BROOKLYN, Mich. — Nearly a week removed from a pair of on-track incidents Kyle Busch had with William Byron and Bubba Wallace, the trio had a chance to hash things out Friday at Michigan International Speedway.

All three drivers spent time in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series hauler prior to Friday’s on-track activities at the 2-mile speedway. For Busch, he’s still struggling to figure out why it happened to be two former competitors who raced for his Kyle Busch Motorsports teams in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series.

“It’s kind of surprising that you get into it with two former drivers because you would kind of expect a little bit more or different than you would from some other competitors out there,” Busch said. “So, I guess I just didn’t quite get that.

“As far as conversations went today, there’s a better understanding between the both of them. So, move forward.”

RELATED: Busch spins early at Watkins Glen | Byron takes shot at Busch

With the Byron incident, Busch insisted there was unnecessary contact made by the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports car in Turn 1, which resulted in Busch spinning on Lap 2.

“He came down and chopped me and hit me in my left front, which just spun me out,” Busch said. “I think it was avoidable.”

Byron still holds a different view of what happened.

“I felt like I gave him enough room; he felt like I didn’t give him enough room,” Byron said. “Obviously, it’s just racing and stuff like that happens.”

What Busch didn’t take lightly was how Byron’s crew chief, Chad Knaus, encouraged Byron to retaliate during the race after Busch nudged Byron’s car through the grass as he entered the inner loop following the initial incident.

Busch said a crew member shouldn’t tell the driver how to handle those situations.

LISTEN: Knaus urges retaliation in Scanner Sounds

“I think spotters and crew chiefs don’t need to encourage their drivers to do (expletive); they need to do their job,” Busch said. “Focus on race strategy and focus on spotting. Then, when it comes down to the mental game and the mental aspect of it, you figure out how to do that off the track, behind closed doors.”

Byron was in favor of discussing the skirmish with Busch in a face-to-face conversation rather than hearing what he had to say from other avenues, and he viewed it as a learning experience in his sophomore Monster Energy Series season.

“It’s better to talk about things than just hear things through the media and think that that’s how you should go about it,” Byron said. “I like to talk about it, especially to understand where they’re coming from. Obviously, I’ve only been in the sport for two years at this level, so I’m trying to learn what’s right or code to go by.”

RELATED: Wallace spins Busch at ‘The Glen’ | Wallace backs it into tire barrier

When it comes to Wallace, however, the second-year Cup Series driver is more willing to go against the grain when it comes to racing veteran drivers and standing up for what he believes in.

“What’s there to be afraid of?” Wallace said. “We’re out here to all race and go for the checkered flag and drivers who have been around the sport are obviously (set) in their ways. ‘You gotta do this, you gotta do that, you gotta do this’ to get their respect. I’m out there running my own race, running for my life, running for my career.”

While he and Busch agreed to disagree, Wallace noted they parted ways respectfully after clearing the air.

“Frustrations were high and whatnot, but we walked out of there and had a good conversation,” Wallace said. “We were kind of pissed off at each other. I would say something to piss him off and vice versa. But at the end of the day, we shook hands. Hell, he finished 11th. I’m not a threat to him. But at the same time, I wanna get my respect.”

NASCAR officials threw out the qualifying speeds of both Richard Childress Racing entries Friday after the two cars were found with unapproved alternators at Michigan International Speedway.

RELATED: Starting lineup

The No. 3 Chevrolet of Austin Dillon had qualified seventh and teammate Daniel Hemric’s No. 8 Chevy was 11th in Busch Pole Qualifying for Sunday’s Consumers Energy 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM). But officials disallowed both qualifying speeds after an inspection revealed the alternator infraction.

In addition, each crew chief will be fined $25,000 and 10 points will be deducted from the driver and owner standings for each team.

The L1-level violations mean the two Richard Childress Racing cars will make up the back row of the 38-car field.

Dillon posted the fastest speed in first practice at the 2-mile Michigan track. Hemric was fifth on the speed chart for the opening session.

BROOKLYN, Mich. — The last qualifier in Friday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series time trials at Michigan International Speedway will be first to the green flag on Sunday afternoon.

The final driver to make an attempt, after shadows started to shroud the track, Brad Keselowski covered the 2-mile distance in his No. 2 Team Penske Ford in 37.801 seconds (190.471 mph) to knock Kevin Harvick off the provisional pole for Sunday’s Consumers Energy 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Qualifying results | Weekend schedule

Harvick had turned a lap in 37.877 seconds (190.089 mph) before Keselowski made it an all-Ford front row with his blistering circuit. The Busch Pole Award is Keselowski’s second of the season, his second at Michigan and the 16th of his career.

