BRISTOL, Tenn. — Mere inches, maybe even centimeters, saved Stewart-Haas Racing teammates Clint Bowyer and Daniel Suarez from colliding and crashing.

On Lap 244 of 500 Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway, Bowyer thought he was clear to take the bottom lane. He wasn’t. A baby tap from another driver sent Bowyer spinning up the race track. Somehow, someway, Bowyer righted himself before making contact with Suarez, who was running up top.

“I don’t even know,” Suarez said. “Probably, I’m a little lucky. Probably, I’m a little good. It worked out. It was pretty tight. I was lucky that Clint has the experience and was able to keep his car out of the wall. There was just enough room for me.”

And now Suarez has just enough points to sit in the 16th and final playoff spot in the championship standings, actually bumping Bowyer out of the slot and into 17th.

Thing is, Suarez ended the Bristol Night Race in eighth. Bowyer was seventh. Suarez, though, accumulated more overall points (38) thanks to his second-place Stage 2 finish. That alone gave him a nine-point boost and was ultimately the reason he had more than Bowyer’s final mark of 30.

“I feel like that was probably the biggest thing of the day,” Suarez said. “I feel like that was an amazing call from my crew chief, Billy Scott. We just have to keep making those decisions.”

How the numbers would play out were the last thing on Bowyer’s mind during the 266.5-mile race.

“You’re not worried about that,” Bowyer said. “A short track like this, you’re worried about keeping up with the race track, keeping up with your adjustments, track and stuff like that. You ain’t got time to screw with that.”

That’s for next week, or maybe the one after that. Only two races remain in the regular season.

Just two points (591 vs. 589) separate Suarez and Bowyer on the cutline, a tighter race than the six-point difference entering Bristol.

RELATED: Full Bristol results | Look at standings

Others on the bubble are 15th Ryan Newman (603 points) and 18th Jimmie Johnson (565 points). Neither moved in ranks from last week. Both finished outside the top 10 this week.

Newman was 11th and gained 34 points (eight stage points). Johnson wound up 19th and added 18 points.

“I have to look at the truth inside of this team and how strong this team is, how good this team is,” Johnson said. “I know the results are coming. It’s just a series of bad luck, and it all started with a bad qualifying effort. We have to clean things up for sure. This team is really starting to jell and come along.”

Johnson qualified 30th.

The seven-time Monster Energy Series champion is on the verge of missing the playoffs for the first time in his career. He has won three times at Darlington Raceway, where the Cup Series heads after its off-week, and four times at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, site of the regular-season finale.

“It’s so hard to predict,” Johnson said. “These are two great tracks for me, two places that I love. We’ll see what happens.”

RELATED: Recap Bristol in 76 seconds

Nine drivers have solidified their postseason berth with a trip to Victory Lane. Any more repeat winners would leave the other seven vacancies open to points.

Newman has a top five and eight top 10s. Suarez has three and nine, respectively. Bowyer has five and 10. Johnson has three and eight.

Each could use anything in the win column.

“Things aren’t going our way,” Bowyer said. “But a lot of them can be helped, just like tonight. It wasn’t a lack of trying on anybody’s part.”

The race-winning No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Denny Hamlin passed post-race inspection at Bristol Motor Speedway with no issues.

The No. 11 was found to be compliant with the 2019 NASCAR Rule Book after Saturday’s Bristol Night Race. Additionally, no cars are headed back to the R&D Center after the race. There was one lug nut found to be not secure on the Nos. 2, 9, 14 and 47.

With the post-race teardown complete, the race results are official.

RELATED: Full Bristol results | Bristol stage winners

The post-race process is part of a new, more timely approach to inspection for all three NASCAR national series. Competition officials announced in February that thorough post-race inspections would take place shortly after the checkered flag at the track instead of midweek at the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, North Carolina.

Those inspections come with a stiffer deterrence structure that includes disqualification for significant rules infractions — “a total culture change,” according to Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer. In the past, race-winning teams found in violation of the rules were penalized with post-race fines, points deductions and/or suspensions, but victories were allowed to stand.

