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This is it. Sunday’s Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard is the final opportunity for drivers to qualify for the postseason before NASCAR’s playoffs get underway next week in Las Vegas.

Fourteen of 16 playoff spots are already locked up, with Clint Bowyer currently holding the 15th position, followed by Daniel Suarez and Ryan Newman, who are tied for the final spot with 617 points.

Seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson is currently on the outside looking in, sitting 18 points below the cutoff line.

To make this week’s NASCAR Props Challenge picks, I’ll rely heavily on betting odds to project expected driver performance.

1. Which playoff bubble driver will finish higher? Daniel Suarez or Ryan Newman?

Suarez is currently a -140 favorite against Newman in driver matchups at the Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook.

Let’s let Vegas do the work here for us.

Pick: Suarez


2. Will a driver with a previous Brickyard victory win on Sunday? Yes or No?

Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick are past winners who are also among the favorites this week. Jimmie Johnson, Ryan Newman and Paul Menard have also won this race, but they are listed among the longshots.

This is really close for me, but I’m going to take the field.

Pick: No


3. Which Team Penske driver has the better finish? Brad Keselowski or Joey Logano?

Once again, Vegas did the heavy lifting here, making Keselowski a -125 favorite over Logano in early-week driver matchups.

Pick: Keselowski


4. Three of the last six Indy winners have come from the first two rows. Will Sunday’s winner start in the top four? Yes or No?

Download the FREE Action Network app to finish reading this article and get the rest of PJ Walsh’s NASCAR Props Challenge Picks.

No. Driver Sponsor Make Organization
00 Landon Cassill Sherfick Companies Chevrolet StarCom Racing
1 Kurt Busch Monster Energy Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing
2 Brad Keselowski Discount Tire Ford Team Penske
3 Austin Dillon Symbicort Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing
4 Kevin Harvick Mobil 1 Ford Stewart-Haas Racing
6 Ryan Newman Acorns Ford Roush Fenway Racing
8 Daniel Hemric Liberty National Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing
9 Chase Elliott NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
10 Aric Almirola Smithfield / Meijer Ford Stewart-Haas Racing
11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
12 Ryan Blaney Wabash National Ford Team Penske
13 Ty Dillon GEICO Chevrolet Germain Racing
14 Clint Bowyer Rush Truck Centers / Cummins Ford Stewart-Haas Racing
15 Ross Chastain Xchange of America Chevrolet Premium Motorsports
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fastenal Ford Roush Fenway Racing
18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
19 Martin Truex Jr. Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
20 Erik Jones Stanley Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
21 Paul Menard Menards / Dutch Boy Ford Wood Brothers Racing
22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford Team Penske
24 William Byron Liberty University Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
27 Ryan Sieg SciAps Chevrolet Premium Motorsports
32 Corey LaJoie ARK.io Ford Go Fas Racing
34 Michael McDowell Long John Silver’s Ford Front Row Motorsports
36 Matt Tifft Southeastern Equipment & Supply Ford Front Row Motorsports
37 Chris Buescher Kroger Fast Lane to Flavor Chevrolet JTG Daugherty Racing
38 David Ragan Mannington Commercial Ford Front Row Motorsports
41 Daniel Suarez Haas Automation Ford Stewart-Haas Racing
42 Kyle Larson McDonald’s Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing
43 Bubba Wallace World Wide Technology Chevrolet Richard Petty Motorsports
47 Ryan Preece Kroger Chevrolet JTG Daugherty Racing
48 Jimmie Johnson Ally Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
51 BJ McLeod Jacob Companies Ford Petty Ware Racing
52 Garrett Smithley Honest Abe Roofing Ford Rick Ware Racing
53 Josh Bilicki AQRE Ford Rick Ware Racing
54 JJ Yeley TBA Chevrolet Rick Ware Racing
77 Reed Sorenson TBA Chevrolet Spire Motorsports
88 Alex Bowman Nationwide Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
95 Matt DiBenedetto Horizon Transport Toyota Leavine Family Racing
96 Parker Kligerman TRD 40th Anniversary Toyota Gaunt Brothers Racing

While it was a dramatic Bojangles’ Southern 500 on several levels Sunday night – from the challenging weather to the challenging competition on track – the playoff picture with one race to set the final two positions of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup playoff field remains as intriguing as it could possibly be. 

This year’s Southern 500 got a late start because of poor weather, but by the time Erik Jones took the checkered flag early Monday morning, the race was every bit the traditional wild card it was expected to be for the four drivers challenging for the final two Playoff berths.

Those drivers – Clint Bowyer, Daniel Suarez, Jimmie Johnson and Ryan Newman – swapped positions in the standings after Darlington’s checkered flag, but the overall picture essentially remains the same. Only 18 points separate Johnson in 18th place from Suarez in 16th as the series heads to Indianapolis Motor Speedway for this weekend’s regular season finale. The top 16 ranked drivers after Sunday’s Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard (September 8 at 2 p.m ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, IMS Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will be Playoff-eligible.

Despite a discouraging finishing statistic going into the race, Bowyer instead earned the best finish of his career there and took stage points to boot. The driver of the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford finished sixth at Darlington – only his second top-10 result there in 14 starts – and moved into 15th place in the playoff standings.

