A retooled NASCAR Playoffs schedule is among the highlights of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule release, with changes to all three elimination races serving as the capstone of a rebuilt postseason.

Bristol Motor Speedway, the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course and Martinsville Speedway — tracks known for producing plenty of fireworks, flared tempers and dented sheet metal — will serve as hosts for the final events in the Round of 16, Round of 12 and Round of 8, respectively.

RELATED: Full 2020 schedule | Finales shifting next season

Below is a look at the 2020 Playoffs breakdown, with the champion being decided at ISM Raceway in Phoenix:

ROUND OF 16

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs open Sept. 6 at historic Darlington Raceway, which returns to the postseason for the first time since 2004. The NASCAR throwback program that has made Darlington one of the must-watch events of the year gets some added mojo, turning the crown jewel Southern 500 into a postseason event.

From there, the series heads to Richmond Raceway for a Saturday night race. It will be Richmond’s third consecutive year hosting a playoff race.

This round ends under the lights at Bristol Motor Speedway as the much-anticipated Bristol Night Race moves from its historic August date to this high-stakes elimination position, where four drivers will leave Thunder Valley out of the postseason. The necessity of tight racing, plus the opportunity to move cars out of the way on the high-banked, .533-mile oval, should make for an explosive end to the opening round.

ROUND OF 12

Las Vegas Motor Speedway remains in the Playoffs, just in a new spot. Instead of serving as the opening race for the entire postseason, Sin City will play host to the Round of 12 opener. Moving this postseason race three weeks later should make for a cooler race weekend in Las Vegas as well.

Always unpredictable Talladega Superspeedway follows Las Vegas, keeping its middle spot in the Round of 12.

The Charlotte road course, which hosted a dramatic debut with an all-timer of a finish in 2018, closes the Round of 12. As the elimination race in the Round of 16 last year, the high-stakes atmosphere led to a finish that saw Jimmie Johnson overdrive the final turn, taking out both himself and race leader Martin Truex Jr. Ryan Blaney snuck by to win the race, and Johnson was eliminated from the postseason.

ROUND OF 8

For the first time in the history of the elimination-style format, Kansas Speedway moves to the Round of 8, taking the opening spot in the three-race series. The opener, in fact, takes place at Kansas. Texas Motor Speedway keeps its same spot on the slate as the middle race in the Round of 8. That gives the Round of 8 two consecutive 1.5-mile tracks.

RELATED: Martinsville on the move

Martinsville Speedway, which has hosted some of the most memorable moments in NASCAR Playoffs history, is the Round of 8 elimination race. Yes, the oldest track on the NASCAR circuit — which in recent years has given us “We’re going to Homestead!” and “He ain’t winning the damn war” — moves to the all-important final race before the Championship 4 field is set for the Championship Race in the desert.

Racing has gone through quite a few changes since Danny Edwards won his first late model championship at Virginia’s Langley Speedway in 1989.

Technology has made it so getting parts for cars is as easy as making a quick phone call, whereas 30 years ago Edwards said most parts he would have to build or make himself. There’s also much more engineering involved in the building of the cars.

Danny Edwards

Larry King Law’s Langley Speedway, a 0.396-mile slightly banked asphalt oval in Hampton, Virginia, has also seen its share of changes, from remodels to repaves, the addition of concrete barriers, skyboxes and grandstands.

Langley Speedway | Facebook | Twitter

But one thing that hasn’t changed in the last three decades is Edwards’s ability to win.

Edwards won his sixth championship at Langley last year, 29 years after winning his first. The championship puts him one away from driver Phil Warren, who holds the record with seven titles.

While some competitors shy away from talking about going for records, Edwards embraces the idea fully. He said the track record will be on his mind every race this season.

“Obviously that’s kind of what we do it for,” he said. “We do it to win races and we do it to win championships, and to have fun as well. We don’t do it for a living. It’s not our full-time job. That puts us at a little bit of a disadvantage to the guys that do. The guys that have the time to spend working on their cars day-in and day-out as a full-time job. It gives them a little advantage there, but we still have the passion and want to go out there and be competitive and win races and ultimately win championships.”

Going into 2018, Edwards and his brother, Greg, were tied with five titles each before Danny Edwards, now 51 years old, was able to break the tiebreaker.

