NASCAR.com will live stream the first three practices at Richmond Raceway — two Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practices and one Xfinity Series practice — in advance of the weekend races in Virginia. Bookmark https://www.nascar.com/live, the destination for all live practice streams this year. You can also catch the practice on NASCAR Mobile.

For Friday specifically, the live-streaming schedule is as follows for users in the United States. Full practices will be posted to NASCAR’s YouTube channel later in the day for fans who can’t watch live.

8-10 a.m. ET: Xfinity Series final practice
11 a.m. – noon ET: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first practice
1-2 p.m. ET: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice

RELATED: Full weekend schedule

FOX Sports will feature a multi-hour block of Fast Friday programming each race weekend, beginning at 3 p.m. ET; practices before 3 p.m. will be live-streamed on NASCAR.com.

It’s a doubleheader weekend at the .75-mile Richmond track with Friday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series ToyotaCare 250 (7 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and Saturday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 (7:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

He might not win all the time, but considering the frequency in which Kyle Busch visits Victory Lane it certainly creates the impression that the Joe Gibbs Racing driver is omnipresent in the winner’s circle.

Busch’s most recent Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series victory occurred Sunday at Bristol Motor Speedway. Yet unlike so many of Busch’s wins — including his previous two this season — Busch didn’t have the dominant car in the Food City 500. Yes, his Toyota Camry was strong, but even Busch admitted others were better. Chief among them, Team Penske teammates Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney, who combined to lead 344 of a possible 500 laps.

RELATED: Full Bristol results

But winning is more than just which driver possesses the most talent, though Busch is undoubtedly not lacking in this department. Many factors play a role in deciding the outcome, as was the case at Bristol.

The decisive moment Sunday came during a caution with 21 laps remaining. Keselowski was leading, Logano was second, Busch third and Blaney fourth. The Penske trio all elected to pit for fresh tires, while Busch’s crew chief, Adam Stevens, chose to keep his driver on the track. That was a critical call that vaulted Busch into the lead he wouldn’t relinquish.

Keselowski incurred a penalty on the subsequent restart, while even with fresher tires Logano and Blaney lacked enough time to move forward and challenge for the win.

RELATED: Kes, Miller on penalty

“It stinks when you have the fastest car and don’t win, but it’s a team sport and it takes every piece to make it work,” said Logano, who finished third.

It’s not as if Busch didn’t earn his 54th all-time victory in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, tying him with Hall of Famer Lee Petty for 10th on the all-time wins list. He did have to fend off older brother Kurt over the last 14 laps. Had he been able to get to the rear bumper of his younger sibling, Kurt said post-race he would’ve crashed him — but he never got that chance as the situation never materialized.

RELATED: Busch on tying Petty for all-time wins

Sometimes circumstances simply work in your favor. Sometimes it is better to be lucky than good. And when you’re both lucky and good, then you’re Kyle Busch.

“It’s pretty awesome to be able to snooker those guys, get our win today here at Bristol,” Busch said. “The Skittles Camry wasn’t the best today, but we made the most of not having the best and got everything we needed here at the end.”

It has been that kind of season for Busch. He now has a Monster Energy Series-best three wins, has finished in the top 10 in all eight races — the first driver to accomplish this feat since Terry Labonte in 1992 — and continues to sit atop the standings, stretching his lead to 27 points over second-place Denny Hamlin.

Many times over it has been demonstrated that Busch is capable of winning any race, no matter the track. It’s not as if he also needs any luck. But when things do go his way, or when his competitors hand him an opportunity on a silver platter because of pit strategy that can best be described as curious like on Sunday, it creates the impression that there is simply no slowing him.

Adding to that seeming aura of invincibility and what must give the competition fits is what lies ahead: Richmond Raceway. Merely a venue where Busch has won six times — second only to his now eight wins at Bristol — including the past two races on the short track, and boasts a stellar average finish of 6.9 in 27 career starts. It is a place where he is often at his best.

“We got some good tracks coming up,” Stevens said. “Hopefully we can get back on our horse, give him something he can race with a little closer next week.”

Maybe Busch won’t get another fortuitous break on Saturday night. It also might not even matter.

 

After a difficult start to the season down south, Justin Bonsignore put himself back on track Sunday at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.

The defending NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion may not have quite had the fastest car for much of the Icebreaker 150, but he was in the right place, at the right time, once again at the Connecticut oval. And although Bonsignore will tell you the Thompson success comes with a lot of luck, capturing his 10th Thompson victory — the most of among active drivers — shows the consistent speed the Holtsville, New York, driver shows up to Thompson with each of the four times the series visits.