Competition officials introduced the quicker post-race inspection timetable in an effort to make the results official on race day, aiming for a 90-minute target time frame to complete their scrutineering. The new post-race inspection process was also designed to deal with potential violations more promptly, avoiding any midweek news that might cloud the previous week’s results or the build-up to the following week’s event.

NASCAR will still inspect cars and parts at the R&D Center as needed, but the more comprehensive at-track inspection will take priority.

According to NASCAR statistical archives, the last time a premier-series driver was disqualified occurred in 1973, when early retiree Buddy Baker was demoted to last place in the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The last time an apparent race winner in NASCAR’s top division was disqualified came on April 17, 1960, when Emanuel Zervakis’ victory at Wilson (N.C.) Speedway was thrown out because of an oversized fuel tank on his No. 85 Chevrolet.

BRISTOL, Tenn. – The first thing Denny Hamlin did after winning Saturday’s Bristol Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway was apologize to the man he beat to the finish line in the 24th Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race of the season.

With 11 laps left in the grueling 500-lap event, Hamlin drove to the inside of Matt DiBenedetto and cleared him from the lead. Roughly three minutes later, Hamlin crossed the stripe .502 seconds ahead of the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Toyota and handed DiBendetto his second major heartache of a difficult week.

“I just want to say sorry to Matt DiBenedetto and (his crew chief) Mike Wheeler,” said Hamlin, who won for the fourth time this season, the second time at Bristol and the 35th time in his career. “I hate it. I know a win would mean a lot to that team, but I’ve got to give 110% to my whole team. Just, sorry.”

RELATED: Official race results
SHOP: Hamlin gear

The regret was heartfelt. On Tuesday, DiBenedetto learned he would not be returning to the LFR Camry next year, possibly to make room for the unquestioned talent of Christopher Bell. But on Saturday night, he put the distraction behind him and drove with the purpose and tenacity of a driver with something to prove.

Eight laps after a restart on Lap 388, DiBenedetto passed Erik Jones for the lead and held it for 93 laps. But with 28 laps left, after Hamlin passed Brad Keselowski and Chase Elliott to move into second place, DiBenedetto lost half his lead battling to put Ryan Newman a lap down. Contact between their cars tightened the handling of DiBenedetto’s Toyota.

“I wanted to win so bad for these guys, for this team, for them giving me this opportunity,” DiBenedetto said on pit road, his voice choking with emotion. “I’m just thankful that they gave me this opportunity. But, man, I’m sad. We got tight after the deal with Newman, when he came up into us. All of a sudden it got really tight after that.

“Congrats to Denny. He raced hard. I’ve been a fan of his since I was a kid. To be racing door to door with him at Bristol, in front of a great group of fans. … I’ll try not to get emotional, but it’s been a tough week. I just want to stick around and keep doing this for a long time to come. I love it. I love the opportunity. I’m not done yet.

“Something will come open. It’s going to happen. I’m here to win. Something’s going to come open. I’m proud of these guys. Thankful for my wife and fans for sticking with me. It’s been a tough journey, a hard week. Cool for this team.”

RELATED: DiBenedetto: I’m not done yet

DiBenedetto ran consistently in the top 10 and his 93 laps led were a race high. Hamlin, on the other hand, had a roller-coaster race in which he started from the pole, damaged his No. 11 Toyota after contact with Jimmie Johnson’s Chevrolet, lost a lap for an unscheduled pit stop on Lap 189 for a loose wheel, regained the lead lap as the beneficiary under caution on Lap 248 and charged forward from 13th place after a Lap 260 restart to win the race.

After DiBenedetto’s difficulty in passing Newman, Hamlin tracked him down relentlessly, running the top of the track before moving the bottom to make the winning pass.

“Between my spotter (Chris Lambert) and crew chief (Chris Gabehart), they just stayed on me to not get anxious, just kind of take my time,” Hamlin said. “I had plenty of time. I just worked him over, worked him over. I knew I didn’t want to show him the bottom until I knew I could make the pass. I ran the top, ran the top, ran the top, got the position on the bottom and finished it.

“We had a great car that could move around. Came back from a couple laps down, and here we are.”