Greg will likely be his brother’s biggest competition on the track this season, with both racing out of the same garage with that record on their minds.

“It’s going to be a tough year. My brother, Greg, is always in the points and he’s a tough competitor. It’s going to be a tough road this year,” Edwards said.

Edwards began racing motocross dirt bikes as a teenager, but got the opportunity to drive a street stock car sponsored by his dad’s company in 1984, and moved up to a late model three years later. He tried to make racing a full-time job for about three years in the 1990s, running 10 races in what is now NASCAR’s Xfinity Series. Eventually he made his way back to his home track, and has been a staple there in the late model division ever since.

Danny Edwards Racing Reference | Danny Edwards Racing Facebook

The one thing Edwards said hasn’t changed that time is on the track.

“As far as the racing, it’s always racing,” he said. “Things look different, cars look a little different. The racing, through the time, although it has changed it didn’t seem like a huge progression as you’re doing it. It was just year after year things looked a little bit different. Nothing major throughout the years unless you look at it from beginning to end. It’s different but it’s the same.

“The facility and race surface (at Langley) has always been known to be a tough place to race at, and it still is, regardless of how many upgrades and changes that have come around the last 30-plus years.”

And keeping up with his younger competitors hasn’t been an issue for Edwards either. While they may have the benefits of more youthful energy, he has the advantage where it counts.

“It just takes a lot of hard work and effort. The things that I guess I have to my advantage is just the experience,” he said. “The younger guys definitely have the advantage with the youth behind them and energy and stamina and things like that, I try to stay in shape the best I can, but at 51 years old it’s a little tougher. So what we have to do is we try to stay on top of our game and use our experience to benefit us the best and keep going.

“I just keep going and doing what I do, always working on the cars and doing work and trying to stay busy and keep focused, and it’s been successful for us to do that.”

Langley will kick off the 2019 season this Saturday with late models, grand stocks, super trucks, legends and bandeleros.

Langley Speedway Schedule

The short term goal for Edwards is to win the race this weekend and every weekend, or at least run the best he can to get as many points as possible.

He’s hoping he and his team can piggy-back off of the success they saw in their championship run a year ago. If they can, it’ll help their long term goal, and hopefully put a new name in the Langley Speedway record books.

“I’m just excited to get back at it after having a good season last year,” he said. “Just trying to pick up where we left off and hope we’re in good shape to repeat. It’s going to be tough but I feel like we’re in a good position after a successful year last year. If we can just kind of build on that and keep that rolling, that’s what I’m looking forward to.

“Obviously going out and winning the championship is the goal, but for me at least I could never say that’s what we’re going to do. You have to do all the right things and everything has to kind of mesh up and everything has to work out in order for that to happen, so we’re just going to work toward that and hope by the end of the season we’re there.”

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule is set and will be unveiled today at 4 p.m. ET exclusively on NASCAR’s digital and social media channels.

BOOKMARK: Watch live here!

So set the alarm on your smart phone and book the time off in your Outlook calendar.

WHERE TO WATCH
NASCAR.com: www.nascar.com
NASCAR’s Official YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/nascar
• NASCAR’s Twitter handle: http://twitter.com/nascar
NASCAR’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/NASCAR/

Tune in for the official unveil, along with reaction from four-time champion Jeff Gordon, Jeff Burton, Ryan Blaney and reigning Monster Energy Series champion Joey Logano, insight from NASCAR Executive Vice President Steve O’Donnell and analysis from our experts.

NASCAR Xfinity Series star Christopher Bell grew up racing on dirt. He’s part of a burgeoning group of NASCAR stars known for racing any time, any place, in any discipline.

The Oklahoma native nearly picked up a midget win in his home state last weekend, battling Jonathan Beason in a finish that had plenty of intrigue, speed … and yes, a flip.

Watch the video below to see the photo finish and the aftermath after the cars collided at the start/finish line.

https://twitter.com/SpeedShiftTV/status/1110014385722966016

NASCAR fined three crew chiefs from the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and one from the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series for lug nuts not properly installed following the races this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.

All four race teams had one lug nut not safe and secure in post-race inspection on Saturday and Sunday.

