stage 2 on Lap 39. Buescher, who was also in the top 10 at the end of the first stage, did the same six laps later. Bell’s day ended early, while Buescher stayed out with repairs until the second wreck.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 Brad Keselowski Team Penske 10
2 Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing 9
3 Ryan Newman Roush Fenway Racing 8
4 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 7
5 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. JTG Daugherty Racing 6
6 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing 5
7 Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing 4
8 Kurt Busch Chip Ganassi Racing 3
9 Matt DiBenedetto Wood Brothers Racing 2
10 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 1

STAGE 1

Kurt Busch won Stage 1 in the second NASCAR Cup Series race of a Pocono Raceway doubleheader, leading all 30 laps in the opening portion.

The driver of the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet was supposed to fire off from third starting position but instead began on the front row. Polesitter Ryan Preece had to drop to the rear of the field because of a pre-race engine change in his No. 37 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet. Busch, therefore, moved up alongside Austin Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

Sunday’s lineup was based on the finishing results from Saturday’s race, which included an inversion of the top 20 finishers.

RELATED: Stage 1 results

The mini in-race victory marked Busch’s first stage win of the 2020 season.

Ryan Blaney ended up second in the first stage, with Christopher Bell behind him in third. Kevin Harvick, who won Saturday’s first Pocono race, and Brad Keselowski were fourth and fifth, respectively. Matt DiBenedetto, Chris Buescher, Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch and rookie Cole Custer made up the rest of the top 10.

There was only one action-based caution, and it came on Lap 15 when Michael McDowell made heavy contact with the wall.

Lightning pushed the green flag back 30 minutes, then rain drew out the yellow flag and ultimately the red flag for 50 minutes and 50 seconds. Eleven laps were completed before the race went back green.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 Kurt Busch Chip Ganassi Racing 10
2 Ryan Blaney Team Penske 9
3 Christopher Bell Leavine Family Racing 8
4 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing 7
5 Brad Keselowski Team Penske 6
6 Matt DiBenedetto Wood Brothers Racing 5
7 Chris Buescher Roush Fenway Racing 4
8 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 3
9 Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing 2
10 Cole Custer Stewart-Haas Racing 1

 

Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Pocono Raceway has been placed on hold because of rain.

The Pocono 350 (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) was halted with just six of a scheduled 140 laps complete. Kurt Busch’s Chip Ganassi Racing No. 1 Chevrolet led every lap before a rain shower prompted the day’s first caution flag. The red flag lasted for 50 minutes and 50 seconds with action resuming at approximately 6:15 p.m. ET.

The event — the second race in a weekend doubleheader for the series — was also delayed by a 30-minute hold for lightning in the area that interrupted the pace laps.

Saturday’s Cup race was won by Kevin Harvick. Before the Sunday Cup race, the Gander RV & Outdoors Truck race was won by Brandon Jones and the Xfinity race was won by Chase Briscoe.

Ross Chastain has assembled a modest streak in the NASCAR Xfinity Series that has been part consistency, part bittersweet and part lucrative. Sunday at Pocono Raceway, he came up short by a hair to race winner Chase Briscoe but claimed the Dash 4 Cash bonus in the Pocono Green 225.

RELATED: Race results | Recap of 2020 Dash 4 Cash program

Chastain carried away a $100,000 consolation prize for the second straight week in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, landing his second consecutive runner-up finish. He was the highest finisher among the four eligible drivers, avoiding the trouble that entangled the other three: Austin Cindric, Justin Haley and Alex Labbe.

The payday meant Kaulig Racing collected three of the four Dash 4 Cash bonuses in this year’s program. But Chastain was still left to sit with leading the most laps (31 of 91) then relinquishing the top spot to a charging Briscoe on the next-to-last lap. Chastain even apologized after his post-race news conference for a “doom and gloom” mood.

“It’s tough to be upset with second, but I am,” Chastain told FOX Sports. “I’m so proud of Kaulig Racing, RCR and everybody that brings these race cars, and we’re unloading and we are in the top two or three every week. I know how lucky I am, but man, it’s the memories we take with us, not the money.”

