Ross Chastain made it look easy Saturday at Pocono Raceway, but the battle for playoff spots intensified dramatically in the Gander RV 150 at the 2.5-mile triangular track.

Pitting early near the end of Stage 2 in the 60-lap NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series race, Chastain regained the lead on Lap 33 and held it the rest of the way, beating surging 18-year-old Tyler Ankrum to the finish line by 1.007 seconds.

RELATED: Pocono results | Updated standings

Stage 2 winner Harrison Burton charged from 10th to third during the closing 26-lap green-flag run and made a statement where the playoffs are concerned.

Burton, 18, posted his fourth top five in a span of five races and closed significant ground on Canadian Stewart Friesen, who self-destructed on the first lap. Burton trails Friesen by 13 points for the final playoff position with two races left in the regular season.

But no one was a match for Chastain, who won the first stage with ease on the way to his third victory of the season and reaffirmed his status as one of the clear favorites for the series title. Chastain dedicated his first Pocono win to Kaulig Racing crew chief Nick Harrison, who passed away at age 37 after last Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race.

“I know we were a little mad because we lost Nick Harrison,” Chastain said. “We realize that everybody goes when it’s their time, but, man, we miss that big boy. These boys (on the Niece Motorsports team), a lot of them worked with him.

“I got to work with him at Kaulig Racing this year. Man, we miss him.”

Ankrum punished his No. 17 Toyota in a futile effort to catch Chastain during the closing run.

“Me and Ross were able to run away from the field,” Ankrum said. “I thought I had a good enough truck to chase him down, but I couldn’t get close enough to him to catch the draft. I was just fighting ‘tight,’ and I burned my tires up trying to catch him.”

Short of a victory that would have locked him into a playoff spot, Burton turned in an optimal performance from the standpoint of the points he gained.

“I wanted to win really bad,” Burton said. “We had a truck that was capable of winning. I think everyone kind of knew that. … We were charging at the end, which was a lot of fun. I didn’t expect to be able to do that that well. I thought we were in trouble there on that last restart, but we made a lot of ground up and were really aggressive.

“As far as points, we gained a ton today, which is really, really good.”

The playoff aspirations of Friesen suffered a major blow before the field cleared the first corner. Moments after the start, Friesen took a low line into Turn 1 and his No. 52 Chevrolet broke loose in the corner, collecting the Toyota of Anthony Alfredo and slamming into the outside wall.

Friesen finished 32nd after failing to complete a lap.

“Got spun around, made contact with the wall,” Friesen said succinctly after leaving the infield care center. “Just a bummer. Got on the apron there and away we went.

“I had a lot of friends and family here today, and I’m really, really disappointed. I wish I could have done more to last a little longer out there, obviously. We’ll be back — it just sucks right now.”

If there’s a silver lining for Friesen, it’s the location of the next race — the half-mile dirt track at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio. Friesen has more than 900 career starts on dirt in a variety of series and has finished second and third in his last two Eldora races. Burton finished 15th in his only Eldora start two years ago.

LONG POND, Pa. – It was the tattoo talk that had the Twitter world abuzz this week and Bubba Wallace says he’ll make good on his promise to fans.

RELATED: Wallace to get Petty signature tattoo?

“I knew that we wouldn’t reach 43,000 retweets in one day, which I was right,” Wallace said on Saturday at Pocono Raceway, site of Sunday’s Gander RV 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). “It was 38,000 I believe. But I didn’t put a timeline on it. I did up here and I said it didn’t happen, but then everyone said I was backing out.

“I’m not getting it on my arm like it was, I’m not that stupid,” Wallace said amid laughs. “It’s a beautiful signature in all, but I’m not that heavily invested in having it take up my whole forearm. We’ll get it somewhere small; I don’t know where I’m going to get it.”

To catch you up, Wallace posted a pair of photos detailing an up-close interaction with his team owner and “The King,” Richard Petty. With a handful of bright-colored sharpies, Petty signed his name in big, bold, silver letters and Wallace indicated that if the tweet got 43,000 retweets he’d get it tattooed. The social media world delivered on that number — though it took longer than the 24 hours Wallace thought was implied in his original offer.

While the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet sat out final practice for an engine change, Wallace had some fun suggesting that the pending tattoo was really the reason he was unable to practice.

 

Next year’s Pocono Raceway schedule will feature a longer weekend, shorter Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races but considerably more racing action at the 2.5-mile triangular track.

For the first time, NASCAR will run two points-paying Cup races on the same weekend, culminating in a 350-miler on Sunday, June 28. The day before, Cup drivers will run their first race of the weekend, with a length still to be determined.

