The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series will be in action at Kansas Speedway while the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is off. The Monster Energy Series heads to the final race of the Round of 12 in the NASCAR Playoffs, while the Xfinity Series enters the first race in the Round of 8. Check out the full schedule below, which is subject to change.

Note: All times are ET

MORE: How to find NBCSN

SUNDAY, Oct. 21
2:20:00 p.m.: Presentation of Colors by Overland Park Police Department Honor Guard
2:20:20 p.m.: Invocation by Chaplain Graham Bailey
2:21:00 p.m.: National Anthem performed by Kansas City, Kansas Police Department Master Detective, Danon Vaughn
2:23:25 p.m.: Flyover by 393rd Bomb Squadron, Whiteman Air Force Base (1 B2 Bomber)
2:28:30 p.m.: Command to start engines by 50 Penn National Gaming VIPs
2:30 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Hollywood Casino 400 (267 laps, 400.5 miles), NBC/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN5)

PRESS PASS (Watch live)
11 a.m.: Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award
5:30 p.m.: Post-Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race

FRIDAY, Oct. 19
2:05-2:55 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN4)
3:05-3:55 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series first practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN App)
5-5:50 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN App)
7:10 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN2)

PRESS PASS (Watch live)
12:30 p.m.: Kyle Larson
12:45 p.m.: Ryan Blaney
1 p.m.: Alex Bowman
1:15 p.m.: Aric Almirola
1:30 p.m.: Christopher Bell, Cole Custer and Daniel Hemric
1:45 p.m.: GMS Racing team announcement
3:30 p.m.: Clint Bowyer
8 p.m.: Post-Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying

RELATED: VIP experience for Ford fan

SATURDAY, Oct. 20
10:30-11:20 a.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series second practice, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN1)
11:40 a.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series pole qualifying, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN App)
1:05-1:55 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN1)
2:55 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series Kansas Lottery 300 (200 laps, 300 miles), NBC/NBC Sports App (Results) (Canada: TSN1)

PRESS PASS (Watch live)
5:30 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Xfinity Series race

Stewart-Haas Racing and Fords, in general, continued to dominate at the 1000Bulbs.com 500 at Talladega Superspeedway as Kevin Harvick grabbed his series-leading 15th stage win when he was in the front at the end of Stage 2 on Sunday.

Harvick led the final 41 laps of Stage 2, which ended on Lap 110 of the 188-lap race. His SHR teammates once again made up the top four: Clint Bowyer in second, Kurt Busch in third and Aric Almirola in fourth. Denny Hamlin was the lone non-Ford to crack the top six as he finished fifth in his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

RELATED: Stage 2 results

Jimmie Johnson brought out the first race caution on Lap 62 when he got loose and spun in traffic, slamming into the interior SAFER barrier. His No. 48 crew made repairs, and he returned to the race one lap down.

On the ensuing restart, Kyle Busch managed to crack into the Stewart-Haas Racing pack of leaders, taking the lead on Lap 69 and holding onto it for one lap. He challenged Harvick for the lead for several laps, but then fell out of the draft and as far back as 21st in the field before returning to the top 10.

Another caution came out on Lap 103 when Kyle Larson spun multiple times after blowing a tire. His No. 42 Chevrolet did not make contact with any other cars as it spun. Larson was running in 11th place at the time of the caution; he dropped to 33rd after his team made repairs.

 

Finish Driver Team Race Points
1  Kevin Harvick  Stewart-Haas Racing 10
2  Clint Bowyer  Stewart-Haas Racing 9
3  Kurt Busch  Stewart-Haas Racing 8
4  Aric Almirola  Stewart-Haas Racing 7
5  Denny Hamlin  Joe Gibbs Racing 6
6  Ryan Blaney  Team Penske 5
7  Kyle Busch  Joe Gibbs Racing 4
8  Austin Dillon  Richard Childress Racing 3
9  Joey Logano  Team Penske 2
10  Brad Keselowski  Team Penske 1

 

STAGE 1

Kurt Busch cruised to the Stage 1 victory at the 1000Bulbs.com 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, leading all 55 laps after he started on the pole Sunday. It marked Busch’s third stage win of the season.