Chastain’s competitors for the Dash 4 Cash bonus were well down the finishing order after the wreck-filled event. Labbe was the next-highest finisher, recovering from a spin and a tap of the inside retaining wall at the end of Stage 1 to take 17th place.

Haley, Chastain’s teammate, was knocked from contention after a mid-race penalty for a run-in with Riley Herbst. The two had brushed together exiting Turn 3 before Haley swerved left to send Herbst’s No. 18 Toyota spinning on the frontstraight, prompting a caution period on Lap 50.

MORE: Haley penalized for Pocono push

NASCAR officials held Haley’s No. 11 Chevrolet for two laps for rough driving. He never made up the deficit, finishing two laps down in 23rd.

Cindric led 11 laps and won Stage 1, but he exited just three laps after the Haley-Herbst incident. His No. 22 Team Penske Ford funneled into a six-car stack-up on the Long Pond straight, and Cindric wound up 29th.

The Dash 4 Cash initiative for NASCAR Xfinity Series wrapped up on June 28 at Pocono Raceway with the final installment in the four-race series for the 2020 season. Ross Chastain nabbed the prize for his second $100,000 bonus in the 2020 campaign.

RELATED: 2020 Xfinity Series schedule

The program opened with a qualifying race June 1 at Bristol Motor Speedway and then the first money race June 6 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Noah Gragson took home the $100,000 at Atlanta. AJ Allmendinger took home the $100,000 at Miami. Chastain took the $100,000 prize home at Talladega.

How it works is the first of the four Dash 4 Cash competitors to finish in a race in the program will win the $100,000 bonus. The winner and the next three highest finishing Xfinity Series drivers (who have declared for points in that series) will qualify for the next event.

In addition to the payout to drivers, Xfinity plans to make donations in each Dash 4 Cash race market that reaffirms its companywide commitment of connecting families, veterans and seniors to the digital tools necessary for navigating these challenging times.

2020 Dash 4 Cash recaps

At Pocono:Ross Chastain won the $100,000 Dash 4 Cash prize for a second time in 2020 to wrap up the program this season. Chastain finished second in the race ahead of Alex Labbe (finished 17th), Justin Haley (finished 23rd) and Austin Cindric (finished 29th).

RECAP: Chase Briscoe wins at Pocono, Ross Chastain takes Dash 4 Cash prize

At Talladega: Ross Chastain won the third Dash 4 Cash $100,000 prize of the season with a second-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway, finishing ahead of AJ Allmendinger (finished seventh), Brandon Jones (finished 16th) and Chase Briscoe (finished 18th). Qualifiers for Pocono: Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Justin Haley, Alex Labbe.

RECAP: Justin Haley wins at Talladega, Ross Chastain wins Dash 4 Cash prize

At Miami: AJ Allmendinger won the second Dash 4 Cash $100,000 prize of the season with a fourth-place finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway, finishing ahead of Noah Gragson (finished fifth), Justin Haley (finished sixth) and Daniel Hemric (finished 31st). Qualifiers for Talladega: AJ Allmendinger, Chase Briscoe, Ross Chastain, Brandon Jones

RECAP: Chase Briscoe wins in double overtime finish at Miami, Allmendinger nabs prize

At Atlanta: Noah Gragson won the first Dash 4 Cash $100,000 prize of the season with a second-place finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway, finishing ahead of Harrison Burton (finished fifth), Brandon Jones (finished eighth) and Chase Briscoe (finished ninth). Qualifiers for Miami: AJ Allmendinger, Noah Gragson, Justin Haley, Daniel Hemric.

RECAP: Noah Gragson wins Dash 4 Cash prize at Atlanta

At Bristol: The top four finishing Xfinity Series regulars at Bristol Motor Speedway were eligible for the $100,000 prize at Atlanta. No prize was given out at Bristol, but it did set the Dash 4 Cash participants for Atlanta Motor Speedway. Qualifiers for Atlanta: Noah Gragson, Chase Briscoe, Brandon Jones and Harrison Burton.

RECAP: Noah Gragson wins at Bristol, earns Dash 4 Cash spot