RELATED: Big night for Bowyer | Johnson on brink of missing playoffs

Similarly, Suarez, also rallied to the best finish of his Darlington career – his first top 20. The driver of the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford finished 11th and is now tied in points with Newman, the driver of the No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford, who finished 23rd at Darlington – but Suarez holds the tiebreaker and is in the 16th and final position set to transfer into the NASCAR Playoffs.

Johnson, the seven-time Monster Energy Series champion and driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, is 18th in the standings, 18 points behind Suarez and Newman and 26 points behind Bowyer. A three-time Darlington winner, Johnson was on pace for a top-five finish only to be collected in a late-race wreck. He was second in the opening stage for a dose of bonus points and was running fourth when he was in the accident.

And Newman, who has a solid history at the Darlington track, is in 17th in the playoff picture – one spot outside the postseason. He and Suarez tangled mid-race and, judging by the post-race reaction, that may be significant as the two compete at Indy this week – a place where Newman won the 2013 race from the pole position.

Although frustrated after the race, Newman realizes he’s still absolutely within playoff reach coming to a track where he’s hoisted a trophy before.

“We got spun and we came back and we did not have a top-10 finish, so it’s unfortunate,’’ Newman said of the incident with Suarez. “We lost some points today, but we’ve got a lot of fight in us and we’ll go into the last one here in the regular season and fight.”

As for the situation with Suarez, Newman said, “I have to watch the replay. They said he hit me, but I don’t know. He had me jacked up sideways going into the corner, so do I owe him? Probably a little something.’’

RELATED: Suarez, Newman offer their sides of incident | Suarez, Newman make contact

Suarez, however, was confident Newman would see things differently once he watched a replay of the incident.

“That’s a racing thing,’’ Suarez said of the incident. “I didn’t touch him. As a driver it’s very, very easy to know that the guy behind you is very, very close and to feel that air, but he’s experienced to know. Once he sees the race, he’s going to realize that we didn’t touch. It was everything aero and just hard racing, that’s it.’’

Bowyer, meanwhile, was absolutely encouraged by the rally he and his team pulled off this week. He had been inside the playoff picture until after the Bristol Night Race and was a season-high eighth in the standings in late April, so the last few months have been a true test of gumption for him and the team. While he reiterated that he hardly feels “comfortable” heading into the regular-season finale, it’s a far better position than it could have been.

“We put ourselves back in [playoff] position, but kid you not, I want to make the playoffs, but I want to make the playoffs to get past the first round and to hit that thing in stride and to race to our capabilities,’’ Bowyer said after the race. 

“Tonight was our capability. Single-digit finishes we’re capable of rattling off and this was a good shot in the arm, a momentum boost for our race team going into that last race in Indy. And if we can do that again is what I’m looking for because you always have to be looking down the road.’’

RELATED: How the playoff picture looks heading to Indianapolis

Looking down the road may be exactly the boost Johnson could use. He is the winningest driver in the field at Indianapolis with four victories (2006, 2008, 2009, 2012). He also has a runner-up (2013) and a third place (2016) finish there.

He certainly did not, however, expect one of his best venues to ultimately be the arbiter of his 2019 Playoff reality. One of only three drivers in history to win seven Cup titles – NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt are the others – Johnson has never in his illustrious career missed qualifying for the playoffs.

“I had at least 15 years with a lot of luck of my side, seven years of championships and having two or three bad years is just part of it,’’ Johnson reflected after Darlington. “I keep saying that we’re getting there and tonight we showed it from the way we qualified to how we ran on those stages. I was running fourth when the accident took place in Turn 3 and I just had nowhere to go.’’

He remains optimistic, however, and with his track record at Indy, how could he not.

“We are running out of days and if we miss it, it’s just going to be by a few (points) I believe,’’ Johnson said. “If I look back over the first half of the season, I see a lot of races where we gave away a few points. So it’s kind of unfair to put all the pressure on one race at Indy. But it is what it is, and we are going to go there to win a race.”

Name: Taylor
Current City: Toledo, Ohio 
Member Since:2018

Getting to KNOW Taylor:

Q.  How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“I grew up in a NASCAR household, so I’ve always loved attending races and in the past few years I’ve gotten really into the sport and followed it closely because of all of the young drivers coming into it.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“My favorite part of NASCAR is the personalities of the drivers and how much they relate to us, the fans, so much. The clashes between each of them are always entertaining but also even more than that, seeing the drivers get along and congratulate each other shows how great this sport really is. It brings people together.”

Q. What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“My favorite NASCAR memory was the 2017 Pure Michigan 400 in the last three laps of the race, Kyle Larson went between two cars to take the lead and won the race. Being my favorite driver, I was so excited to see this monumental moment happen in person. Definitely the most exciting moment I’ve experienced live.”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Driver: “Kyle Larson.”
Track: “Michigan International Speedway.”
Race Weekend Traditions: “I love going up to the track each day there is an event for the Truck, Xfinity, and Cup races, practices and qualifying. Also getting a foot-long corn dog at Michigan is a pretty great tradition.”
Sponsor: “My new favorite sponsor would have to be Menards because they have a fun store to look around in AND the wonderful No. 12 Ryan Blaney drives for them!”