Busch and his Stewart-Haas Racing teammates started in the first four positions at Talladega, and held the same places all the way to the end of the stage: Clint Bowyer was second, Kevin Harvick was third and Aric Almirola was fourth.

RELATED: Stage 1 results

Midway through the stage, eight cars led a breakaway from the rest of the pack — all Fords (from SHR and Team Penske) and Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet — and set a pace other cars could not match.

Brad Keselowski peeled away on Lap 41, however, pitting early for a loose left rear wheel on his No. 2 Ford. He returned to the race one lap down and finished Stage 1 34th — one place from the lucky dog position.

Finish Driver Team Race Points
1  Kurt Busch  Stewart-Haas Racing 10
2  Clint Bowyer  Stewart-Haas Racing 9
3  Kevin Harvick  Stewart-Haas Racing 8
4  Aric Almirola  Stewart-Haas Racing 7
5  Joey Logano  Team Penske 6
6  Ryan Blaney  Team Penske 5
7  Chase Elliott  Hendrick Motorsports 4
8  Denny Hamlin  Joe Gibbs Racing 3
9  Alex Bowman  Hendrick Motorsports 2
10  Ty Dillon  Germain Racing 1

 

Ever wonder what goes on in a driver meeting? We’re here to help.

This year, we’ll publish the actual rules video your favorite Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers will watch before climbing into their stock cars. Above is the video for the 1000Bulbs.com 500 (Sunday, 2 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Talladega Superspeedway.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — The goalposts kept moving for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series playoff picture Saturday afternoon at Talladega Superspeedway. Each crash, each penalty, each shuffle of position shifted the cutoff line for the Round of 6.

Brett Moffitt and Matt Crafton each spent time going the wrong direction in the Fr8Auctions 250, but both scraped by to clinch spots in the next round of the postseason. Only three drivers had secured their berths by the time the frantic final stage set sail, and the chaotic home stretch put all five remaining drivers in a Yahtzee tumbler.

When it all shook out, the bottom four were separated by just 10 points. Moffitt and Crafton could breathe easier, while Ben Rhodes and Stewart Friesen were eliminated. 

RELATED: Round of 6 set | Full race results

“I wasn’t comfortable at all,” said Moffitt, who entered the race with an 18-point cushion and escaped by just eight. “Every single speedway race I’ve been whether it’s Cup Series or Truck Series, I have been leading and gotten wrecked. I’ve been running in the back and have tried to be conservative and have gotten wrecked. And today, I was a middle man and got wrecked. It happens.

“That’s the stressful part about Talladega. A lot is out of your control.”

Moffitt’s Hattori Racing Enterprises No. 16 Toyota collided with the No. 12 of Tanner Thorson with two laps left in the second stage, but he continued on with moderate damage. An unscheduled stop with 15 laps left for a flat right-rear tire, cut on the sidewall, relegated him to a 17th-place finish, two laps down.

Crafton’s impact was far more severe, his ThorSport Racing No. 88 Ford gobbled up in a 10-truck stack-up that forced a red flag with 59 of the 94 laps complete. He wound up sidelined, 26th in the 32-truck field and had to sweat out the remainder of the event to learn his playoff fate. Finishes of fourth and second in the opening two stages sustained Crafton, allowing him to advance by a four-point margin.

WATCH: ‘Big One’ takes out playoff contenders

“Very frustrating, but it’s Talladega,” Crafton said. “What do you expect?”

Four points the other way was Rhodes, who caught a piece of the pile-up that snared Crafton, his ThorSport teammate. The 21-year-old driver soldiered on to a 16th-place result, but never could regain his lead-lap stature, ending his playoff run after one round.

“We can make excuses, but that’s not what we’re here to do,” said Rhodes, who entered Talladega with a five-point deficit. “We’re here to race and get some wins.  It was just a bad day, but I think overall at the end we showed that we were still strong even with a truck that looked like it belonged on the wrecker.”