RELATED: Race resultsNo. 2 all-clear in post-race inspection

NASCAR fined crew chiefs from the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing team (Danny Stockman Jr.), No. 36 Front Row Motorsports team (Mike Kelley) and No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing team (Tristan Smith) $10,000 apiece for the infraction.

Austin Dillon drove the No. 3 to an 11th-place finish, while Ryan Preece (No. 47) finished 16th and Matt Tifft finished 29th.

Crew chief Ryan Fugle of the race-winning No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota was fined $2,500 in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series.

NASCAR announced Monday in a memo to teams a host of qualifying procedure updates, including additional deterrence measures, for all three NASCAR national series ahead of the upcoming race weekend at Texas Motor Speedway.

The goal: To create order on pit road and retake control of qualifying following a final round at Auto Club Speedway in which all 12 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers failed to make it to the start/finish line in time to log an official lap.

Starting at Texas, any driver that does not take a lap in any of the qualifying rounds will have all previously posted times in the session disallowed – which means instead of falling back on the previous round’s time, that driver would start the race from the back. Additionally, any driver who blocks pit road — at the judgment of NASCAR – in a way that prohibits other drivers from exiting pit road will incur a penalty, such as disallowing that team’s posted qualifying speed and/or disqualifying that car from additional qualifying rounds.

“The inherent problem (at Auto Club) was obviously everybody waiting to the end, and it being unorderly on the end of pit road with people blocking and playing all kinds of games,” NASCAR Senior Vice President of Competition Scott Miller told NASCAR.com. “So really, we want to retake control and make order out of pit road and the way that drivers leave.

“We want to allow every competitor the chance to leave pit road when they want to leave and not be at the mercy of somebody else.”

Starting at Texas, vehicles not immediately making a qualifying attempt will be staged in a track-specific area designated by NASCAR. Once a vehicle leaves the area, it must continue directly onto the race track — it cannot stop at the end of pit road and wait in a gamesmanship play.

The structure of group qualifying will not change — meaning the first of three rounds is 10 minutes, the second round is five minutes and the third and final round is five minutes.

Miller said NASCAR reached this update in collaboration with teams and others in the industry, and there were a few options considered.

One that was not: A return to single-car qualifying at short tracks and intermediates.

“One of the things we wanted to hold true to is not to go back to single-car qualifying,” Miller said. “Single-car qualifying is two things – it’s boring and it’s expensive. It also doesn’t create a good show.

“Anytime we go on the track it should be a show. Certainly, we are in, first and foremost, the racing business. But we’re also in show business. We definitely have to provide our fans with something that’s intriguing to watch and gets them excited about coming back and watching the race.”

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour stays down south for race two of the season on Saturday, before heading back to New England.

The South Boston 150 at South Boston Speedway will see Whelen Modified Tour drivers return to the Virginia oval for the first time since in 18 years. South Boston is one of two new tracks on the 2019 series schedule that will see teams test their equipment in another short-track environment.


SOUTH BOSTON 150 AT SOUTH BOSTON SPEEDWAY

WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

Doug Coby is back at the top. At least for now.

The five-time series champion opened the season with a victory at Myrtle Beach Speedway, and he leads a long list of drivers looking to keep momentum rolling into South Boston. But, prior to two weeks ago, Coby didn’t have laps at the Virginia track under his belt. During an organizational test, Coby and his No. 2 Mayhew Tools Chevrolet team earned crucial experience just two days before Myrtle Beach, building a notebook they will need for Saturday’s afternoon showdown.

But, over his 18-year career, Coby hasn’t quite found the knack for this style track. In his 25 career wins, he has just three at tracks that are under a half-mile — Seekonk Speedway, Monadnock Speedway and New London-Waterford Speedbowl. Instead, Coby’s success has come at tracks like Stafford Motor Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park — which combine for 16 of his victories, and are tracks that have long straightaways and high-speed action.

WHELEN MODIFIED TOUR: 2019 Schedule | Race Center

South Boston is a short, .4-mile, paved oval that Coby will be hoping to quickly knock of his bucket list in his first start. With Phil Moran in control, and Coby sitting behind the wheel of an LFR Chassis — a department that does have previous experience at the track in the past — it could be the perfect place for him to put his struggles at bullrings officially behind him.