Bonsignore winning, Ron Silk continuing his success with Stuart Motorsports, and Doug Coby’s near perfect weekend performance are just a few of the storylines leaving the annual Icebreaker, the third race of the season.

Icebreaker 150: Race Results | Race Recap | Photo Gallery

Bonsignore Keeps Streak Rolling at Thompson

For most of the Icebreaker 150, it looked like Justin Bonsignore might settle for second. During the first 107 laps, Bonsignore’s No. 51 Phoenix Communications Inc. Chevrolet chased Doug Coby around the .625-mile oval, but he wasn’t far back.

When a pit stop penalty sent Coby to the rear in the final 50 laps, it was Bonsignore who took advantage — pulling away over the final green-flag stint and holding off another former series champion on a final restart.

In many ways, the victory allowed Bonsignore to turn around what was a little bit of a dismal start down south, where he finished 12th in the opener at Myrtle Beach Speedway, but finished 25th after an early wreck sidelined him from the finish with a power steering issue.

But Bonsignore knew returning to New England would help steer things back in the right direction.

“We’ve had speed at every race so far, Myrtle Beach we didn’t pit, and at South Boston I got us wrecked,” Bonsignore said. “I was like 40 laps down last week, and I said it on the radio, I said ‘don’t worry guys, I’ll make up for this next week’. I just knew right away that we were going to our best track, or at least one of our best tracks. You couldn’t have asked for a better place to come when you get off to a rough start.”

Perhaps even more important to him down the line will be the feat he accomplished by winning Sunday. Although multiple drivers had won four straight at the historic oval, Bonsignore became the first driver in the history of the modern era to win five Whelen Modified Tour races in a row at Thompson, adding his name to the record books of one of the longest standing NASCAR tracks.

“Stuff like that, you will think about it when you’re done racing, hopefully have kids, and you can say you won five in a row and no one else did that at Thompson,” he said. “I’m still living in the moment, but already thinking about what we need to do when we come back in the summer to be a little bit better.”

Bonsignore’s path to repeating as champion sees him up to seventh in the standings after three races, 25 from the lead.

“It would have sucked if he (Coby) beat us, but I think it’s going to be us two this year. They have definitely picked their game up. It’s going to be a dogfight,” Bonsignore said. “Doug and I were pretty even. I think we would have been closer on the second tire than we were on the first one. We were within a half of a tenth of each other almost every lap all weekend. I’ve won a bunch here, and some of them are just on luck. I think I could have beat him, but I can’t say that as a guarantee. It would have been a hell of a race.”

And, living on the high of his Thompson win, Bonsignore and his Kenneth Massa Motorsports team now must turn their attention across the state to Stafford Motor Speedway, where the series competes in the NAPA Spring Sizzler on April 28 — a track Bonsignore has yet to master.

“You have to be good in Connecticut to win this championship,” Bonsignore said. “We know that. We definitely went with three different packages to Stafford last year and the Fall Final we were at our best, but the tire strategy there is hard to play out. We have to play smart and try to get top-fives and the wins will come. I’m confident going to Stafford. I’m getting better and better there. If I can win the Sizzler first, it would make up for 10 years of not winning there.”

Former Champion Silk Back in Form 

It was nearly back-to-back wins for Ron Silk on Sunday.

Once Coby was out of the picture at the front, it was Silk who took control of second for the final stint of the race. For the 2011 Whelen Modified Tour champion, the second-place effort was just what the Stuart Motorsports team needed to keep their roll going fresh off a win at South Boston Speedway on March 30.

“Things are going pretty good, at the end of the year last year, we ran good for the last few races, we had a good car at Myrtle Beach and got a terrible finish out of it. Hopefully we can just keep some momentum,” Silk said. “The plan is to do well and run full-time, but if we run into a point where we are struggling and need to regroup we might do that, but, I don’t see any reason why we can’t keep this going.”

At the end, did Silk feel like he had something for Bonsignore? Not quite.

THOMPSON, CT - APRIL 7: Cars race during the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Icebreaker 150 on April 7, 2019 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park in Thompson, Connecticut. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

“Justin and the No. 2 were the best cars all weekend. I think he just would get out a few car lengths mind the gap and not use too much of what we had left,” Silk said. “We weren’t as good as those two, but otherwise, I thought we were just as good as anyone else. The guys did a great job on pit road. I owe a lot of it to those guys.”

Silk sits just in front of Bonsignore in the points standings, in sixth, after three races.

“Running good is always a confidence booster, everyone stays motivated. The Stuarts are a great group of guys,” Silk said. “I really enjoy racing for them. Kevin has given us everything we needed to improve, and I’m glad it’s paying off for us.”

