Four drivers were eliminated from the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs after Sunday’s race at Kansas Speedway as the postseason field was trimmed from 12 drivers to eight.

Read on for a full update on the standings and results.

Eliminated drivers

• Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Team Penske Ford
• William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
• Alex Bowman, No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
• Clint Bowyer, No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford

Advancing to the Round of 8

1. Kyle Busch, No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, 4,046 points
2. Martin Truex Jr., No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, 4,042 points
3. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, 4,037 points
4. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford, 4,030 points
5. Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, 4,028 points
6. Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, 4,024 points
7. Kyle Larson, No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, 4,011 points
8. Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford, 4,009 points

MORE: Unofficial results

The ups

• Two drivers had clinched spots in the Round of 8 based on victories earlier in the round (Kyle Larson at Dover, Ryan Blaney at Talladega). Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin snapped up two more berths based on their performance in the first two stages at Kansas. Hamlin won Stage 2, and Truex gathered 15 points in the stages, tied with Chase Elliott for the most among playoff drivers.

• The No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports team benefited from a late caution period, and Chase Elliott converted the solid pit strategy and good fortune into a clinching second-place run that sealed the final Round of 8 berth. Elliott erased a 22-point gap to keep his postseason hopes intact.

• Joey Logano entered the Hollywood Casino 400 in the last transfer spot on the provisional playoff bubble, but bolstered his cause with a Stage 1 victory. The Team Penske No. 22 group rallied from an unscheduled pit stop for a wheel vibration, then used some pit strategy to emerge triumphant in a two-lap shootout at the opening stage’s end. A seventh-place finish worth four points at the end of Stage 2 helped keep his title defense going, offsetting a late spin that left him with a 17th-place finish.

The downs

• Some early damage and an ill-handling No. 88 Chevrolet hindered Alex Bowman’s long-shot chances to advance in the postseason. Though he recovered to briefly return to the lead lap, Bowman was closed out of the top 10 at the end of each stage, frittering away extra points and losing ground to his playoff rivals.

• Brad Keselowski faded out of the running for one of the final spots in the Round of 8 with an uncharacteristic 19th-place result that made it a tense run to the finish at Kansas, a venue where he won in May. Keselowski didn’t score a top-10 finish in any of the Round of 12’s three races.

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 NBCSN | Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, October 21
6 p.m., NASCAR America: Monday, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, October 22
2 p.m., Glory Road: The Inaugural Brickyard (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
2:30 p.m., Glory Road: NASCAR’s Lost Tracks (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
5 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., Glory Road: Controversial Finishes, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6:30 p.m., Glory Road: IROC (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
9 p.m., Dale Jr. Download (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App

On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

Wednesday, October 23
Midnight, Glory Road: Controversial Finishes (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
12:30 a.m., Glory Road: IROC (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Motormouths, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
Noon, NASCAR Coast to Coast

Thursday, October 24
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
Noon, 1999 NAPA Autocare 500

Saturday, October 26
9 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
10 a.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series qualifying, FS1/FOX Sports App
11 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
12:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (joined in progress on NBCSN) (Canada: TSN App)
1 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NGOTS, FS1/FOX Sports App
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series NASCAR Hall of Fame 200, FS1/FOX Sports App
4:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)

On MRN
9 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice
Noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice
1 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series NASCAR Hall of Fame 200
4:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying

Sunday, October 27
10 a.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series NASCAR Hall of Fame 200 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
12:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
12:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Martinsville, FS1/FOX Sports App
1:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
2:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series First Data 500, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN1, 4)
7 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Post Race, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lap, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

On MRN
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series First Data 500

Denny Hamlin took the lead from Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. with 34 laps remaining in the stage, pacing the field the rest of the way for the Stage 2 victory in Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway.

The victory was Hamlin’s fifth stage win of the 2019 season. Last week’s winner at Talladega, Ryan Blaney, placed runner-up in the stage.

Truex, who has led 33 laps thus far, faded to third, while Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron and his defending race winner teammate Chase Elliott rounded out the top five. Stage 1 winner Joey Logano placed seventh.