The real advantage, though, may rest with the drivers who have previous experience at the Virginia oval in Whelen Southern Modified Tour action from 2009-2016. Burt Myers, who also tested at South Boston, has 10 starts at the track nicknamed ‘SoBo’ but has come up just short of winning. The Walnut Cove, North Carolina, driver finished eighth or better in all of those starts, and as one of the only with experience, they could pay off for him in a big way.

Kyle Bonsignore, who picked up his first career Whelen Modified Tour win last year, finished second in his most recent South Boston stop. Kyle Ebersole, who led 12 laps in the Myrtle Beach opener, won at the Virginia oval in 2014. Jeremy Gerstner and Gary Putnam also have previous starts at the track. The Hill family returns to action with veteran James Civali behind the wheel — another driver who has previous experience and two wins at South Boston.

From up north, Chase Dowling, who finished in the runner-up spot in the championship standings last season, will make his first start driving for Jamie Tomaino.

RACE FACTS

RACE South Boston 150
PLACE South Boston Speedway, South Boston, Virginia
DATE Saturday, March 30
TIME 2:45 p.m. (approx.)
TELEVISION FansChoice.TV, 2:45 p.m. (live broadcast); NBCSN — Wednesday, April 3, 4 p.m.
TRACK LAYOUT .4-mile paved oval
2018 WINNER N/A
2018 POLE N/A
EVENT SCHEDULE Saturday: Garage Opens: 7:30 a.m., Practice: 9:45-11 a.m., Group Qualifying: 12:10 p.m., South Boston 150: 2:45 p.m. (approx.)
TWITTER @SoBoSpeedway57, @NASCARHomeTrack
HASHTAG #NWMT, #SouthBoston150

RACE CENTER | ENTRY LIST | SCHEDULE

CREW CHIEF HANDOUT: 

The starting field for the South Boston 150 is limited to 28 starters, including provisional positions. The first 22 drivers will secure starting positions based on the group qualifying process. The remaining six positions will be awarded through the provisional process.

NASCAR group qualifying is in place for this event. The number of groups for qualifying will be determined by NASCAR. Each group qualifying session will be five (5) minutes in duration and the fastest single lap speed of each vehicle will determine the first 22 starting positions. Vehicles may not return to the track or make any further qualifying laps unless directed to do so by a NASCAR Official or in the event of a caution. If a vehicle returns to pit road, the vehicle’s qualifying attempt is complete. Once a vehicle’s attempt is complete, the vehicle must proceed directly to the designated impound area once it enters pit road. Vehicles will proceed immediately to impound after making their qualifying attempt. Vehicles will be impounded after qualifying/inspection. Vehicle must qualify on race set up.

The South Boston 150 is 150 laps (60 miles). The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. Four tires (4) must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. The tire change rule is four (4) tires, any position.


MEDIA CENTER

RaceDayCT.com: Thompson Speedway Test & Tune Postponed To March 30 | Wayne Burroughs Jr. Ready For New Venture at Thompson Speedway

RacingVirginia.com: Five-Time NASCAR Whelen Modified Champion Doug Coby Expects Speed, Excitement For South Boston Race

Short Track Scene: The Doug Coby Show Returned on Saturday at Myrtle Beach

NASCAR.com: Jimmy Blewett Having Early Success With Gershow Motorsports | Rapid Rewind: Doug Coby Fights Through Adversity at Myrtle Beach

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 25, 2019) — NASCAR and GEICO announced today a multiyear agreement designating the blue-chip brand as the “Official Insurance Partner of NASCAR®” and expanding its presence across the sport.

GEICO’s involvement in NASCAR spans more than a decade through a partnership with International Speedway Corporation (ISC), which includes highly visible assets such as the GEICO Restart Zone, race entitlements and campgrounds sponsorships. Additionally, GEICO has a team relationship with Germain Racing, sponsoring the No. 13 GEICO Chevrolet driven by Ty Dillon in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series™.

“Our affiliation with NASCAR has been successful over the past decade, and expanding our partnership to include rights with the sanctioning body was the next logical step,” said Bill Brower, assistant vice president of marketing for GEICO. “Our expanded presence will allow us to further engage the most brand loyal fans in sports and bolster our effective marketing platform.”