Brad Keselowski ran third, followed by Kyle Busch, who started 31st and benefited from an opportune caution, shortly before he would have had to make a green-flag pit stop. Chase Elliott came home fifth, with Kyle Larson sixth.

In the battle for the final playoff spots, Daniel Suarez scored nine points in the first stage and moved past Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Clint Bowyer for the final playoff-eligible position. Suarez leads Bowyer by two points with two races left.

Bowyer and Suarez finished seventh and eighth, respectively, but the stage points made the difference.

Johnson’s troubles continued on Saturday night. The seven-time champion started 30th and fell two laps down after contact with Austin Dillon and Hamlin. Johnson fought hard to finish 19th, four laps down, but he fell 26 points behind Suarez for the last playoff spot.

WATCH: Johnson, Dillon make contact

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Matt DiBenedetto emerged from the curtains of the driver introductions stage at Bristol Motor Speedway with a boxer’s robe and gloves, “Italian Stallion” emblazoned on the back. After a 15-round Saturday night bout, DiBenedetto emerged with a people’s champion belt.

DiBenedetto gave the Leavine Family Racing No. 95 Toyota the ride of its life in Bristol’s annual night race, just days after learning that he wouldn’t return to the organization in 2020. The potential granddaddy of all redemption stories for the 28-year-old driver faded away when Denny Hamlin whizzed by with 12 laps left, leaving DiBenedetto with a career-best second place, a multitude of emotions and the largest crowd reactions of the day — both pre- and post-race.

RELATED: Unofficial results

“To see it slip away was oh my gosh, I can’t even,” said DiBenedetto, who said he screamed into his helmet for the final laps, unable to catch Hamlin. He led a race-high 93 of the 500 laps. “The pain was like being stabbed 100 times in the chest. It was killing me. But it’s a sign of things to come. I’m not done yet. I feel like a team is going to hopefully grab me and be glad they did because I’ll go out and do nothing but win and give them my all.”

Those cheers — at a decibel not heard all day at the .533-mile track — are the type usually reserved for a race winner. So were the congratulations that DiBenedetto received, with Chase Elliott, Clint Bowyer, Bubba Wallace, Ryan Blaney all among his peers who stopped by his parked car to offer their congratulations. So did four-time champion Jeff Gordon, who lent his ear for an extended post-race conversation.

The emotions also flowed for his father, Tony, who carried his son’s pre-race boxing costume on pit road in a paper bag. The elder DiBenedetto described heartbreak for his son’s recent career news, but a degree of gratitude for those who had given him opportunities along the way — singling out the St. Hilaire family, Bob Leavine and J.D. Gibbs among them.

Upon hearing the cheers rain down from the grandstands, Tony DiBenedetto called it “cloud nine.”

WATCH: DiBenedetto take lead

“I think what made me feel the best, because I’ve been pretty down lately with just not having a ride, I’m not gonna lie, because we scratched and clawed so hard to get here,” Tony DiBenedetto said, “but when I heard those people screaming for my son, it went away. It went away. It just felt good and real that these people are behind my son. And I want to share him with them, because we are them sitting in the stands. That’s who we are, Mom and Dad. We want them to be part of this second and the wins coming. It’s just a true story.”

The emotions didn’t spare DiBenedetto’s crew chief, Mike Wheeler, who crouched not far from the No. 95 car to reflect on the night and to survey the damage from contact with Ryan Newman’s No. 6. The collision altered the car’s handling characteristics, with DiBenedetto complaining that it had tightened up for the final stretch.

Wheeler had spent the previous three seasons as Hamlin’s crew chief, working on the No. 11 car that wound up in Bristol’s Victory Lane. His partnership with DiBenedetto started just this season, but that pairing appears set to end, just as their performance has begun to click.

“If you told us we’d run second this week before we got here, we’d be like, heck yeah,” Wheeler said. “But to kind of lead the whole last stint and then come up just short, obviously it’s disappointing. Personally for me to get beat by the 11 car because of the fender damage, it’s like gosh. I don’t understand why things happen to me like that. It makes you a better person, I guess, in the future. But definitely needed a moment to compose myself afterward to talk to you guys.”

