LAS VEGAS — Embedded in Kyle Busch’s post-race interview after his Gander Outdoors Truck Series victory last weekend was a commentary on one of his young drivers, 18-year-old Todd Gilliland. His remarks suggested that the time to perform was now. 

But two drivers who have successfully matriculated through the Kyle Busch Motorsports pipeline — Christopher Bell and Noah Gragson, both with multiple KBM wins to their names — said that the pressure on drivers still in their teenaged years is immense. But both said that’s largely owed to the system and the brief window available for drivers to establish themselves as competitive regulars.

RELATED: Busch scores landmark Gander Outdoors Truck Series win

“I think if you would’ve asked this question 20 years ago to a guy in my position, coming into the Cup Series, it’d be, ‘yeah, these guys are too young. They need to develop your skills,’ ” said Noah Gragson, who now drives in the Xfinity Series for JR Motorsports. “But that’s all you have these days is young guys and there’s 20 more behind me, so if I don’t get the job done, there’s 20 more that can. That just gives me more motivation and hunger and drive to be the best that I can be and work hard.

“Twenty years ago, you could have a guy who could develop his skills, spend three or four years in Cup, and then he starts winning races. Now if you don’t go into Cup your first or second year and win races, you’re out.”

RELATED: Gragson on differences between Busch, Dale Jr. as a boss

Gilliland, an alum of the NASCAR Next youth initiative, sits winless in 28 Truck Series races despite competing in top-flight equipment. Busch indicated that on at least two occasions, Gilliland should have prevailed but that the chance to capitalize slipped away.

Bell shares the same developmental path as Gilliland when it comes to NASCAR’s national tours, honing his skills at Kyle Busch Motorsports. But Bell was a relative latecomer, with his Truck Series debut coming at age 20 in 2015.

“I don’t know. It’s hard to say. It is crazy seeing how young people are,” Bell said. “I’m 24 years old and I feel like I’m one of the older guys in the Xfinity Series right now, so there’s a lot younger guys who are running Cup. I think Chase (Elliott) is younger than me and he’s been in Cup for a number of years now. It’s very interesting to see the younger guys come up. They keep getting younger and younger as well.”

It’s been a career week, followed by a career week for Kyle Busch. That’s how he rolls. And more opportunity awaits this weekend at his hometown Las Vegas Motor Speedway where he will compete in all three of NASCAR’s national racing series.

Last weekend, the 33-year-old Vegas native became the all-time winningest NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series driver claiming his 52nd victory at Atlanta. He holds the same distinction in the Xfinity Series where he has 92 wins.

On Thursday, he announced a contract extension with Joe Gibbs Racing with longtime sponsor Mars Inc. on board to further the effort as well.

RELATED: Busch, JGR, Mars ink extension | Busch’s top career moments

“My relationship with Joe (Gibbs), JD (Gibbs) and the family has grown a lot of the years and each year I think it gets better and better,’’ Busch said. 

“With the time I have been there and talking to them in the middle of 2007, and then being a driver with them since 2008 has meant the most to my career. 

And, he added, “It’s all about relationships and I feel like the relationship with M&M’s has continued to get better and grown over the years as well as Toyota. I have a lot of friendships there. With all of that, you never say never but I don’t know if you’d ever really see myself drive anything different than a Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 M&M’s Toyota. Hopefully it stays that way and we know it will stay that way for the foreseeable future. I am certainly looking forward to that.”

The immediate future looks pretty promising too.

Busch shows up in Las Vegas ranked third in the Cup standings with a runner-up finish in the season-opening Daytona 500 followed by a sixth-place result at Atlanta Motor Speedway last weekend. He and JGR teammate Erik Jones are the only two drivers in the series to score top 10s in both races. He trails championship leader – and another JGR teammate – Denny Hamlin by nine points in the standings.

And certainly this week’s venue knows about shows. Even for all that Busch has won – 195 national series victories in the three series (52 in Trucks, 92 in Xfinity and 51 in Cup) – taking the checkered at Las Vegas is a source of pride like no other.

RELATED: Where does Busch rank in all-time wins?

With good reason, Busch absolutely considers himself a favorite in all three events. He’s swept a three-series, three-race weekend twice before in 2010 and 2017– at Bristol, Tennessee – and is the only driver to ever do so.

“It would be pretty sweet,’’ he acknowledged with a grin Friday. “Every time I run a triple, that’s the only thing you think about. But you have to win the first one to win the second one to win the third one.”