The official partnership with NASCAR provides GEICO exclusive status and promotional rights in the insurance category across the country and U.S. military bases abroad. Through the agreement, GEICO will be present at key NASCAR races throughout the season, building further upon its at-track activation plans. Additionally, the GEICO Restart Zone will expand to select race tracks this season, with the potential to increase the number of tracks in 2020.

“Building on the collaboration taking place across the industry, we continue to pursue opportunities that will further integrate brands throughout the sport,” said Jon Tuck, vice president and chief revenue officer, NASCAR. “Our partnership with GEICO deepens their presence in the sport and provides them even more opportunities to engage our brand loyal fans to maximize their marketing objectives.”

GEICO, the nation’s second largest auto insurance company and a member of the Berkshire Hathaway family of companies, is the latest brand to expand its partnership in the sport. GEICO now joins the NASCAR Fuel for Business Council, providing the company access to an exclusive group of more than 50 Official NASCAR Partners to create business-to-business opportunities and co-marketing programs.

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series continues at Texas Motor Speedway with the O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 on Sunday, March 31 at 3 p.m. ET on FOX, SiriusXM and PRN.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Kyle Busch’s bid for a three-race winning streak in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series ended Sunday, foiled at the hands of the last driver to accomplish the feat.

Busch had a glimmer of a chance at upending Brad Keselowski’s dominant day at Martinsville Speedway, lining up alongside him for the final restart, but contact and a brief slip behind eventual runner-up Chase Elliott left Busch with a third-place result in the STP 500.

“I had a nose underneath the 2 (of Keselowski) there in the middle of (Turns) 3 and 4 and he just chopped my nose off,” Busch said on pit road after his eighth straight top-five finish at the historic .526-mile track. “Normally when you hit a guy, they move out of the way. Instead it seemed like my car had to move out of the way and then the 9 (of Elliott) got by me so we ended up finishing third. That was a lot better day then we probably should have had, and we made the most of our opportunity with our M&M’s Camry.”

RELATED: Busch hits 1,000th NASCAR start mark

Busch was a bit of a late bloomer in Sunday’s 500-lapper, making methodical gains from a 13th-place starting spot on the grid. When Stage 2 ended just past the halfway point, his Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota was scored 12th — outside the top-10 window for stage points.

Some of the gained ground came from speedy service on pit road. Busch picked up one spot in each of the first two pit-stop exchanges of the final stage, capped by a significant two-position upswing in the final round of stops.

“We had so much trouble passing cars in the first half of the race because we weren’t any good, and we started to make it a little bit better,” No. 18 crew chief Adam Stevens told NASCAR.com. “It’s still really hard to pass, so thankfully our pit crew gained us most of our track position and then later in the race we were able to be a little more competitive. But they kept us in the ballgame, for sure.”

MORE: Full Martinsville results

Busch emerged from Martinsville with one streak ending, but a stellar start to the season well intact. With six races in the books this year, Busch has top-three finishes in all but one of them. The lone outlier was a still-solid sixth-place result at Atlanta in the second event on the calendar.

Sunday, the No. 18 team’s ability to make timely adjustments and remain steady on pit road helped keep that performance bar set high.

“It’s about communication,” Busch said. “I have a hand in that and being able to talk to my crew chief. I’m thankful to have Adam Stevens on the box and he made some smart changes for the second half of the race. It got us way better. The pit crew was awesome today, too. I think we picked up like 12 spots on pit road today so that was a huge help because you couldn’t pass on the race track.”

The race-winning No. 2 Team Penske Ford for driver Brad Keselowski has passed post-race inspection at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday with no issues.

The No. 2 Ford was found to be compliant with the 2019 NASCAR Rule Book after Sunday’s STP 500. With the post-race teardown complete, the race results are official and Keselowski’s 29th career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win is in the books.

RELATED: Brad Keselowski dominates Martinsville | Full race results

The only issues noted in post-race inspection were one lug nut each not safely secured on the Nos. 3, 36 and 47 of drivers Austin Dillon, Matt Tifft and Ryan Preece, respectively, after a post-race check. 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 scrutiny. 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 monitor 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.