DiBenedetto had handled the week in his usual affable manner, trying to reflect on the bright side while acknowledging the hardships. The disappointment was at such a degree that Wheeler expressed concerns for his driver’s ability to rebound.

“I would tell you Wednesday this week, he was junk,” Wheeler said. “I saw him Wednesday morning at the simulator and I knew something was wrong. He said he didn’t sleep very well, and I could just tell that was going to be a problem. I was actually worried that it would be so dejecting that he wouldn’t be able to sleep and he’d suffer performance. Fortunately, he was a man and took it and did his job tonight.”

RELATED: DiBenedetto finds home in support | DiBenedetto not returning to LFR in 2020

It was a performance that lived up to DiBenedetto’s pre-race alter ego, even though the prize-fighter costume was planned long before this week’s career developments. DiBenedetto indicated that he had intended to wear the same outfit during Bristol’s outsized driver introductions last year until those plans unraveled.

The family had called Mason St. Hilaire from his previous team, Go Fas Racing, to see if they had it, but it couldn’t be located. They reordered it and it arrived a couple of weeks ago.

Timing has been a fickle partner for DiBenedetto through his career, but this was impeccable.

“It was what I was going to do last year but it was more fitting this week after the week we’ve had,” DiBenedetto said. “It’s craziness. The underdog story, the Italian Stallion, the nickname with my middle name being Guido, I’m doing it. I’ve got to do what I wanted to do last year and come out as Rocky.

“That was cool, a cool intro, and fitting I guess for my story that fans have embraced so much. That was amazing. When I got out of the car and fans are screaming and cheering for us, I lost it. I couldn’t even hold it together.”

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give you 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, August 19
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, August 20
5 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Wednesday, August 21
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Motormouths Call In, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series East in Bristol, Tenn. (tape delay)

MRN
Noon, NASCAR Coast to Coast

Thursday, August 22
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series West in Monroe, Wash.

Friday, August 23
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series practice, NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice, NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)

Saturday, August 24
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Road America qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (tape delayed) (Canada: TSN App)
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Countdown to Green Road America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: CTECH Manufacturing 180, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN2)

On MRN
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: CTECH Manufacturing 180

Sunday, August 25
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series qualifying, FS2/FOX Sports App
2 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NGOTS, FS1/FOX Sports App
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series: Chevrolet Silverado 250, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
2 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series: Chevrolet Silverado 250

Kurt Busch won Stage 2 of the Bristol Night Race on Saturday, leading the final two laps in the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet to collect his second stage win of the season.

Busch took the lead with six laps left in the stage, as others went to pit road when the caution came out on Lap 243 after Clint Bowyer’s No. 14 went spinning in Turn 2. That caution brought a handful of frontrunners to pit road and Martin Truex Jr. gave up his lead.

Daniel Suarez in the No. 41 also stayed out and finished the stage second. Ryan Newman in the No. 6, Kyle Busch in the No. 18 and William Byron in the No. 24 rounded out the top five.

RELATED: Stage 2 results

On Lap 246, Kevin Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford was pushed to the garage for a mechanical issue.

Earlier, on Lap 185, Denny Hamlin in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota reported a loose wheel and pulled to pit road for repairs. Five laps later, the caution flag came out when Aric Almirola in the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford got into the wall.

Leaders took the opportunity to head to hit pit road and Truex won the race off, leading the field back to green.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 Kurt Busch Chip Ganassi Racing 10
2 Daniel Suarez Stewart-Haas Racing 9
3 Ryan Newman Roush Fenway Racing 8
4 Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing 7
5 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports 6
6 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports 5
7 Erik Jones Joe Gibbs Racing 4
8 Brad Keselowski Team Penske 3
9 Daniel Hemric Richard Childress Racing 2
10 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 1

STAGE 1

Kyle Larson won Stage 1 of Saturday’s Bristol Night Race in the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, beating out Chase Elliott in a battle to the green-and-white checkered flag for his fourth stage win of 2019.