CONCORD, N.C. (March 1, 2019) – Coming on the heels of earning her second career NASCAR K&N Pro Series West victory last night at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway Dirt Track, Toyota Racing Development (TRD) driver, Hailie Deegan announces six-race deal to drive for Venturini Motorsports.

Deegan will make six ARCA Menards Series (ARCA) appearances and one NASCAR K&N Series start behind the wheel of VMS’ Toyota Camry in 2019.

The 17-year old from Temecula, CA will make her highly anticipated ARCA debut at Toledo Speedway on May 19. She’ll also compete in series’ events at Pocono Raceway (5/31), Madison Int’l Speedway (6/14), Elko Speedway (7/13), Lucas Oil Raceway (10/5) and Kansas Speedway (10/18). Deegan and VMS will also pair for the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East event at Bristol Motor Speedway on August 15.

RELATED: Hailie Deegan makes last-lap pass to win on Las Vegas dirt

Throughout her upcoming ARCA schedule Deegan will feature continued support from long time marketing partner Monster Energy, Craftsman and newcomer iK9.

In 2018, Deegan etched her name in NASCAR’s record books becoming the first female to win a NASCAR K&N Pro Series event as well as earn rookie of the year honors in any NASCAR regional or national series.

The daughter of legendary X Games Motocross giant Brian Deegan, Hailie began her driving career at the age of eight racing dirt on four wheels. She’s the only female driver in the Lucas Oil Off Road Pro series as well as Regional series to win championships in 2013, 2015, 2016 along with being the only youth ever to win the Lucas Oil Off Road Pro series Driver of the Year award (2016).

Hailie has been surrounded by some of the best coaches and industry leaders her entire life. With these resources at her fingertips, she is confident that she can continue to find success as she climbs the ranks of NASCAR in pursuit of one day becoming one of the sports’ elite drivers.

A member of the TRD family, Deegan’s upcoming ARCA effort will coincide with her full-season schedule running the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West driving for Bill McAnally Racing.

Using a fast lap of 180.294 mph in his No. 3 Chevrolet, Austin Dillon topped opening practice on Friday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Dillon’s Richard Childress Racing teammate Daniel Hemric was second-fastest, his No. 8 Chevrolet notching a top speed of 180.078 mph. Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin came up third on the leaderboard in his No. 11 Toyota (180.030 mph), while Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase Elliott and William Byron used late runs to notch the fourth- and fifth-fastest spots, respectively.

Brad Keselowski, the most recent winner at Las Vegas and last week’s winner at Atlanta Motor Speedway, ranked 22nd on the leaderboard. Reigning race winner Kevin Harvick was 15th-fastest.

MORE: Full practice results

Practice leader Dillon was one of the 14 drivers that tested the 2019 rules package at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Jan. 31 and Feb. 1. Last weekend’s race at Atlanta featured the majority of the package’s features, but Las Vegas will also utilize the aero ducts, which are designed to foster tighter racing at speedways longer than a mile in length.

The Monster Energy Series is back on track at 7:40 p.m. ET for Busch Pole Award qualifying with coverage on FS1.

LAS VEGAS — There may be something to the “Dirt Princess” nickname that applies to Hailie Deegan. After a Thursday night coronation at Las Vegas Motor Speedway’s dustier facility, there’s easily more of a royal aura.

In a town known for its gambling and glitz, the 17-year-old Deegan came bankrolled with grit, surging from an eighth-place starting spot and converting a last-lap pass to score her second NASCAR K&N Pro Series victory in the season opener for the West division. The triumph touched off a celebration bathed in emotion, but caked in dust. It also helped quell any notion that last year’s breakthrough win may have been a one-off, and showed that the NASCAR Next driver’s prospects are brighter still.

RELATED: Deegan makes last-lap pass to win

Deegan’s methodical charge to the front was aided by lap-down traffic that stymied impressive newcomer Jagger Jones, who led 31 laps but left a crucial opening as he navigated the final time around. Deegan’s thoughts during her second-half rally ranged from hitting her turn-in points to maintaining proper pace on the fickle surface, but they also included a prediction. “Watch this come down to the last lap again,” she recalled thinking. “And in the end, it did.”

“This was my kind of — what’s the word — rebound race,” said Deegan, who posted her first K&N win in 2018 with a final-lap nudge of then-teammate Cole Rouse. “Coming here, especially in the heat race since we didn’t do that great, I was like, ‘man, I’ve got a lot of work to do tonight,’ but I wasn’t going to go down second again. I was done getting second. I’ve got second a ton of times now, and it just is not fun knowing that there’s a little more you can do, a little better you can be, and I just wanted to be the best I could tonight and go out and show everyone if they counted us out in the heat race that we weren’t done.”