MORE: 2020 NASCAR schedule

Practice and single-car qualifying for the first Cup race will take place Friday, June 26, and cars will be impounded thereafter. Drivers will use the same cars for both races, with the starting order for the second race determined by an inversion of the cars remaining on the lead lap at the end of Race 1, reporters learned Saturday during the announcement at Pocono.

“There’s a little flux here,” Pocono Raceway CEO Nick Igdalsky said of the first Cup race. “The race length is tentative at this point. We’re shooting for a 350-miler on that one, but that one may flex a little bit.”

Accordingly, the Cup cars may have to run as many as 700 miles under race conditions in the same weekend.

“After (Race 1), we will give the competitors back their cars, and they can do all their maintenance,” said Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competition. “They can’t really run the 700 miles without having their cars back for general service and all that.

“So we’ll give them their cars back. They will likely change valve springs and work on any slight damage from the race and all the maintenance to prepare for 350-mile Race 2.”

Teams will keep the pit stalls they earn during Friday’s qualifying for both races.

Both Cup races will be part of doubleheaders, with the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series running a 200-mile event before Saturday’s Race 1 and the NASCAR Xfinity Series competing over 225 miles before Sunday’s Race 2.

The ARCA Menards Series will feature a 200-mile race Thursday afternoon.

Other scheduling features announced Saturday in advance of the 2020 Pocono weekend:

  • Each series will have one 80-minute practice session.
  • Practice for the Monster Energy Series and Gander Trucks is scheduled Friday. Xfinity Series practice is scheduled to be held Saturday.
  • Gander Trucks qualifying is set for Friday. Xfinity qualifying is set for Sunday.

With the race still a year away, officials cautioned the schedule should be considered tentative.

NASCAR.com staff contributed to this report.

Roughly 10 minutes into opening Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Pocono Raceway, Kyle Larson’s No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet broke loose in the Tunnel Turn.

As the rear of the car stepped out to the right, Larson tried to correct it but couldn’t prevent his Camaro from slamming the outside wall. The contact sent the car hurtling down the track into the inside wall, completing the destruction of Larson’s primary vehicle.

Forced to go to a backup car, Larson will start from the rear in Sunday’s Gander RV 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). His early troubles mirror those from last weekend at New Hampshire, where Larson wrecked his primary car in practice, started from the rear in a backup, crashed twice during Sunday’s race and finished 33rd.

“I’m just disappointed in myself,” said Larson, who enters Pocono race 13th in the standings but only 31 points inside the current Playoff cut line. That’s two weeks in a row now. I hate that I did that. I just got really loose, over-corrected some, spun to the inside and hit the wall. I just hate that I did that. We only have today for practice and I didn’t have much time in that practice session…

MORE: Larson explains wreck

“I’ve just got to stop being stupid.”

Larson wasn’t the only driver kicking himself after an incident in practice. Later in the session, Chase Elliott also lost control in Turn 1, bounced off the outside wall and damaged his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet beyond repair.

Elliott will join Larson at the rear of the field in a backup car for the start of Sunday’s race, the 21st in the Cup series this year.

RELATED: Suarez tops opening practice at Pocono

“I put myself in a pretty poor situation there for practice,” Elliott said. “I apologize to my guys here and the people back at the shop… You shouldn’t make decisions like that to put yourself in a bad spot.

“It’s completely my fault. We’ll try to get this other car going as soon as we can and try not to crash again.”

After posting the seventh-fastest time in opening practice, Erik Jones topped the charts in Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice on Saturday morning at Pocono Raceway.

Jones paced the 2.5-mile triangular speedway with a lap of 172.117 miles per hour in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Camry. Jones comes into the race weekend with three career top-five finishes at Pocono, including a third-place result back in June.

RELATED: Best 10-lap averages | Final practice results

Kurt Busch finished up the 50-minute practice session in second at 172.051 mph in the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1. The remainder of the top five included Matt DiBenedetto (171.373 mph), William Byron (171.246 mph) and Kyle Busch (171.226 mph).

After crashes in opening practice earlier Saturday morning, both Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson were able to shake down their respective backup cars in the final session.

Next up on track for the Monster Energy Series will be Busch Pole Qualifying at 4:05 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

PRACTICE 1

Daniel Suarez led the way in Saturday morning’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series opening practice for Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Best 10-lap averages | Practice results

Suarez rocketed to the top of the leaderboard with a lap at 172.516 miles per hour in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Mustang. William Byron finished the session in second with a lap at 172.404 mph in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1.

Aric Almirola landed in third with a lap of 172.401 mph in the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Mustang, while Martin Truex Jr. clicked off a time of 172.387 mph to finish fourth. Clint Bowyer finished fifth and became the third SHR entry in the top five with a lap at 172.351 mph.