RELATED: Stage 2 results

Midway through the stage, Kyle Larson got into the back of the No. 66 of Joey Gase to send it spinning and bring out the caution. Gase then took his ride to the garage, thus ending his day.

Larson, in his No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, placed 14th despite having led 60 laps. He’s already locked into the Round of 8 with a victory earlier this month at Dover International Speedway.

Brad Keselowski was the lowest-finishing playoff driver, in 16th.

Place Driver Team Pts
1 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 10
2 Ryan Blaney Team Penske 9
3 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 8
4 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports 7
5 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports 6
6 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing 5
7 Joey Logano Team Penske 4
8 Paul Menard Wood Brothers Racing 3
9 Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing 2
10 Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing 1

STAGE 1

Joey Logano stayed out during a late-stage caution and emerged during the ensuing restart to win Stage 1 in Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs race at Kansas Speedway.

It was the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford’s 10th stage win of the season, and it came after he went two laps down earlier in the stage with a loose wheel.

Right behind him was Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

RELATED: Stage 1 results

Rounding out the top five were Daniel Suarez in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and Kyle Busch in the No. 18 JGR Toyota.

Series points leader Denny Hamlin led nine laps and placed eighth in the stage. Kyle Larson led 60 laps, but fell to 13th after the caution came out.

Coming off his first pole of the season, Richard Childress Racing driver Daniel Hemric quickly handed off the lead after pacing the field for five laps and finished 16th in the stage.

Ryan Newman and Alex Bowman made contact early in the stage, taking off a chunk of the right rear fender of the No. 6 Ford of Newman. It was contact between Newman and Roush Fenway Racing teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. with five laps remaining in the stage, however, that brought out the caution to set up the restart at the end of the stage.

Place Driver Team Pts
1 Joey Logano (P) Team Penske 10
2 Chase Elliott (P) Hendrick Motorsports 9
3 Daniel Suarez Stewart-Haas Racing 8
4 Martin Truex Jr. (P) Joe Gibbs Racing 7
5 Kyle Busch (P) Joe Gibbs Racing 6
6 Brad Keselowski (P) Team Penske 5
7 Ryan Blaney (P) Team Penske 4
8 Denny Hamlin (P) Joe Gibbs Racing 3
9 Erik Jones Joe Gibbs Racing 2
10 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing 1

Daniel Hemric is on the pole for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Is the Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender worthy of a spot on your roster? How should you navigate the playoff game format? We’ve dissected the numbers to offer a suggested lineup worthy of your Fantasy Live consideration.

PLAY NOW: Set your lineup | How the game works | Tips to set your lineup

RJ Kraft’s Fantasy Live lineup for race day at Kansas:
Playoff driver 1: Brad Keselowski
Playoff driver 2: Martin Truex Jr.
Non-playoff driver 1: Kurt Busch
Non-playoff driver 2: Aric Almirola
Garage: Kyle Busch

RELATED: Odds for Kansas | Lap averages | Weekend preview

Analysis: The most recent winner at Kansas — Keselowski — is the anchor to my lineup. He’s been solid here throughout his career and was solid in practice. I also like that given his position to the cutline (+20) that he and crew chief Paul Wolfe will be aggressive in maintaining track position and nabbing stage points. I also like Truex at this track. He swept the 2017 races here and I like the momentum he has in the playoffs.

For the garage, I am absolutely taking a playoff driver. The pick here centered around Busch, Kevin Harvick and Ryan Blaney. Blaney qualified the best of the three — third — but his 1.5-mile tracks numbers have been disappointing for much of the year with just three races of at least 30 points. Busch had great lap averages in final practice and his starting spot of 18th indicates the No. 18 team is all set in race trim. The bugaboo with him has been the inconsistency in the playoffs, but I think they have something to prove this weekend. And then there’s Harvick — who has been tremendous at this track with crew chief Rodney Childers — but will start all the way at the back in 40th. The lap averages for Harvick were solid. Starting toward the back didn’t bother Chase Elliott (52 points) or Kyle Larson (37 points) in the spring as each scored points in both stages as well. It’s more of a coin flip than I originally thought and I’m going with Busch for the better starting spot and lap averages.