Coby’s Near Perfect Weekend Comes Up Short

Practice and qualifying both saw the No. 2 Mayhew Tools Chevrolet at the top of the leaderboard. And for the first 107 laps, the race did as well.

But when Doug Coby led the field down pit road for fresh rubber, the race took a turn for him. He did exit at the top of the field, but a penalty for running over an air hose while leaving the pit stall ended the chances for the five-time champion to get back to Thompson victory lane for the first time since 2015.

“We had a really good car,” Coby told Short Track Scene. “Came back to fifth and showed everyone we had a really good car and that it could run through traffic, too. It was important to win, but it was important to have the race like we had … to kind of feel like we‘re back a little bit.”

Last year, Coby watched Bonsignore win half of the races and roll to title, ending Coby’s streak of four consecutive in NASCAR’s Whelen Modified Tour. And although he had the speed he needed to get the job done at Thompson, ultimately, he didn’t seal it.

“You gotta win the race,” he told Short Track Scene. “Justin [Bonsignore] won eight races last year and we handed him one this year. The bottom line is, if we want to win at Thompson, everybody‘s gotta step up and do their part. It was a mistake. I‘ve made plenty of mistakes.”

Although Coby’s victory didn’t occur, he does lead the standings heading back to Stafford Motor Speedway, a place where he has won 11 times.

Up Next

After three races in four weeks, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour returns to the track on Sunday, April 28, as part of the annual NAPA Spring Sizzler at Stafford Motor Speedway.

THOMPSON, CT - APRIL 7: Justin Bonsignore, driver of the #51 Phoenix Communications Inc. Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Icebreaker 150 on April 7, 2019 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park in Thompson, Connecticut. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

Near the conclusion of Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway, some late-race confusion within the No. 2 Team Penske camp on the final restart order resulted in NASCAR black-flagging an upset Brad Keselowski, who went to the NASCAR hauler after the race for a discussion.

Keselowski pitted during one of the final cautions and upon exit was ahead of cars on track that had not pitted. NASCAR attempted to correct the restart order through communication with spotter Coleman Pressley via the race channel.

With Keselowski’s team taking issue with the running order, NASCAR race control waved off one restart attempt, then went back to green-flag conditions with Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford still outside the double-file lineup. NASCAR officials issued the team a pass-through penalty for “disobeying a NASCAR request” on Lap 486; the team served the penalty four laps later.

MORE: Full Bristol results

Keselowski was visibly upset on pit road after an 18th-place finish in which he led 40 laps, but after a discussion with NASCAR officials he understood where the mix-up happened and said NASCAR “made the right call.”

NASCAR Senior Vice President of Competition Scott Miller joined SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Monday morning for a weekly call and further clarified the confusion.

“The thing is, it’s really actually pretty simple,” Miller said. “We were trying to get him in the right spot in the lineup and we were communicating with his spotter via the race channel, which is their responsibility to listen to per the rule book and numerous times we told him the 6 car (of Ryan Newman) belonged in front of him, give him space to get in there and he didn’t. As we talked to Brad after the race, there was a breakdown in communication on their side because he never really received that communication from his spotter.

“That’s where the problems started and obviously, unfortunately, it didn’t end the way Brad wanted it to end. But it’s their responsibility to monitor what we’re saying and what we’re trying to get things to do, and it didn’t appear that happened as it should have.

“We expected Brad to be there when we got (back to the NASCAR hauler) and he certainly was.”

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series next heads to Richmond Raceway, where the two-time 2019 winner has seven straight finishes inside the top 11.

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Kevin Harvick finished 13th in Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol and on the lead lap and that’s about an amazing of a comeback as you’re likely to see at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Making up a lap or perhaps two is difficult. Harvick, at one point, was scored four laps in arrears.

Down. Out. Finished. Done.

Thanks to an incredibly fast No. 4 Ford Mustang, the 2014 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion was able to race his way back onto the lead lap and into the picture.

RELATED: Race results | More on Harvick’s pre-race Bristol penalty

The day certainly didn’t start out well – the team failed pre-race inspection three times and was penalized before the race had even begun.

Because of the inspection issues, Harvick dropped from 13th to the rear of the field at the start of the race; one crew member was ejected, the driver had to do a pass through penalty under green once the race began and the team will lose 30 minutes of practice time at the next points event.

His first break came when he hit pit road after the green flag – a multi-car incident brought out the caution flag and Harvick only lost one lap in the pits.

But a loose wheel put his No. 4 back on pit road a short time later and Harvick soon found himself multiple laps down.

He joined the lead-lap cars during the final caution of the race when he was in the free pass position.

The finish was his worst since a 26th place run at Daytona this year. But it may have been one of the team’s most impressive efforts overall.