Q. What are some of your hobbies?
“In my free time I like to hang out with my dog Jake, listen to music and of course keep up on the latest NASCAR news and drama!”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK TAYLOR FOR HER CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HER IN 2019! Look for Taylor on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.

Ryan Sieg placed 14th in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200 at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

Cole Custer came away with the victory in the race, with Tyler Reddick finishing second, and Ryan Blaney placing third. Christopher Bell took fourth place, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr to round out the top five.

Reddick picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Blaney finished out front in Stage 2 to pad his totals for the weekend.

Sieg earned 23 points over the weekend, increasing his total to 647 on the season. He ranks No. 12 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series overall points standings. Sieg did not earn any playoff points and remains at one for the season.

The seventh-year driver qualified in 13th position at 167.032 mph.

Sieg still is looking for his first career win but owns five top-five finishes and 17 finishes in the top 10.

Sieg battled 37 other cars in the field and the race endured five cautions and 23 caution laps. There were five lead changes before the checkered flag.

Ryan Sieg Driver Page | Race Center

Noah Gragson finished eighth in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200 at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

It’s Gragson’s 15th top-10 finish of the season.

Cole Custer earned the checkered flag in the race, with Tyler Reddick finishing second, and Ryan Blaney placing third. Christopher Bell brought home fourth place, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr to round out the top five.

Reddick picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Blaney finished out front in Stage 2 to pad his totals for the weekend.

Gragson earned 30 points over the weekend, increasing his total to 801 on the season. He ranks No. 7 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series overall standings. Gragson did not earn any playoff points and remains at one for the season.

The second-year driver qualified in eighth position at 169.001 mph.

Gragson still is looking for his first career win but boasts eight top-five finishes and 18 finishes in the top 10.

There were 38 cars in the field and the race endured five cautions and 23 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag, there were five lead changes.

Noah Gragson Driver Page | Race Center

Justin Haley finished 11th in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200 at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

Cole Custer earned the checkered flag in the race, with Tyler Reddick finishing second, and Ryan Blaney placing third. Christopher Bell took fourth place, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr to round out the top five.

Reddick picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Blaney won Stage 2.

Haley earned 28 points over the weekend, giving him 735 on the season. He ranks No. 9 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series overall standings. Haley did not muster any playoff points and remains at one for the season.

The second-year driver qualified in 12th position at 168.175 mph.

Haley still is looking for his first career win but boasts two top-five finishes and 16 finishes in the top 10.

Haley battled 37 other cars in the field and the race endured five cautions and 23 caution laps. There were five lead changes before the checkered flag.

Justin Haley Driver Page | Race Center

Dale Earnhardt Jr placed fifth in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200 at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

It’s Earnhardt’s first top-five finish of the season.

Cole Custer brought home the win in the race, with Tyler Reddick finishing second, and Ryan Blaney crossing the finish line third.

Reddick picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Blaney took Stage 2.

Earnhardt did not collect any playoff points Saturday and still is seeking his first playoff points of the season.

The 23-year driver qualified in 14th position at 166.964 mph.

Earnhardt has tallied 24 career victories, 69 top-five finishes and has placed in the top 10 in 93 races.

Earnhardt battled 37 other cars in the field and the race saw five cautions and 23 caution laps. There were five lead changes before the checkered flag.

Get Dale Earnhardt Jr Gear | Race Center

Alex Labbe crossed the finish line 17th in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW 200 at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

Cole Custer brought home the win in the race, with Tyler Reddick following in second, and Ryan Blaney placing third. Christopher Bell took fourth place, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr in the No. 5 spot.

Reddick picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Blaney took Stage 2 to pad his totals for the weekend.

Labbe earned 20 points over the weekend, increasing his total to 92 on the year. He ranks No. 38 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series points standings. Labbe did not pick up any playoff points Saturday and still is seeking his first playoff points of the season.

The fourth-year driver qualified in 17th position at 165.431 mph.

Labbe has yet to secure his first NASCAR win but has placed in the top 10 in one race.

Labbe battled 37 other cars in the field and the race endured five cautions and 23 caution laps. There were five lead changes before the checkered flag.

Race Center

Aric Almirola placed 17th in the Bojangles’ Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway on Sunday.

Erik Jones brought home the win in the race, with Kyle Larson finishing second, and Kyle Busch crossing the finish line third. Kevin Harvick took fourth place, followed by Brad Keselowski in the No. 5 spot.

Kurt Busch picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Kyle Busch took Stage 2 to pad his totals for the weekend.

Almirola earned 20 points over the weekend, giving him 674 on the season. He ranks No. 14 in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series overall standings. Almirola did not collect any playoff points and remains at one for the season.

The 12-year driver qualified in 30th position at 168.244 mph.

Almirola has tallied two career victories, 16 top-five finishes and has placed in the top 10 in 59 races.

There were 39 cars in the field and the race endured seven cautions and 35 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag, there were 13 lead changes.

Aric Almirola Driver Page | Get Aric Almirola Gear | Race Center