On the non-playoff side, I thought Kurt Busch looked the best in practice and has been a steady hand on the intermediates all year. The second spot is a close call and I am not going to be fooled by all the teams that trimmed out their cars for a strong starting spot. This spot for me is between Jimmie Johnson and Almirola. I like Almirola’s recent Kansas results — four straight top 12s, while Johnson has been solid of late on the 1.5-mile tracks (five races with at least 26 points in the past six on that track length). The seven-time champ is a more popular play among users and I like being a little bit of a contrarian so I’ll take the Stewart-Haas Racing driver.

On the bonus picks side, I will take Keselowski to win Stage 1, Kyle Busch to win Stage 2 and Harvick to win the race with Toyota as the manufacturer pick.

Each week in this space, we’ll also highlight two Props Challenge items for players.

MORE: Play the Props Challenge today

1. Does a driver below the cutline advance to the Round of 8? The drivers below the cutline are Alex Bowman (-18), Chase Elliott (-22), Clint Bowyer (-24) and William Byron (-27) with reigning series champion Joey Logano holding the final transfer spot. I don’t see Logano or his Penske teammate Keselowski or even Harvick — starting at the back — coming up short of advancing and I think everyone above them is relatively secure. My pick here is NO.

2. O/U 8.5 playoff drivers will score stage points at Kansas. The playoff drivers are pretty strung out in the starting grid due to some non-playoff teams going all in on qualifying trim. That said, the better long-run cars belonged to the playoff field and I think that will show itself in stage points. So while the starting spots may say under, I am going OVER as I expect the cream — in this case playoff drivers — to rise to the top in each stage.

Last weekend the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series was at one of its two superspeedway tracks, where long-shot winners happen frequently. We identified Ryan Blaney as a value play despite his 20-1 odds, and he delivered, securing his place among the final eight drivers in the playoffs.

This week, we’re back to the series’ bread and butter — the 1.5-mile track. The list of 1.5-mile winners in 2019 is mostly a who’s who of NASCAR:

• Atlanta*: Brad Keselowski
• Las Vegas 1: Joey Logano
Texas: Denny Hamlin
Kansas 1: Keselowski
Charlotte: Martin Truex, Jr.
Chicagoland: Alex Bowman
Kentucky: Kurt Busch
Las Vegas 2: Truex, Jr.

(*Note: Atlanta was the only 1.5-mile track run without aero-ducts, and also is the only 1.5-mile track with incredibly high tire wear. For the rest of this article, I will not be including Atlanta when I refer to 1.5-mile tracks.)

Every single 1.5-mile winner made the playoffs, while all but Kurt Busch are still alive in the playoffs. Unless something incredible happens, we’re looking at a race for the win among the favorites. To find the value plays among this group, I’ll rely on my statistical model. The top factors in my model for this weekend’s race are:

Year-to-date driver rating
Average green flag speed at 1.5-mile aero-duct tracks
Driver rating over the last eight Kansas races
Final practice 10-lap average

RELATED: Field’s winning odds

I’ll also use practice data over 15 consecutive laps and longer to manually tweak model results. Since there isn’t historical data for these metrics, they can’t be part of the model, but they will give us an idea of who is fast over a longer race run.

We’re on a good run with Blaney last week and Larson two weeks ago at Dover, as well as pegging Martin Truex, Jr. at 14-1 odds at the last 1.5-mile race at Las Vegas. Let’s see if we can continue the run with a trio of playoff drivers at Kansas.

Kyle Busch +500

Busch is my model’s favorite to win, and it likes him at anything longer than +400. Fortunately, bettors across the country can find him at odds longer than this. Busch is +500 at DraftKings Sportsbook and +450 at MGM properties.

The guy they call Rowdy hasn’t won a 1.5-mile race this year, but that hasn’t stopped him from putting up some strong numbers at this track type. Busch has the third-best average green flag speed at 1.5-mile tracks. If we remove each driver’s misleading finishes from the tally, Busch stays in third with an average green flag speed rank of 5.3, just fractions behind Kevin Harvick’s 5.2 and Chase Elliott’s 5.0 rank.