As for his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Clint Bowyer led five times for 24 laps and had one of the best long-run cars in the field Sunday. But contact with Joey Logano on lap 432 resulted in a flat tire for the driver of the No. 14 Ford and put the team in catch-up mode for the remainder of the race.

“He was racing me pretty hard,” Bowyer said of Logano. “… We just barely touched, and it must have cut the valve stem out of it or something and hit it just right.”

Bowyer managed a seventh-place finish in spite of the setback.

“My strong suit, just like last week, was long runs,” he said. “We just slowly kept picking them away. You could see that on restarts. I couldn’t take off worth a damn, but I could really come on strong on the big end of a run.”

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Denny Hamlin, the series’ most recent winner heading into the Bristol race weekend, appeared to have made the move of the race when a two-tire call under caution at lap 417 put him out front for the subsequent restart.

The lead was short-lived. Hamlin was penalized for speeding on pit road, something that’s been the Joe Gibbs Racing driver’s Achilles heel, and forced to give up the valuable track position.

He did manage to rally and finish fifth, however.

RELATED: Official race results

“I screwed up our strategy on pit lane,” Hamlin admitted. “We’ll get it cleaned up. Just got to work through all the kinks and clean stuff up.

“We didn’t have a race-winning car. Top-five finish with a car that probably shouldn’t have been there is a good day.”

Hamlin won the season-opening Daytona 500 as well as last weekend’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. The TMS win came after he rallied from a, you guessed it, pit road speeding penalty.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — It was a frustrating day for pole winner Chase Elliott as the Hendrick Motorsports driver lost the power steering in his No. 9 Chevrolet barely 20 laps into the race, then was involved in an incident just shy of the halfway point of the 500-lap race.

MORE: Official Bristol results

Despite the setbacks, he was still contending for a spot in the top 10 when his car hit the wall with less than 70 laps remaining. He led the first 38 laps of the race, finished 11th and on the lead lap, but saw a good day otherwise ruined.

“Definitely not what we started out hoping for,” he admitted. “We got turned late in the race, that was about it. We fell behind from there.

“I had a great car, even without the power steering.”

Kyle Busch’s racing-winning No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota has passed post-race inspection with no issues at Bristol Motor Speedway.

The No. 18 Toyota was found to be compliant with the 2019 NASCAR Rule Book following Sunday’s Food City 500. With the post-race teardown complete, the race results are official.

RELATED: Race results | Full schedule for Richmond

The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Denny Hamlin (fifth-place finisher) and the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Martin Truex Jr. (17th-place finisher) each was found to have one lug nut not safe and secure. According to the guidelines in the rule book, the infraction should result in a fine this week for those team’s crew chiefs.

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 to evaluate technical trends, 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. — Ryan Blaney locked horns with Ryan Newman at Bristol Motor Speedway and survived to tell the tale.

A full-contact Sunday afternoon back-and-forth between them in the late going of the Food City 500 ended with both Ryans sharing a post-race laugh about it on pit road. The good-natured ribbing and squeeze of the shoulders was easier to stomach after both salvaged top-10 finishes on a day of survival at the rugged Tennessee half-mile.

MORE: Full Bristol results

With 72 laps to go, Blaney’s Team Penske No. 12 Ford carried momentum up into Newman’s Roush Fenway Racing No. 6 Ford at the exit of Turn 2. The two Mustangs collided, and Newman’s car scraped against the outside retaining wall. A handful of laps later, Newman gave Blaney’s car a substantial nudge in retaliation, but both continued without further incident.

“I told him if he’s going to listen to his spotter, he might as well just take the mirror out of the car,” Newman said post-race, delivering hard-edged comments that were softened by a wide grin. “Just cut me off on the back straightaway, kind of hurt both of us. But it was hard racing, I guess that happens at Bristol. It just sucks when it happens to you.”

Later — and importantly, still smiling — Newman said that the contact could be chalked up to both Blaney and the Bristol’s rambunctious brand of racing. “Both. You expect more out of that, and out of him especially,” he said. “If it was a rookie, it’s one thing. But his spotter can’t drive the car, and his spotter’s got to see those runs, too.”

Blaney explained that Josh Williams, his spotter, wasn’t to blame.

“Yeah, I put him in the fence off of (turn) two on accident. I tried to clear him myself,” Blaney said. “Just racing hard on a restart and my spotter said he was still out there, but I stayed on the gas trying to clear him myself. I fenced him and I felt bad about that. He got me back. He fenced me off the frontstretch, so that’s hard racing.