RELATED: Stage 1 results

Pole-sitter Denny Hamlin took the lead at the green flag but on Lap 16, he shifted to the high-side of the track and lost the first spot to Larson. The back-and-forth battle between the two for the lead continued for a majority of the stage. Hamlin led 67 laps.

Joey Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford suffered a flat right-front tire on Lap 69, forcing him to pit road for an unscheduled stop. The slow stop put Logano three laps down.

RELATED: Logano has pit road problems

On Lap 79, the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet of Austin Dillon had a tire go down in front of Jimmie Johnson in the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, bringing out the first caution of the day. Johnson wasn’t able to slow down and got into the back of Dillon. Meanwhile, Hamlin got around Johnson and put him a lap down.

WATCH: Johnson, Dillon bring out caution

The first caution brought lead-lap drivers to pit road and Larson won the race off pit road. On the restart, it was Larson and the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Chase Elliott battling for the lead.

Larson was able to hold on and lead for the rest of the stage. He led 62 laps, in all.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing 10
2 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports 9
3 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 8
4 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing 7
5 Matt DiBenedetto Leavine Family Racing 6
6 Ryan Blaney Team Penske 5
7 Erik Jones Joe Gibbs Racing 4
8 Brad Keselowski Team Penske 3
9 Kurt Busch Chip Ganassi Racing 2
10 Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing 1

BRISTOL, Tenn. — A team collaboration that came together just this week paid off in a big way for Timmy Hill and his new-look No. 61 Toyota team at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Hill was beaming after Friday night’s seventh-place finish that matched a career best for the NASCAR Xfinity Series journeyman. The result marked the fourth top-10 finish of his career, but the first outside of Daytona International Speedway.

RELATED: Race results | Reddick rallies at Bristol

“It’s huge. For me, I’ve had three or four top 10s but they’ve all been at superspeedway races,” Hill said after driving the top-finishing Toyota in Friday’s Food City 300. “A lot of the guys say, hey, that’s luck, superspeedways are luck and a lot of guys wreck out. I really feel like tonight, we’ve earned this finish. We did finish one lap down, but for the most part we were on the lead lap all night long. I feel like we really worked hard and worked our guts out tonight and feel like we earned this one.”

The race marked the debut of a partnership between Carl Long’s MBM Motorsports and Hattori Racing Enterprises with team principal Shige Hattori. Hill said the arrangement allowed the team to share notes, pool its resources and to beef up its tire supply.

Hill said he was unsure about the future of the Long-Hattori collaboration, but after a largely trouble-free debut at Bristol, the 26-year-old driver was still soaking in the night.

“Most people who know me know that I smile quite a bit,” Hill said. “No, this is going to go through the night. I’ve got a long drive back home so I’m sure I’m going to talk to my wife and my family all throughout the night and really cherish this moment.”

Denny Hamlin is on the pole for the Bristol Night Race on Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Does the surging Joe Gibbs Racing driver merit a spot in your Fantasy Live lineup? 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 Bristol:
1. Denny Hamlin
2. Kyle Larson
3. Kurt Busch
4. Joey Logano
5. Erik Jones
Garage: Kyle Busch

RELATED: Odds for Bristol | Lap averages | Weekend preview

Analysis: We’re back with the Fantasy Update after a week away. With three races to go in the regular season, we are not saving uses — it’s about playing the best drivers you have at your disposal. So with that in mind, let’s dive into Bristol.

I’m taking the front row of Hamlin and Larson. Hamlin is one of the hottest drivers in the series in the past month and Larson has been extremely solid at Bristol in his career. Following the solid-at-Bristol mindset, Kurt Busch will be in the lineup as well. I don’t love his lap averages from Friday, but I like the starting spot, the fact that he’s the reigning race winner and a six-time Bristol winner. Jones had solid lap averages in opening practice and has run well in the night race in the past. Logano has won the night race twice and Bristol has been one of his stronger tracks of late.

For the garage, I will take Kyle Busch despite the not-so-great starting spot. I have two uses left on “Rowdy” and I’ve had this race earmarked as one. It’s tempting to bail, but here’s a stat to consider: In seven of his eight Bristol wins, Busch has started outside the top 10. He’s too good here to not roll the dice on his track record.