Two big incidents occurred during the 50-minute session as Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson both found trouble in separate crashes. Larson lost control of the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet Camaro coming out of Turn 2, hitting the outside retaining barrier which sent him hard into the inside wall. Elliott smacked the wall at the exit of Turn 1, receiving heavy damage on the right side of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro. Both drivers have gone to backup vehicles as a result.

The math isn’t adding up for Todd Gilliland, but a victory in one of the next three races could transform the equation dramatically.

The driver of the No. 4 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota is eighth in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series standings, but five other competitors, including two behind him (Tyler Ankrum and Ross Chastain) already have locked up playoff spots with victories.

Given that Gilliland is 150 points out of first place and 100 behind Matt Crafton (currently in the last playoff-eligible position on points), his only realistic path to the postseason lies in winning a race.

RELATED: Truck Series standings | Pocono schedule

To do that, Gilliland will have to translate early speed into a checkered flag. He has three chances — in Saturday’s Gander RV 150 at Pocono Raceway (1 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), or in subsequent races at Eldora and Michigan.

Last year, Gilliland qualified second in consecutive races at those three tracks, but his best finish among the three was fifth at Michigan. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t think he can win before the end of the regular season — even, perhaps, on dirt at Eldora.

“Someone’s got to win there, so it can be me,” said Gilliland, who was second fastest behind KBM teammate Harrison Burton opening practice and quickest in Happy Hour. “We were fast at Michigan. We’ve got a fast truck this weekend. It just doesn’t drive real good.

“We’ve been working really hard, and, honestly, this weekend coming here … Kyle Busch Motorsports, I think I saw on Instagram, has won the last four races here. So we’ve got a pretty good track record. We’re still trying to be that guy who brings it home this weekend.

“But with a bunch of young teammates, it makes it hard, because you don’t really know what to go off of. We trust each other as much as we can. At the same time, we’ve got to have our own feel for it and go forward with confidence.”

Teammates Burton and Christian Eckes are both 18 years old. Gilliland turned 19 in May.

For Jimmie Johnson, New Hampshire Motor Speedway was more than just a 1-mile flat oval. Last Sunday, it was the highway to the danger zone.

Broken belts and resulting power steering issues relegated the seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion to a 30th-place finish in the Foxwoods Resort Casino 301. That result followed another 30th at Kentucky Speedway the week before.

What’s more, the New Hampshire fiasco put Johnson in real jeopardy of missing a Cup series Playoff for the first time in his career. Johnson is the only driver to have qualified for postseason competition in every year NASCAR has used a playoff format, starting in 2004.

RELATED: Pocono schedule

At New Hampshire, however, Johnson fell to 17th in the series standings, tied with Daniel Suarez and 17 points behind Clint Bowyer, who currently holds the final playoff-eligible position. Johnson trails all three of his less-experienced Hendrick Motorsports teammates in the standings, with Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman already playoff bound — thanks to race victories — and William Byron comfortably in the 12th spot.

For Johnson, there’s no need to mince words — the situation is dire.

“It was an unfortunate turn the last couple of weeks,” Johnson said ruefully during a conference call with reporters in advance of Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). “I think, prior to those two weeks, we’ve really upped our performance and have been bringing more competitive cars to the track.

“We just have to keep evolving in that space, from the 48 specifically and then, I think, as a whole for HMS.”

RELATED: Driver standings

In a broad sense, Johnson and Hendrick have yet to optimize performance under the higher-downforce, lower-horsepower rules introduced into the Cup series this year.

“There are some styles of tracks with the 550 (horsepower) rules package that suit us well and others that we need to work on. So we’re working hard and had things rolling the right way for a while, but then two unfortunate weekends have set us back.

“I’ve learned in this sport that you have to let things roll off your back. Monday, you dig in and learn your lessons from the weekend behind you, and you’ve got to look forward, let stuff roll off your back, be fully committed and fully focused on the upcoming weekend. That’s really the position we’re in and bring on Pocono.”

To rejoin the playoff battle, Johnson will need a better performance than the No. 48 Chevrolet team achieved in the June race at the ‘Tricky Triangle,’ where he started eighth and finished 19th.

Cole Custer topped the leaderboard in Friday’s final Xfinity Series practice at Iowa Speedway, wheeling his No. 00 Ford around the .875-mile track at 129.972 mph.

The final practice session was in preparation for Saturday’s U.S. Cellular 250 (5 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN).

RELATED: Final practice results

Tyler Reddick recorded the second-fastest time for the second consecutive practice, moving his No. 2 Chevrolet around the track for a fast lap of 129.833 mph.

Christopher Bell, the two-time defending Iowa winner, was third-fastest in the final session, driving his No. 20 Toyota 129.736 mph. Chase Briscoe in the No. 98 Ford (129.587 mph) and Justin Allgaier in the No. 7 Chevrolet (129.486 mph) rounded out the top five.