“Me and Ryan have always raced each other really good. I’ve looked up to him for a long time, and it’s nice you can have a laugh about it and joke about it and not be pissed about it, so it was my fault. I just tried to clear myself.”

Blaney and Newman persevered, though both had realistic chances of placing higher on the scoring pylon. Blaney finished fourth, despite leading a race-high 158 of the 500 laps. And Newman grabbed his best finish of the season in ninth, overcoming a penalty for improper fueling on a Lap 435 pit stop.

Blaney’s effort was his fourth top-five result in the last five races. His post-race lament was his difficulty in adjusting to the variable track conditions on the rough concrete surface.

“I kind of run into this all the time here,” Blaney said. “We’re good early and then I can’t figure out kind of what I need to do to get better as the track rubbers up. Joey’s really good at it. I thought he had the best car probably. The track rubbers in and gosh, I just need to do something different there. Overall not a bad day. We were up there all race and just trying to keep up with the track. The track was really racy today from bottom to top. I thought it put on a really good show.”

Newman’s season-best marks a high point in his first year with the Roush Fenway No. 6 team, which spent time among the top five before the slight fade near the end.

“We had a car that was probably better than what we ran all day,” Newman said. “We just kind of got caught up there. Don’t know what happened with the penalty on pit road there. Need an explanation for that, but either way, good day for us. …

“I don’t know. I’ve put in a lot of work before and not gotten rewards, so just proud of the guys. They did a good job on pit road, even with the penalty. We’ll just keep digging.”

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Kyle Busch wasn’t the only driver to overcome adversity during Sunday’s running of the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

But he was the only one to end up in Victory Lane.

The race winner was involved in a multi-car crash on the second lap of the 500-lap affair, sustaining damage to the rear of his car. But he patiently worked his way back through the field. He took his first lead at lap 384.

The key to the win came late – Busch collected his third win of the season in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and his eighth overall at Bristol Motor Speedway when he chose track position over fresh tires during the 11th and final caution of the race.

RELATED: Official race results
SHOP: Kyle Busch gear

“I don’t know, we’re crazy; we just do what we do (to) try to win,” the driver of the No. 18 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing said after climbing from his entry on the frontstretch.

The final run to the checkered flag was set up after Kyle Larson got into the wall with less than 25 laps remaining to bring out the yellow flag. Joey Logano and Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski, running 1-2, hit pit road, as did several others in the lead pack.

But Busch, along with older brother Kurt, opted to stay out, along with Daniel Suarez and Paul Menard to restart first through fourth when the field went back to green with just 14 laps remaining.

“It’s pretty awesome to be able to snooker those guys, get our win today here at Bristol,” the younger Busch said. “I love this place.

“It was fun to battle out the brother there at the end. I know we didn’t quite get the side-by-side racing it out; I saw him looking at the top. I’m like, ‘I better go.’ I got up there, was able to make some ground.”

“It was a no-brainer for us,” crew chief Adam Stevens said afterward when asked about the call not to bring his driver to pit road.

Busch also paid tribute to three-time series champion and FOX NASCAR analyst Darrell Waltrip, who won 12 times at the Tennessee venue.

“It ain’t 12, that’s for sure,” Busch said of his win total at BMS. “So I’ve got more to go.”

RELATED: Drama unfolds in Stage 1 | Amirola drags jack stand on track

There were issues on the final restart, Keselowski was penalized for failing to follow a NASCAR directive, but none for the front two.

Logano, Ryan Blaney and Denny Hamlin completed the top five.

Menard, Clint Bowyer, Suarez, Ryan Newman and Jimmie Johnson were sixth through 10th, respectively.

“I really wanted to beat him,” Kurt Busch said of the battle with his brother. “I was going to wreck him. … He already won (this year). I figure he could give a little love to his brother. I wanted that one bad. …

“I’m happy that we were in position to do it. This group of guys, we’re not quite ready to win yet, but that was close.”

The win was Busch’s 54th overall in the series. His previous wins this season came at ISM (Phoenix) Raceway and Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California

He led 71 laps, including the final 19. He also overcame an early spin that saw his Toyota swept up in a five-car incident on just the second lap of the 500-lap race.

The race was the eighth of the season; all eight have been won by drivers from either the Joe Gibbs Racing or Team Penske camps.

It was a battle reminiscent of past contests held at Bristol, with plenty of contact as well as lead changes. Blaney was the lap leader at 158 while Logano paced the field for 146.

Ty Dillon was a surprising winner of the opening stage, edging Bowyer with a last-lap pass. Logano won the second stage.

Several teams, including those of Keselowski, Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr., battled loose wheel issues. Others were merely forced to deal with damage typically associated with the close-quarters racing that has been the norm at BMS.