For the bonus picks, I have Hamlin in Stage 1 and the win, with Elliott in Stage 2.

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

MORE: Need Props help? The Action Network has you covered | Play the Props Challenge today

1. Will either Chip Ganassi driver, Kurt Busch or Kyle Larson, be the highest finishing Chevrolet? Considering I have two Chevrolets in my lineup and they are both of the Ganassi drivers, I am a resounding YES on this prop. Elliott could play the spoiler on this one, but I like one of the two Ganassi drivers to take the top spot in the bowtie camp.

2. O/U 20.5 lead changes. I am taking the UNDER here. In the last six summer races at Bristol, the number of lead changes have averaged 17.7 lead changes and only hit the over once (in the 2017 race). I am playing the odds based on past history that trend continues and turning a blind eye to the spring race results that saw 21 lead changes in April.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Ryan Blaney’s recent marks at Bristol Motor Speedway are pretty impressive.

The driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford has led at least 100 laps in the last three races at the .533-mile oval. Two of those instances were race-high marks.

A descriptor such as pretty, though, is needed. None of those runs converted into wins. Blaney’s best Bristol finish in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series is fourth – earlier this season after spending 158 of the 500 laps out front.

“It can get frustrating at times,” Blaney told NASCAR.com Friday. “But it’s all a learning experience, just trying to remember things very well, save information and apply it to the next time.”

That time is now.

BRISTOL: What to watch | Complete at-track gallery

The annual Bristol Night Race is Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Blaney will start 12th after circling the track at 128.082 mph during qualifying. His final practice speed was good for second fastest (128.245 mph) and better than his opening sixth-place go-around (127.368 mph).

“We’ve been really good here early,” Blaney said. “We just need to kind of be able to carry that toward the end.”

Then, maybe then he’ll get his first Cup Series victory at Bristol and first overall in 2019.

With just three races remaining in the regular season, Blaney sits ninth in the championship standings with 654 points. He’s the highest-ranked driver out of those who have not won this season and even a spot ahead of one who has won (Alex Bowman, 10th with 653 points). He’s currently safe since the playoff field is cut at 16 – for now.

“I don’t really think about the points,” Blaney said. “Really, the only time I think about the points is in the playoffs. You know, I just want to win races. That’s something that’s kind of eluded us during the regular season this year, which has kind of stunk. I thought we could have won two to three already this year, but it hasn’t worked out for us.”

The moments that stick out most to Blaney are Atlanta Motor Speedway, Chicagoland Speedway and Michigan International Speedway. He finished 22nd, sixth and 24th in those races, respectively. He thought those got away from him despite having what he considered a competitive car.

Blaney’s best finish so far is third. It happened twice: ISM Raceway and Sonoma Raceway. He has seven top-five performances and 10 top 10s. He has also led 365 laps, which once again leads drivers without wins.

RELATED: Full look at standings | Playoff bubble watch

To get really deep into the weeds of possibilities, Blaney can clinch a playoff spot this weekend on points alone if a winner repeats or if Aric Almirola, William Byron, Kyle Larson or Erik Jones wins and Blaney gets help. A victory, of course, would also guarantee him a berth.

“You can talk about playoffs and talk about the regular season, but at the end of the day, it’s the same goal: try to win the race and do the best you can,” Blaney said. “The pressure side of it, that’s all year. You’re under pressure to try to win races, to try to keep your job. That’s pressure in itself. But playoffs, you’re just fortunate to be a part of them. … If you’re worried about pressure, your mind is not focused on how to perform at the highest of your abilities.”

And that’s all Blaney needs to do this weekend. He has proved he can run well at Bristol. Now he just needs to seal the deal.

Saturday is another opportunity for the 25-year-old to yet again impress at Bristol — really, this time.

“You always got to be confident,” Blaney said. “I think there’s a fine line between confident and arrogant, so you try to be as confident as you can in your team and yourself. Believe in yourself, that you’ve been good at this track before.”