FIRST PRACTICE
Two-time defending Iowa Speedway winner Christopher Bell led the way during the first Xfinity Series practice session at the .875-mile track, recording a fast lap of 129.646 mph in his No. 20 Toyota on Friday evening.

RELATED: First practice results

Bell, who has won five times this season, was faster than Tyler Reddick, who logged the second-quickest lap of 129.220 mph in his No. 2 Chevrolet. Reddick has three Xfinity Series wins this season.

Shane Lee in the No. 28 Toyota (129.098 mph), Brandon Jones in the No. 19 Toyota (129.014 mph) and Ryan Sieg in the No. 39 Chevrolet (128.850 mph) completed the top five in the practice session.

Even factoring in his laidback Californian-cool personality, listening to Kyle Larson this week, it’s obvious that he is both optimistic and confident about his chances to qualify for the 2019 edition of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

That’s not to say, however, Larson doesn’t have a plan.

The popular driver of the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet is ranked 13th in the driver standings as the series heads into Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Larson holds a 14-point advantage on Clint Bowyer, who is currently in the 16th and final playoff transfer position. He has a 31-point advantage on Jimmie Johnson and Daniel Suarez, who are 17th and 18th respectively, tied in points with six races remaining to set the field.

RELATED: Larson in your fantasy lineup for Pocono?

“I feel okay about it (position) but thankful the rest of the bubble guys had issues this last race (at New Hampshire) because I DNFed and only lost nine points to the cutoff,” Larson said. “I was surprised by that.

“I do feel like our cars are definitely fast enough and capable and should be in the playoffs. As far as speed goes, I feel good about it. But obviously, I’ve got to just not make mistakes to give up a lot of points, like I could have this last weekend.”

Not too surprisingly to his fans and the greater NASCAR nation who has gotten to know the young talent, Larson would prefer not to rely on points advantages and instead earn that first victory of 2019. Just win.

And the series is visiting venues where that could happen – places where Larson has traditionally shined.

This week’s 400-miler at Pocono Raceway is followed by races at Watkins Glen, Michigan, Bristol, Darlington and finally the famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Larson has a runner-up finish at Pocono in 2018. He won two stages and led 35 laps in the race this June, only to finish a disappointing 26th. And Larson has a pair of top-10 runs in five starts at Watkins Glen – including a best of fourth in 2014.

But the brightest and biggest circle on Larson’s schedule is probably around the Aug. 11 stop at Michigan International Speedway where Larson won his first ever Monster Energy Series race in 2016 and answered by sweeping the 2017 season. He hasn’t had a top 10 since his last victory in 2017 at the track, but was encouraged by his 14th-place finish back in June. It remains a valid opportunity to secure that “safety net” victory.

“Michigan, we’ve obviously had a lot of success, but the racing was way different then, so it’s hard to say that I go there with the same amount of confidence I had back in 2017,” Larson said. “But we raced there a few weeks ago and we were really fast, our pit strategy just didn’t work out there at the end. I ran inside the top-three, top-five most of the race. We could be good there.

“Bristol and Darlington, those are a couple of my best tracks. I’m excited about the upcoming month and a half of racing because those are tracks I’ve historically run pretty well at.”

RELATED: What are Larson’s odds for Pocono?

Bristol Motor Speedway’s high-banked half-mile has been a particularly good venue for Larson. He’s won the pole position twice and finished runner-up in both races last year. Twice, Larson has led at least 200 laps in a race at Bristol.

The historic Darlington (S.C.) Raceway has been another positive entry in Larson’s young career. He has four top 10s in five starts, including a pair of career best third-place finishes. He led a dominating 284 of 367 laps in his third place effort last year.

“Consistency is probably what we need to do the most to gain points, but then you know, if a win is there for the taking, we’re definitely going to try to win,” Larson said. “But we also can’t do anything too crazy in terms of fuel strategy or things like that, that could cost us if it doesn’t work out. Obviously, we’d like to not be close to the Playoff bubble because then we could call our races a little differently, but that’s just the box we’re in.”

And so Larson insists his method involves taking care of himself and not paying too much attention to the immediate playoff competition. He’s optimistic. That’s half the battle.

“It is kind of crazy seeing Jimmie Johnson floating around that cutoff, I don’t really pay attention to that necessarily – everyone’s history and successes that they’ve had,” Larson said.

“I just want to make the playoffs, so we’ll keep trying to finish these races. We were doing a good job and gaining a lot of points and this past weekend kind of set us back a little bit. But we’ve got fast cars and that helps make it a little easier to be consistent and do what we’ve got to do to make the playoffs.’’