TALLADEGA, Ala. – All four Stewart-Haas Racing cars were amply endowed with speed for Saturday’s knockout qualifying session at Talladega Superspeedway.

Kurt Busch was just glad he got the pick of the litter.

“Four Stewart-Haas Fords — I’m really happy that I got the fast one,” Busch quipped after winning the pole for Sunday’s 1000Bulbs.com 500 (2 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and leading an SHR sweep of the top four starting spots for the second race in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs’ Round of 12.

RELATED: Qualifying results | Lineup, team rosters

The Busch Pole Award was Busch’s fifth of the season and the 27th of his career. What’s more, his final-round lap at 195.804 mph (48.906 seconds) ended a quest dating to his first race in the Cup series in 2000.

“We’re on the pole!” Busch said. “This is my first restrictor-plate pole ever. Ever! It took me almost 20 years. I got one!”

Busch beat teammate Clint Bowyer (195.301 mph) for the top starting spot by .126 seconds, a huge margin relative to the rest of the top 12. Kevin Harvick (195.186 mph) qualified third, followed by Aric Almirola (194.571 mph).

“With Stewart-Haas cars 1-2-3-4 at this race in the playoffs, it really sets the tone,” Busch said. “Now we’ve got to execute on Sunday.”

The time trials, however, were a tale of two organizations, not just one. Behind the four SHR entries were all four Hendrick Motorsports drivers, with last week’s Dover winner, Chase Elliott, leading the way into the fifth starting position. Jimmie Johnson, Alex Bowman and William Byron were close behind.

“With all four guys in the top 12, it’s a strong showing for us,” said Byron, whose lap time of 49.420 seconds (193.768 mph) was identical to Bowman’s. “That should be good for Sunday. Qualifying doesn’t reflect totally on how things will shake out Sunday and how you are going to race. But it should be fine.

“With the four of us together at the start, we have an opportunity to stay in front of some of the possible situations, but you don’t control much out there, and everything gets so shuffled during the race, it’s hard to know. But I feel good about where we are right now. We’ll see what happens.”

All four SHR drivers are competing for the series championship. Elliott and Bowman are still title contenders for Hendrick.

Playoff driver Kyle Busch qualified ninth in the fastest Toyota, with reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr. claiming the 11th starting position.

“You always want to make the second round, and you hope you can do a little better,” said Truex, who has never won a restrictor-plate race. “We thought we picked up some speed, and we gained one spot, beat the 17 (12th place qualifier Ricky Stenhouse Jr.).

“Better than none, and we’ll go get them tomorrow.”

The remaining four playoff drivers qualified as follows: Brad Keselowski 18th, Ryan Blaney 19th, Joey Logano 20th and Kyle Larson 34th.

With the playoff field set to be cut from 12 drivers to eight on Oct. 21 at Kansas Speedway, Bowyer and Almirola currently are tied for ninth in the standings, 10 points below the cut line.

The No. 72 Chevrolet driven by Corey LaJoie failed post-qualifying inspection and will go to the rear on Sunday.

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Racing for just the fourth time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series this season, Timothy Peters fought off a block from Noah Gragson on the final lap of the Fr8Auctions 250 at Talladega Superspeedway to become the first three-time winner in the series at the 2.66-mile track.

Driving in the last of his three events for GMS Racing, Peters started a move to the outside of Gragson’s Toyota on the backstretch. When Gragson moved up to block, Peters stayed in the gas, and Gragson’s No. 18 Tundra spun across the nose of Peters’ Chevrolet into the outside wall.

RELATED: Full resultsTalladega photos

NASCAR called a caution for the wreck, freezing the field with Peters in the lead.

For Gragson, there was the consolation of moving into the Round of 6 of the NCWTS Playoffs. Matt Crafton did likewise, despite being collected in a 10-car wreck on Lap 59 of 94 and finishing 26th. Gragson and Crafton join Round of 8 winners Justin Haley and Grant Enfinger, along with Brett Moffitt and Johnny Sauter, in the Round of 6.