Harvick starts 40th after failing pre-qualifying inspection four times, and Elliott wasn’t as strong as Busch in either practice session. Notably, Elliott was 0.3 seconds slower per lap than Busch over every long-run metric that each driver ran in final practice.

MORE: From The Action Network

Qualifying was a bit strange, with playoff teams focusing on long-run speed. That makes it notable that Kyle Busch qualified among the top half of the playoff drivers. There are many weaker drivers starting in front of him, so expect him to wind up at the front of the field rather quickly.

Busch has eight straight top-10 finishes at Kansas, including six inside the top five before a misleading 30th-place finish earlier this year.

Joey Logano +1400

Like Busch, Logano also shows up strong in a combination of important metrics. His average green flag speed at 1.5-mile tracks during day races is sixth, while his average finish is second. Among all 1.5-mile races, Logano ranks fourth in average green flag speed, and he holds the best average finish.

Logano also has a strong Kansas history, with seven top-five finishes in his last 10 incident-free Kansas races. That includes five finishes of fifth or better in six incident-free Kansas races during the high downforce era (2013-2015, plus 2019). Additionally, Logano has finished outside of the top eight only once in six Kansas races during the playoffs.

Finally, Logano showed well in practice. Yes, he was only 17th over 10 consecutive laps, but when adding five more laps he really popped. Thirteen of the 16 drivers faster than him over 10 laps also made a 15-lap run, with only non-playoff drivers Paul Menard, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Daniel Hemric failing to do so. Logano leapt to fifth on the charts over 15 consecutive laps, meaning he gained nine positions among drivers that made both 10- and 15-lap runs.

Logano can be found at this price at Station Casinos in Las Vegas. His deep starting position (29th) presents a minor concern, depressing his chances to win in my model slightly. That said, there’s still value down to +1000.

William Byron +4000

Byron has been a sneaky driver at 1.5-mile tracks this year. He ranks eighth in average green flag speed at this track type in 2019. If we just look at the last four 1.5-mile races, Byron has an average green flag speed between fifth and 10th, while posing a sequence of great results during that run.

In practice, Byron followed a similar trajectory to Logano, moving from 18th to ninth in final practice as the number of consecutive laps increased from 10 to 15. He even leapfrogged Logano over 25 consecutive laps.

Kansas has not been a good track for Byron in the Cup Series, which may be why his odds are so depressed. He had two DNFs in 2018, and a 20th place in the first race this year. However, that’s a pretty small sample size to rely on, especially with two misleading results. He was strong at Kansas in the other NASCAR national series, where he placed fourth at Kansas in his lone Xfinity race and won his only Gander Trucks appearance at the track.

Byron is in a must-win situation to advance in the playoffs after his crash at Talladega. That gives him some additional upside to gamble and race aggressively. I’d buy Byron down to +3000.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Just win.

That’s the game plan for all three Hendrick Motorsports drivers currently below the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 12 cutline heading into Sunday’s elimination race at Kansas Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Alex Bowman is in the best shape among his teammates, sitting 13th in points, 18 points below Joey Logano. Chase Elliott is next in line with a 22-point deficit, while William Byron is 12th facing a 27-point gap with Clint Bowyer just ahead of him.

While Bowman, Elliott and Byron are still mathematically able to race their way into the next round on points, that task is enormous, and the likelihood is minimal. It’s almost a guarantee they would need drivers like the Team Penske bunch of Logano and Brad Keselowski to falter.

RELATED: Playoff standings | Starting lineup

On top of that, all three teams admittedly didn’t have exactly what they were looking for in Friday’s pair of practice sessions at the 1.5-mile track. Byron was the fastest in opening practice in the 20th slot, while final practice saw Bowman earn Hendrick’s best time with the 15th-fastest pace.

So, are they concerned?

“Yeah,” Bowman said after qualifying 16th on Saturday. “We were a 30th-place race car yesterday in practice, so I’m pretty worried for sure.”