Keselowski grew up in Rochester Hills, Michigan, and the pole is the first step toward winning for the first time at his home track.

“The Discount Tire Ford Mustang has been incredible since we unloaded,” Keselowski said. “We were really fast in practice, and then everybody started picking up a bunch toward the end of qualifying, and I got a little nervous.

“But (crew chief) Paul Wolfe and the team did a great job. We picked up just enough to get our second pole here. Hopefully, we can convert it into a win.”

To do so, Keselowski will have to be fast in race trim as well. With Michigan being the last non-impound event for the higher-downforce, lower-horsepower competition package introduced this season, crew chiefs have considerably more latitude in preparing the cars specifically for qualifying and then making wholesale changes for the race.

“There’s a lot you can do to optimize the car for today (in qualifying) that maybe won’t carry over to Sunday,” Keselowski said. “But still, it’s good to be starting first, and I think we’ve got a lot of knobs to get her tuned in for the race.”

Hendrick Motorsports teammates William Byron (189.703 mph) and Alex Bowman (189.509 mph) claimed the third and fourth starting spots, respectively. Clint Bowyer and Chase Elliott, last Sunday’s winner at Watkins Glen International, will occupy the fifth and sixth positions on the grid.

Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Paul Menard and Jimmie Johnson completed the top 10 in time trials. Denny Hamlin was 14th in the fastest Toyota with a lap at 188.093 mph.

Harvick was pleased with his second-place qualifying effort.

“It was a good day for our Mobil 1 Ford Mustang,” he said. “Track position is really important everywhere we go. Coming to Michigan, it is of the utmost importance, so this is a really good start to the weekend for us.”

Bowyer is 15th in the standings, 12 points ahead of Johnson and Ryan Newman, who are currently tied for the last available spot in the Cup Series playoffs. Newman qualified 20th, 10 positions behind Johnson.

Richard Childress Racing teammates Austin Dillon and Daniel Hemric posted the seventh and 11th fastest laps in qualifying, respectively, but their times were disallowed post-inspection because the cars were not running fully functioning alternators, as prescribed by NASCAR rules.

MORE: RCR’s qualifying speeds thrown out

Dillon and Hemric will start from the rear of the field.

Two practice sessions for the Monster Energy Series are scheduled Saturday. Sunday’s 400-mile main event is the 23rd of 36 points-paying races for the circuit.

Contributing: Staff reports

A Michigan native, a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion and a man who closely follows the nuances of the sport, Brad Keselowski has long had the Michigan International Speedway winner’s circle on his to-do list.

Now, to do.

The driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford was second fastest in opening practice Friday in preparation for Sunday’s Consumers Energy 400 at the Michigan two-miler (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and while he doesn’t want to read too much into that one present and promising statistic, there are plenty of other reasons to consider him a favorite for this weekend’s race.

RELATED: Full Michigan schedule | First Michigan practice

Not only does the track hold a sentimental place for the Rochester Hills, Michigan, native, Keselowski has been good there. Really good. He has been runner-up twice and holds 11 top-10 finishes in 20 Monster Energy Series starts – including the last three races. He was sixth in the season’s first stop at Michigan in June. He was runner-up in August last year. And in the 2017 race, Keselowski led a high 105 laps only to finish a gut-wrenching 17th.

“We had a great run here in the spring,” Keselowski said. “I thought we were more than capable of winning. We had a pit road issue very close to the end when we were in a position to grab the lead and take control of the race. That was really frustrating.

“I felt like we had the speed last spring to be in contention at the end. Everything has to fall your way and you have to execute as well, but that didn’t happen for us here and it hasn’t happened for us.”

But, he noted of his near chart-topping practice speed: “It looks like we are off to a good start this weekend. We have really good speed. We are one day into a three-day weekend so it is a bit early and a presumption to say anything beyond that, but it is a good start, nonetheless.”

RELATED: Three Michigan favorites | Michigan paint schemes

So Keselowski and his team will take that. It has been an interesting dynamic this year that this team hasn’t garnered the headlines despite a consistently solid, three-victory, playoff-assured season. Only championship leader Kyle Busch and his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. have won more races (four victories each) than Keselowski.