RELATED: Round of 6 set

Despite a sixth-place result, Stewart Friesen was eliminated from the playoffs, as was Ben Rhodes, who ran 16th, one lap down, after his No. 41 Ford sustained damaged in the same wreck that sidelined Crafton.

But it was Peters who emerged from the last-lap chaos with the victory.

“Everybody’s wanting to win,” Peters said, who triumphed for the 11th time in his career and the first time since 2015. “Everybody’s wanting to block. I wanted to win, too, because this is my last go-around on the three-race stint. So, at the end of the day, I was going for it.

“These guys right here (the No. 25 GMS Chevrolet team) worked their butts off. It just feels so good, so good. … Man, I love this place, and it’s so cool to be a three-time winner. But this is not about me. It’s about the team. This team put together this truck back at the shop, and I was just the lucky one who got to drive it today.”

WATCH: Gilliland takes wild ride | Moffitt’s Talladega trouble

Myatt Snider finished a career-best second, followed by pole winner David Gilliland, Haley and Wendell Chavous, who scored his only top five in 50 starts.

With his playoff hopes on the line, Crafton had to sweat out the final 30 laps after exiting the race in the aftermath of the afternoon’s largest wreck. But Rhodes couldn’t recover the lap he lost because of the accident, and Friesen couldn’t challenge for the victory because his engine was down on power.

WATCH: ‘Big One’ takes out playoff contenders

“I saw some people getting turned up in front of me, and I got hooked in the right-rear,” Crafton said of the wreck that put his playoff chances in jeopardy. “The next thing I knew I was facing the fence and hit head-on. …

“That’s Talladega for you. It’s all out of your hands from when we drop the green. I mean, when you’re racing and people are side-by-side bouncing off each other like that. We did everything we could do the first two segments and let her fly from there.”

Crafton, a two-time series champion, was fourth in Stage 1 and second in Stage 2, collecting 16 points that proved crucial to his advancement into the Round of 6. Crafton finished the Round of 8 four points ahead of Rhodes and six ahead of Friesen.

Sauter also sustained heavy damage in the Lap 59 wreck, but by then the regular-season champion had collected 17 stage points, enough to lock him into the next round.

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Playoffs field has been trimmed from eight drivers to six following Saturday’s Fr8Auctions 250 at Talladega Superspeedway.

Justin Haley locked up a berth in the Round of 6 in the first race of the playoffs with a win at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park. Grant Enfinger took the checkered flag the next week at Las Vegas to advance.

Unofficially advancing on points are Johnny Sauter, Noah Gragson, Brett Moffitt and Matt Crafton.

RELATED: Peters wins in wild finishOfficial Talladega results

The two eliminated drivers are Ben Rhodes and Stewart Friesen.

The point totals as we head to the Round of 6:

 Rank  Driver  Points
 1  Johnny Sauter  3042
 2  Brett Moffitt  3027
 3  Noah Gragson  3025
 4  Grant Enfinger  3018
 5  Justin Haley  3014
 6  Matt Crafton  3003

After a week off the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Playoffs will resume Oct. 27 at Martinsville Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The Round of 6 will play out in Texas then ISM Raceway at Phoenix before the Championship 4 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

 

Kevin Harvick led a handful of Fords atop the leaderboard for Saturday’s final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Talladega Superspeedway when he guided his No. 4 around the 2.66-mile track  at 204.227 mph.

RELATED: Practice results

Harvick’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Aric Almirola was second-fastest after his No. 10 Ford went 203.957 mph, while another teammate, Clint Bowyer, was fourth at 202.431 mph.

Joey Logano broke up the SHR contingent with the third-fastest time in his No. 22 Team Penske Ford at 202.478 mph.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. rounded out the top five in the 75-minute practice session when his No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford went 202.388  mph.