Bowman noted crew chief Greg Ives and the No. 88 team made adjustments, but it’s unknown just how much those changes will help until after the green flag drops on Sunday.

“We have what we have now,” Bowman said, who finished second at Kansas in the spring. “… We gotta be aggressive the whole time. I don’t know if we even made any big changes or not, I’m just really hoping we did with how our car practiced. We’re going to be aggressive. We have to get stage points if we have any hope of closing the points gap.”

The game plan is the same for defending Kansas winner Elliott, but he’s cognizant of that fact that going over the edge in favor of aggression can easily take you out of the postseason, as well.

“I feel like you can be aggressive, but you don’t want to overreach,” Elliott said. “I feel like my time in racing, especially since I’ve been in Cup, I feel like I’ve gotten myself in more trouble when I try to do too much than when I just try to do my job. I’m just going to try to do my job this weekend.”

In Byron’s case, Talladega treated him well until it abruptly didn’t, as he crashed with 25 laps to go after winning the first stage. But the No. 24 team can only focus forward on the surefire way to advance to the next round – obtaining Byron’s first career Cup Series victory.

“You have to put that behind you and think about what we have to do to win,” Byron said. “Ultimately, if we want to advance past this weekend, we’re probably going to have to do that. Then, if we want to make it through the next round, we’re going to have to do that, too. So, that’s kind of what it takes.”

While the speed might be lacking in their Chevrolet-powered machines this weekend, what the Hendrick brigade does have in their favor is how Kansas has proven to be more of a wild-card race than initially anticipated. The same can happen this time around.

For now, glimmers of hope are what all the three of them cling onto as the daunting reality of a non-Hendrick Round of 8 looms in the distance.

But winning would fix everything on elimination Sunday.

“Tomorrow is a new day, and anything can happen,” Bowman said. “Hopefully we have a race car capable of winning because I think that’s what it’s going to take.”

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Push came to shove between Cole Custer and Tyler Reddick on Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway.

The two NASCAR Xfinity Series playoff drivers came to blows on pit road after Reddick’s No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet made contact with Custer’s Stewart-Haas Racing No. 00 Ford shortly after a restart with five laps left in the Kansas Lottery 300, the first race of the Xfinity Series’ Round of 8.

RELATED: Race results | Brandon Jones prevails

Custer brushed the wall and faded to an 11th-place finish as Reddick drove on to finish a close second to first-time winner Brandon Jones.

Custer approached Reddick on pit road and placed a hand on his left shoulder, stating, “you can be a dumb(expletive),” then Reddick retaliated by grabbing Custer by the firesuit. That’s when the shoving began and the altercation escalated.

“I thought I could just go up and talk to him, but he went berserk when I laid a hand on him,” Custer said after the scuffle. “I wasn’t going to rough him up, I just put a hand on him.

“Everybody just grabbed onto each other as hard as they could,” he added.

Custer wound up on the pavement after crews for both teams converged on their scrap.

“I was just frustrated that he can’t keep his car on the bottom (lane) and then runs up and puts us in the wall,” Custer said. “I mean, if he wants to wreck cars and put them in the wall from time to time, that’s fine, but when it affects me, I’m not very happy with it. I just went over to talk to him and say that.”

On the contrary, Reddick felt that it was Custer who was the aggressor after quickly walking down to approach the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing driver.

“I understand Cole’s frustration 100 percent,” Reddick said. “We’re trying to lock ourselves into Homestead and he came up to talk after the race and, see him put a hand on me, I put a hand on him back. That’s just how it’s going to be if we’re going to have a conversation that way. Out of breath, but had a little fight there with some people. It was a little bit of fun. … I think a lot of Cole and his driving ability and a lot of that team, so just heat of the moment. We’re pissed off. I’m sure we’ll talk about it soon, maybe today, tomorrow, who knows, maybe have a beer over it.”

Although the dust may clear sooner rather than later between the two competitors, their opinions on what went down don’t line up at the moment.

“It was more hands than words before we could even begin to talk,” Reddick said. “From there, other people were jumping in and at that point, you’re just trying to defend yourself. It is what it is, it’s part of it.”