And beyond those three victories (at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Martinsville Speedway and Kansas Speedway), Keselowski has a pair of runner-up finishes and is on a streak of three consecutive top-10 finishes coming to Michigan. Although he established his NASCAR Playoff eligibility almost immediately this season winning the second race, he’d like to finish out the last four races of the regular season with a trip to Victory Lane for good measure.

Coming off a particularly aggressive race at the Watkins Glen International road course last week, Keselowski was asked how forceful he would be to get that next win himself – particularly at a place like Michigan that holds so much sentimental value to him.

“You really don’t know until you are in those shoes,” Keselowski said. “That question always reminds me of the story of the guy that fell down in a canyon by himself and a rock fell on his arm so he bit his own arm off to get out. So people ask you what you would do to survive if you have to and I am guessing he never would have guessed that he would do that. I don’t know what I am capable of either or what I would do.

“I hope I don’t have to bite my own arm off. With that in mind, I think without a doubt I would do more for this race than most any other.”

RELATED: All of Keselowski’s Monster Energy Series wins

At 35 years old, driving for NASCAR Hall of Fame team owner Roger Penske and owning a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship trophy already on his mantle, Keselowski’s views are indicative of the opportunity his success has granted – to become a sounding board for the sport. He acknowledged with only four races remaining to set the 16-driver playoff field, the pressure is palpable.

Keselowski has finished in the top five in the championship standings four times and has been among the top 10 seven of the last nine years.

“I look at the points every two or three days,” Keselowski said. “Everybody is a little different. It is the clearest measurement of your success in the sport. It is one of the great things about NASCAR or being in this sport in general.

“You think about most careers, most lives and it is always hard to have a measuring stick. In sports, the scoreboard is up there all the time. You constantly get a reference on it. It is one of the things I appreciate about the sport so much.

“You really know if you are doing well or not. There is no ambiguity to it. I look at it a lot and I think it is interesting.”

The world of racing is cutthroat. It is an industry where friends aren’t made easily. Staying friends while competing every week on the track is even more difficult. Drivers are meant to be warriors and show no sign of weakness, even in the darkest days and the hardest career struggles. But what happens when two unlikely allies join forces to create one of the strongest friendships in NASCAR?

The detailed documentary, “Blink of an Eye,” showcases the life of journeyman driver Michael Waltrip, who goes from a small-town boy living in Kentucky to the grandest lights on the NASCAR stage. Waltrip struggled with finding Victory Lane in his racing career. The hardships and pressure that come along with a famous family name and a strong personality in the garage created a dark cloud that followed him every day. An 0-for-462 career mark is a losing record of great magnitude, especially when it follows the footsteps of a successful older brother, Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip. When Michael Waltrip started to lose all hope, emotion arrived with “The Intimidator.”

Nicknames like the “Intimidator” and “jokester” go together like oil and water. But Michael Waltrip’s bright light and the rough, country edge of Dale Earnhardt created a friendship that chased victories both on and off the track.

The film demonstrates how two people can form a bond and traces the origins of their friendship, while displaying how that friendship changed both lives for the better. “Blink of an Eye” is a pulled-back curtain to the world of racing. With every mountain encountered, a valley is endured. Racing parallels life and the film’s arc with its highs and lows.

This emotional account reaches its peak with one of the crown jewels in NASCAR, the 2001 Daytona 500. Waltrip led the race late and Earnhardt’s son, Dale Jr., was running second. Earnhardt Sr., who had become a legend and a hero in the sport with seven championships and a devoted following, sat in the third spot. Waltrip, inside of his car, recounts all the struggles and the 400-plus races he had lost. This was his one chance to change all of that if he could just stay in the lead.

Waltrip stared down his losing streak and saw the checkered flag flying just for him, but he had no idea what actually was unfolding in his rearview mirror. Waltrip’s losing streak had ended but what the world of stock-car racing lost that day was much, much greater.

That day in Daytona, Florida, still echoes with the NASCAR community and the sports world today. It’s an underdog tale of friendship, tragedy and redemption; one the documentary captures in heart-tugging detail through the voices of those who actually lived through it.

Blink of an Eye opens nationwide on Sept. 12 and tickets can be purchased at BlinkofAnEyeFilm.com.

Austin Dillon soared to the fastest lap in opening Monster Energy Series practice Friday, setting the early pace at Michigan International Speedway.

Dillon posted a best lap of 189.969 mph at the 2-mile oval, landing the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet atop the speed charts. Dillon’s lap with roughly a minute left in first practice knocked Brad Keselowski off the top spot in the opening tune-up for Sunday’s Consumers Energy 400 (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM).