So what do NASCAR and Toyota Racing, which has groomed her development in stock cars, have in Deegan? There’s boundless energy, for one, on display in her charismatic post-race interviews, an exuberant burnout and her buoyant sprint up the Las Vegas dirt track’s stands, checkered flag in hand. There’s the obvious marketability and the nearly unique quality of being a woman in a male-dominated sport.

There’s also instant extreme-sports cred, thanks to her father Brian’s X-Games pedigree, which hasn’t skipped a generation. That’s also helped her with the effortless ability to slip the word “gnarly” into casual conversation. She can thank her family for that, too. But there is also an inherited determination, evident in Brian Deegan’s role in the post-race festivities. In between post-race photos, her famous father lobbed playful “told-you-so’s” toward his daughter about how her diligence and focus for the dirt-track opener had set her apart.

2019 Deegan Vegas

PHOTO GALLERY: All access look at Deegan’s win

“Hailie, it’s a foundation that her dad’s built, being raised with Brian,” says veteran Bill McAnally, Deegan’s car owner for her second K&N season. “I mean, he’s been a competitor all his life and all his kids have learned that it takes effort, it takes a lot of hard work to get it done, and they’re willing to pay the dues. She works hard — in the gym, on the race track. … Knowing she was going to come dirt racing, she’s been in anything she could get sideways for the last month or so. They work really hard, and I’d say it’s the effort that they put in. Brian’s done an amazing job building her foundation.”

Above all, the list of qualities in Deegan’s playbook includes short-track driving chops, a trait reinforced Thursday night in the Nevada dust. Post-race, an emboldened fan cried out from the bleachers, intimating that we’ll see her in Daytona once February rolls around again. Deegan heard it in Victory Lane and reacted with a laugh.

The chances of reaching stock-car racing’s national ranks and larger speedways may have grown brighter, but when pressed, Deegan — for once that night — was willing to ease off the throttle over those prospects.

“I think that it just honestly depends at the rate, if this year goes like this race over and over again, man I’d want to be at Daytona, yeah. But I think as of now, we have a lot to learn, a lot of little things to perfect like that heat race,” she says, mentioning a faulty set-up with her pedals that slowed her in the qualifying heats, “but other than that, I have a lot of stuff to learn and I think I want to learn that in the K&N Series before I move up.”

LAS VEGAS — Hailie Deegan was not to be denied.

In what she called the biggest race of her season and her “rebound race,” second wasn’t going to be good enough.

Thanks to a last-lap pass, she didn’t have to settle for a runner-up finish. The 17-year-old from Temecula, California, captured her second career win and opened up the 2019 K&N Pro Series West season in Victory Lane in the Star Nursery 100 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway Dirt Track.

After having a pedal extension problem in her heat race forcing her to start ninth, she slowly and methodically worked her way into the top five by the Lap 51 break. With some new tires and adjustments, she restarted third behind Derek Kraus and Jagger Jones.

Kraus was passed by Jones with 31 laps to go, and Deegan followed him through. But the No. 6 got smaller and smaller in her windshield, racing out to a four-second lead with 10 laps to go.

Just like she did before the midway break, she slowly reeled Jones in. As the white flag flew, Deegan was in striking distance of Jones. With the help of lapped traffic, the No. 19 dove to the inside, cleared Jones off Turn 2 and sped to the checkered flag.

Star Nursery 100 Race Results

“In the end we wouldn’t have caught him if it weren’t for the lapped cars,” she said. “And they got in his way. If I was him, I’d be mad. Really mad. But some peoples losses are other peoples wins and we ended up getting it done. I knew what we had to do to win. I knew it was going to come down to the last lap again and we made it happen.”

The NASCAR Next driver was not optimistic about her chances pre-race, saying her car was extremely ill-handling and the track wasn’t conducive to her style of dirt racing. But in the downtime between the heat and 100-lap main, she did some homework and things changed.

“Mostly just me working on my lines,” she said. “The line I was trying to run didn’t work for my car, so I had to move around and find which line worked. Once we found that, fixed the car, the car was great. The track was still icy, and we still weren’t good, but it was better than everyone else.”

The thrill of victory for some is dichotomous with the agony defeat for others. In his first career K&N Pro Series West start, Jones seemed to be on his way to a victory.

Unfortunately for the 16-year-old from Scottsdale, Arizona, and his Sunrise Ford Racing team, circumstances dictated otherwise.