“It was just hands on the shoulders and then I did it right back,” he added. “From there, I get grabbed from behind and got headlocked into the ground and from there, really don’t know what’s going on.”

Reddick indicated that he wasn’t mad after the altercation, but he was more frustrated in how certain Stewart-Haas Racing crew members jumped into the tussle.

“Just disappointed in his crew members not letting us handle it amongst ourselves,” Reddick said. “Some guys want to take cheap shots and hop in on somebody that’s not giving somebody else any attention. It’s just between me and him, and that’s the way it should have been. Obviously, it didn’t go that way.”

“I know who did it,” he added. “I know whose face it is. I know his name. Don’t care to, but I’ll remember that.”

Contributing: Staff reports

After Saturday’s Kansas Lottery 300 took a sharp turn with 16 laps left, Brandon Jones sped away on two straight restarts to collect his first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory in a race that ended with Playoff drivers Cole Custer and Tyler Reddick brawling on pit road.

Jones stretched his advantage after a restart on Lap 196 of 200, with first Chase Briscoe and then Reddick giving chase. Jones held off both pursuers and crossed the finish line .272 seconds ahead of Reddick, with Briscoe .623 seconds behind the leader.

RELATED: Race results | Playoff standings

“My foot was literally shaking on the accelerator on that last lap,” Jones said in Victory Lane. “I’m not even sure if I was wide open at the time that I was doing it. There was a lot of nerves and a lot of emotion going through my mind, but I saw it coming, and I was pretty pumped.”

Jones’ triumph in the Round of 8 opener denied the eight remaining playoff drivers an automatic berth in the four-driver field for the Xfinity Series title at the Nov. 16 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Four playoff drivers followed Jones in order at the finish.

Contact from Reddick’s Chevrolet forced Custer into the outside wall after the final restart, and Custer dropped to 11th at the finish. After both drivers exited their cars on pit road, Custer approached Reddick to voice his displeasure, placing a hand on Reddick’s shoulder.

Reddick responded with both hands to the collar of Custer’s firesuit, and the drivers fell to the pavement while grappling, only to be separated by crew members.

MORE: Reddick, Custer tussle on pit road

“I put my hand on him, and he just went berserk,” said Custer, who led a race-high 85 laps and won the second stage. “I thought we had a good car. I thought we had a chance to win.”

“If he puts a hand on me, I’m going to put a hand on him back,” Reddick said. “That’s just how it’s going to be if we’re having a conversation that way… It was just the heat of the moment — we’re pissed off. I’m sure we’ll talk about it here soon, maybe today, tomorrow.

“I obviously didn’t want to get into his quarter panel, but if I lift, I get passed. I hate that it happened to him, but we’ll try to move forward.”

Briscoe was leading, with pole winner and series leader Christopher Bell right behind when the two drivers closed fast on the No. 0 of Garrett Smithley on Lap 184. Smithley steered toward the top of the track and pinched Briscoe’s Ford into the outside wall.

With no room to maneuver, Bell plowed into Briscoe’s car, sending Bell’s No. 20 Supra sliding across the infield grass with major damage to the right front. Briscoe recovered to run third, after his crew replaced the rear bumper cover on his No. 98 Mustang, but Bell had to settle for a 12th-place finish.

Bell, however, retained the series lead by 11 points over Custer and 12 over third-place Reddick, as the “Big Three” remained comfortably above the cut line for the Championship 4 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Justin Allgaier ran fifth and is fourth in the standings, two points ahead of Briscoe.

Austin Cindric’s championship hopes took a severe blow when the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford tangled with the No. 18 Toyota of Harrison Burton on Lap 70. After an intense exchange of positions moments before, Cindric tagged the right rear of Burton’s car, turning it sideways.

But Burton remained in Cindric’s path, and both cars sustained damage when they collided in the middle of the track. Burton retired with a broken right front suspension. Ultimately, with a succession of unscheduled pit stops, Cindric finished 25th, six laps down, and dropped to eighth in the Playoff standings, 30 points below the cutoff for the Championship 4.