RELATED: Practice 1 results

Keselowski, a Michigan native, held on for the second-fastest lap at 189.929 mph, just eight-thousandths of a second slower in the Team Penske No. 2 Ford. Jimmie Johnson was third-fastest (189.603 mph) with teammate Alex Bowman tied with RCR’s Daniel Hemric at 188.957 mph to round out the top five in the 50-minute session. Four of the top five drivers were in Chevrolets.

Defending race winner Kevin Harvick was sixth-fastest on the board. Joey Logano, winner of the series’ most recent race at Michigan, landed the ninth-fastest lap.

The No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford team of former Michigan winner Clint Bowyer was docked 15 minutes of practice time at the end of the session. Bowyer’s team was late leaving the garage before qualifying last weekend at Watkins Glen International.

MORE: Full schedule for Michigan, Mid-Ohio

Busch Pole Qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series is scheduled for Friday at 5:05 p.m. ET (NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM).

BROOKLYN, Mich. — If you’re wondering if the dust has settled between Ryan Blaney and Jimmie Johnson since their incident at Watkins Glen International five days ago, here’s the short answer: It hasn’t.

Johnson started his Friday morning visiting the Boys and Girls Club of Lenawee in Adrian, Michigan, where he received a tour of the facility by a handful of the children in the program, participated in a question-and-answer session and signed autographs before the race weekend at Michigan International Speedway.

But in his first media availability since the heated post-race discussion with Blaney at “The Glen,” the seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion noted Blaney failed to reach out this week.

“We know what happened on the track … the drivers do,” Johnson told NASCAR.com. “There was a window of opportunity there from my standpoint for Ryan to handle it a certain way, to engage in at least the way that I know I have when it wasn’t on purpose and I have yet to see or hear from him. So, that only validates my line of thought and how angry I was in the car.”

While Johnson indicated he was waiting for some form of communication, Blaney told NASCAR.com he had already had that conversation after the race.

“I have nothing to apologize about,” Blaney said Friday morning at Michigan. “He came down on me. I apologized to him right then and there, even though it was his fault. I have a lot of respect for Jimmie — or had a lot of respect –that’s why I kind of let him chew my ass out for a minute, minute-and-a-half or whatever he did and I didn’t go back into him, especially when he put a finger in my face.

“Then his comments after we got done talking pretty much threw all that out the window. That respect is very little.”

Blaney said he briefly considered reaching out this week but reiterated he didn’t do anything wrong.

“I was there and he came down across me, then we talked about it after the race,” Blaney said. “You do that to yourself and then expect me to apologize for that? It’s not like I flat ran him over. I told him that. … It’s his doing, but he wants to be mad at me about it.”

Johnson was asked about Blaney’s comments to NASCAR.com later Friday following practice at Michigan.

“I have learned more about Ryan’s point of view through reading articles than I have from out of his mouth, and that part bothers me,” Johnson said. “It’s pretty sad. When I went to go talk to him after the race, at some point he said he felt bad but I never heard ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to,’ nothing that would make me think that he didn’t care if it happened.

“That aspect only confirmed the way I felt in my car. So I thought I would get a call from him during the week, just the friendship that we’ve had, the amount of respect that I thought we had for one another, and I didn’t.”

With four races remaining in the Monster Energy Series regular season, Johnson is currently tied with Ryan Newman on the playoff cutline but would win the tiebreaker to be in the 16-driver field. Blaney currently sits 10th in the standings.

Given Johnson’s comments at “The Glen” warning everyone to “stay tuned,” the possibility of retaliation lingers for Blaney. But it’s not something Blaney is necessarily worried about, he said.

COMMENTARY: Did Blaney deserve the heat? | Will drama continue at Michigan?

“He wants to do what he wants to do,” Blaney said. “That’s a separate deal. I’m over it. I’m sure he’s still mad.”

Blaney admitted he has given other drivers chances in the past and it hasn’t worked to his favor. That attitude might be changing this year as he enters the NASCAR Playoffs.

“I’ve checked up for a lot of people and they chopped my nose off like that over the years,” Blaney said. “That’s just not happening anymore. If he wants to be pissed off and try to wreck us and take us out, it’s going to be a whole other problem.”

NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Jeff Gordon made a return to Victory Lane on Thursday night — this time at the Knoxville Nationals, as a supporter of Qualifying Night race winner David Gravel.

Gordon, former crew chief Ray Evernham and sponsor Axalta planned to make a big splash at this year’s premier sprint car race in Iowa, with a sponsored/wrapped Axalta car for Gravel, who made good Thursday night to lock into Saturday night’s prestigious 24-car main event.