“Hailie definitely had a little more speed at the end,” he said dejectedly. “But I think I would’ve held her off no problem, but lapped card cut me off, pushed me right into the tire on the last lap and Hailie was just able to get underneath me. Definitely wanted that win.”

Jones was’t upset with Deegan for the move. He was frustrated with Kenny Bumbera, who made life difficult for Jones on the final lap. When the door opened, Deegan kicked it down.

“Oh I think her move was fine,” Jones said of Deegan’s last lap maneuver. “I mean she didn’t really do anything too bad. It’s just the lapped car cut me off in front. It just pushed me up the track. Once that all happened she had a whole lane to herself. It was kind of given to her, which is unfortunate on the last lap. It just sucks sometimes.”

Joey Tanner came home third in his first career series race for Jefferson Pitts Racing. Kody Vanderwal and Todd Souza rounded out the top five.

After leading a race-high 60 laps, Derek Kraus finished sixth with Trevor Huddleston, Travis Milburn, polesitter Austin Reed (led the first eight laps) and Matt Levin completing the top 10.

2019 K&N Pro Series West Championship Standings

The Star Nursery 100 is scheduled to be broadcast on Tuesday, March 5 at 6 p.m. on NBCSN.

The next K&N Pro Series West event will take place Saturday, March 30 at Irwindale Speedway.

2019 Deegan Vegas

PHOTO GALLERY: All access look at Deegan’s win

You’ve seen NASCAR before, but probably never like this. Never with this sharpness and total clarity, with slo-mo action that allows you to practically see every pixel pop.

NASCAR Productions presents February’s “Prime Cuts” on the NASCAR YouTube channel, a highlight reel of beautiful scenic shots, exhilarating race action, slo-mo cinematography and exclusive material shot by NASCAR-led camera crews and supplemented with race broadcast footage and calls.

Emmy Award-winning camera operators paint pictures fans can’t see anywhere else using specialty cameras — some of which capture at up to 960 frames per second.

Presented for the first time in a long-format cut, these cinematic images are captured each race weekend and illustrate the sights and sounds of the world’s best racing circuit.

February’s Prime Cuts focus on Speedweeks in Daytona as well as Atlanta. Watch it at the link above (or below), or simply embedded in this article.

MORE: “Prime Cuts,” more YouTube content

Name: Chad
Current City: Charlotte, North Carolina
Member since: 2018
Getting to KNOW Chad

How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“When I was a kid my grandfather owned a bar/restaurant in rural Upstate NY. I remember going there on Sunday’s and seeing half the trucks in the parking lot flying 3 flags and the other half sporting rainbow warrior colors. Sitting in the bar and watching the passion of the fans had me hooked on the sport.”

What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“Taking my step-son to his first race when he was 14 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Watching him stand next to the fence during practice and seeing his face as the cars roared by was priceless. You forget the first time you felt that but watching someone else experience it was tremendous.”

Who are your favorite drivers?
“Keselowski and Blaney are by far my two favorite drivers. I think Brad K would be fun because we’re close to the same age, I appreciate his career path, the conversation with him with all things not racing would be extremely interesting. Blaney would just be an all-around good time. I think he’s hilarious on GCOE, can’t go wrong as a Star Wars fan, and my kids are drawn to his personality.”

Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Memorabilia: “A panorama of Daytona signed by Dale Jr.”
Sponsor: “Miller Lite. I’m a huge Brad K fan and it’s the perfect sponsor product for every race day.”
Track: “Charlotte Motor Speedway.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK CHAD FOR HIS CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HIM IN 2019!

Trackside Live is back for the second show of the 2019 season! Following a fun-filled weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway, there will be two shows over the span of two days at the fabulous Las Vegas Motor Speedway’s Neon Garage stage.

MORE: Full Las Vegas schedule | Buy tickets

The first show will be at 7:30 p.m. ET on Sat., March 2 after the NASCAR Xfinity Series Boyd Gaming 300 (4 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The second show will be on Sun., March 3 at noon ET before the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Expect to hear from drivers like NASCAR K&N Pro Series West driver Hailie Deegan, the winner of the Xfinity Series race, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Corey LaJoie, NHRA drivers Matt Hagan and Leah Pritchett and more.

Last year, Brendan Gaughan got into a heated debate about Pineapple Poker while at the live show and he’ll be back this year with Michael Waltrip to talk more strange casino games on Sunday.

The Trackside Live hosts are coming prepared with games and giveaways so be sure to come out and watch the live show if you’re at Las Vegas.

If you’re not able to be there in person, bookmark this page so you can catch the livestream on NASCAR.com.