Jeremy Clements, Justin Haley, John Hunter Nemechek, Ryan Sieg and Ross Chastain finished sixth through 10th, respectively.

Contributing: Staff reports

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – With nothing set in stone for the 2020 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, Corey LaJoie is doing everything in his power to help his cause.

Prior to his qualifying effort for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), LaJoie indicated he has yet to sign a contract for next year, but he hopes to be back with Go Fas Racing and the No. 32 Ford Mustang entry.

“Every talk I’ve had, we’ve been working toward me being back where I’m at,” LaJoie said. “I feel like I’ve had good communication with my group … just getting to the point where we’re having some fun and I like the guys I’m with now.

“I haven’t signed anything, if that’s what the answer is, but I’m working toward making that happen.”

LaJoie also clarified what a potential relationship with Stewart-Haas Racing might look like if Go Fas Racing were able to team up with the Ford Performance powerhouse

“I think it’s just going to be Go Fas buying cars from Stewart-Haas as opposed to what you guys would say is an alliance,” LaJoie said. “There would be some sort of help, I hope, because four-year-old Front Row cars we’re taking and running with every week, obviously, there’s room to improve there.”

RELATED: Silly Season tracker | Kansas weekend schedule

From a business and personal standpoint, LaJoie continues to build relationships with companies to come on board the No. 32 car, specifically those who want to dip their toe in the NASCAR waters without the price tag of partnering with the larger organizations in the garage.

LaJoie is also focused on getting the best power under the hood of his race car in order to produce better results on a consistent basis, rather than wait until superspeedways to squeak out top-10 finishes like his seventh-place result in last Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway.

“I’m working on my end with partners to try to upgrade the engine package from that B-tiered engine package to the A-tiered engine package, maybe not for all the races but for some,” LaJoie said. “The faster that you make that horse that I sit on every week, the faster it hopefully puts me in the conversation in the next couple years for a race-winning capable car.”

With an outlook on the future, the 28-year-old knows an uptick in on-track performance will only improve his chances to compete for a more competitive ride. That’s just another reason why he’s directly involved with the day-to-day operations of improving the organization as a whole.

“I’ve had to be because the situations I’ve been in throughout my career, I’ve never been able to just sit back because my phone doesn’t ring,” LaJoie said. “It used to ring, but now my on-track stock is just low enough where I’m not in those conversations to get in the 37 ride or when some of these guys start to think about retiring. I’m trying to get my on-track stock to where I’m in those conversations because I know I can do it.

“That’s why I’m working hard to get my on-track stock better because, perception wise, if we can get that 32 car running better, I think that carries a little bit more weight making that car incrementally better each and every year with me behind the wheel on and off the track. When those guys do have conversations about who they’re going to put in there next, hopefully my name is in those conversations.”

Away from the race track, LoJoie hones in on his social media presence, which includes his “Sunday Money” podcast with Motor Racing Network. LaJoie is working tirelessly on his various social media platforms, hoping his personality will attract more dollars.

“It gets increasing more important every year because that’s the second question sponsors ask, ‘Well, how many Instagram followers, how many Twitter followers?’”LaJoie said. “So, I’m working on that and I have fun with it. I’m just gaining that off the track because there’s only so much I can do inside the race car.”

Overall, LaJoie thinks he is exceeding the expectations the No. 32 team set out to accomplish this season, but he’s not willing to settle with a focus on the greater goal.

“I’ve been running the best I have in my Cup career and Go Fas and their 32 car are running the best they have in their life span,” LaJoie said. “I think that carries a little bit of weight, but it’s still not quite good enough.”

The teal-colored pit wall at Kansas Speedway was not lost on Sherry Pollex, Martin Truex Jr.’s longtime girlfriend. Pollex reacted to the paint job on Twitter.

“Can’t get over how amazing this is!!!” Pollex posted. “Thank you @kansasspeedway for the teal walls to raise awareness for #OvarianCancer!!  Looking forward to seeing everyone Sunday!”

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The teal walls had special meaning for Pollex, who has battled the disease since her diagnosis in 2014. Pollex and Truex also have raised substantial amounts of money for children with cancer through the activities of Truex’s foundation.