With four-time Monster Energy Series champion Gordon and Evernham in attendance, Gravel was the night’s biggest winner, holding off Brad Sweet — who has more than 50 career starts at the NASCAR national series level, and is in the midst of perhaps his best-ever sprint car season.

Dubbed the “Granddaddy Of Them All,” the 59th Knoxville Nationals runs from Aug. 7-10 and hosts more than 100 sprint cars. The Knoxville Raceway half-mile clay oval is the site of the four-day showdown, which included a pair of qualifying nights held on Wednesday and Thursday.

There are last-chance qualifiers on Friday and Saturday prior to the 50-lap feature event that caps off the festivities. Saturday night’s 24-car A-Main event will have a total purse of nearly $1 million, with the winner taking home a $150,000 grand prize.

Chip Ganassi Racing driver Kyle Larson fell a couple spots shy of qualifying for Saturday night’s A-Main during his qualifying session on Wednesday. With the Monster Energy Series racing in Michigan, Larson will no longer attempt to make the main event at Iowa.

Sixteen drivers already are locked into Saturday’s main show, among them: Sweet, the defending event winner who drives a car for team owner Kasey Kahne; Sheldon Haudenschild, who drives for team owner Ricky Stenhouse Jr.; and World of Outlaws stalwart Daryn Pittman.

The always anticipated road-course portion of the NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule continues this week with Saturday’s B&L Transport 170 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Austin Cindric earned his career first Xfinity Series victory last week at the iconic Watkins Glen International road course and shows up in Ohio an absolute favorite as well. He won the pole position last year at Mid-Ohio and led a race-best 59 laps only to finish second to series veteran Justin Allgaier.

RELATED: Mid-Ohio schedule

Allgaier proved himself as the 2018 road-course ace, earning wins in two of the four events – answering his Mid-Ohio win with another at the next stop in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin (Road America). He leads the series championship contenders with three career road-course wins and could use another to secure his position in the 2019 NASCAR Playoff field.

The JR Motorsports driver is one of only two drivers ranked in the top eight without a victory, and that’s largely because the top three in the standings have absolutely dominated the win column. Championship leader and defending series champ Tyler Reddick has three wins. Christopher Bell and Cole Custer have five victories each. Allgaier is ranked fourth just behind these multi-time winners.

Allgaier’s experience, plus the fact no member of that championship leading group of three has won on an Xfinity Series road course previously, certainly makes him a favorite heading into the weekend. He has a win, two top fives and three top 10s in four Mid-Ohio starts.

Counting the last five road-course events for the series, Allgaier has a pair of wins, four top fives and is averaging a 4.6 finish in the No. 7 JRM Chevrolet.

Some of his fiercest competition this weekend may actually come from within the JR Motorsports group. Xfinity Series rookie Noah Gragson won a NASCAR K&N Series race on the Sonoma, California, road course earlier this summer. He was ninth in the Xfinity Series road-course race last week at Watkins Glen and was a perfect two-for-two in top 10s in his two Gander Outdoors Truck Series road-course events.

RELATED: Xfinity Series Preview Show

The 21-year-old driver of the No. 9 JRM Chevrolet has four wins in 10 road-course races in the combined NASCAR K&N East and West series.

“I really feel like this time of year is where we can really make move because of how comfortable I feel on road courses,” said Gragson, who is ranked seventh in the championship standings. “We were able to come away with a good run despite some adversity last week in Watkins Glen and I am really confident that we can have an even better run in Mid-Ohio, despite having never been there before. It’ll be an interesting weekend for sure and I’m ready to get it going.”

Joe Gibbs Racing has turned to the days of the vintage Internet, revealing two retro paint schemes for Denny Hamlin and Erik Jones for NASCAR’s Throwback Weekend at Darlington Raceway.

RELATED: Darlington paint schemes | Vote for your favorite

In a video released Thursday by the team, Hamlin and Jones traded dueling Sport Clips designs in a mock America Online chat session. The retro looks will hit the track Aug. 30-Sept. 1 at the historic 1.366-mile venue in South Carolina.

Hamlin will pilot a Bill Elliott-inspired No. 18 Toyota in the Aug. 31 VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200, a race he has won five times. Jones will drive the No. 20 Toyota in the Sept. 1 Bojangles’ Southern 500 that mimics his paint scheme from his rookie season in Late Model competition.

MORE: Buy Darlington tickets