Practice holds for the final 15 minutes included: No. 18 Kyle Busch, No. 19 Daniel Suarez, No. 38 David Ragan (all late to pre-race inspection); No. 41 Kurt Busch, No. 78 Martin Truex Jr. (both failed pre-race inspection twice); No. 2 Brad Keselowski, No. 7 DJ Kennington and No. 99 Landon Cassill (missed mandatory spotters meeting.)

Additionally, the No. 43 of Bubba Wallace served a 30-minute practice hold for failing pre-race inspection twice.

The Monster Energy Series returns to the track at 4:35 p.m. ET for Busch Pole Qualifying (NBCSN/NBC Sports App).

Kurt Busch will lead the field to green for Sunday’s 1000Bulbs.com 500 (2 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). There was just one practice session this weekend, giving players a bit of a puzzle to solve when it comes to setting their lineups. We’ve dissected the numbers to offer a suggested lineup worthy of your Fantasy Live consideration as you make roster decisions.

PLAY NOW: Set your lineup | How the playoff game works

Remember that the garage locks at the end of Stage 2. Also, your garage play can only be swapped for a driver of similar classification. (A playoff garage driver can only be swapped for a playoff driver in your lineup; a non-playoff garage driver can only be swapped for a non-playoff driver in your lineup.)

Cars to the rear: No. 42 — Unapproved adjustments

Pat DeCola’s Fantasy Live lineup for race-day at Talladega:
Playoff driver 1: Joey Logano
Playoff driver 2: Brad Keselowski
Non-playoff driver 1: Denny Hamlin
Non-playoff driver 2: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Garage: Chase Elliott

MORE: Fantasy analysis for Talladega | Driver stats | 10-lap averages | Lineup 

Analysis: The Fantasy Live Playoff Game is in Week 5! These five drivers made up my original lineup and I am sticking with them. The thing is — with Talladega, anything goes and you just try to play the odds. So, while Kevin Harvick was fastest in the weekend’s lone practice session, SHR dominated qualifying and it’ll be fast on Sunday, the group doesn’t have as much of a rapport drafting with each other as the Team Penske drivers. Fastest car or not, no driver or stable can be considered fantasy locks because one minor slip-up and everything changes in the blink of an eye.

I kept that in mind when setting my lineup, with the thinking that Logano and Keselowski have seen the most success most recently at the track and we know the Penske teammates work well together. Hopefully they’ll just keep it going, right?

Logano and Keselowski have won six of the past eight ‘Dega races and I feel as comfortable with them pacing my lineup as one can be when it comes to NASCAR’s biggest wild card.

Sure, stacking them might increase the risk of losing both in a tandem wreck, but it’s the playoffs and you have to take some risks. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don’t — right, Jimmie?

WATCH: Letarte: Don’t stack teammatesSetting your lineup at unpredictable track | Non-playoff picks

For the non-playoff plays, I expect both Hamlin and Stenhouse Jr. in many lineups (same with the playoff Penske duo above), but it’s for good reason. Both of them had their seasons end much earlier than they would have liked, both have something to prove in these final six races and both have arguably their best shots to make a statement at this particular track. Hamlin won at Talladega in 2014 after starting 34th and has led at least a lap in every single race there since that win. Needless to say, he always finds his way to the front, a trait that can reap benefits in NASCAR Fantasy Live.

Like Hamlin, Stenhouse also has a recent Talladega win on his resume (Spring 2017), and has managed to see the front of the field at the track since the very beginning of his career, something that can’t be said about most venues for him. The Roush Fenway Racing driver has led laps in all but two of his 10 starts at the Alabama track.

I threw Elliott in the garage, thinking he’s the only driver who doesn’t have to sweat on Sunday because he’s already locked into the Round of 8. It’ll allow him to be aggressive, and the Hendrick Motorsports driver has already shown an ability to lead laps at ‘Dega (and finished third in the spring.)

For the bonus picks, I’m taking the pole-winner Busch for Stage 1 and 2 with Logano for the win. The spring race’s winner has been humming along all season since his lone 2018 victory and now feels like the time he’ll strike.