Having announced that 2018 will be his final full-time NASCAR season, Elliott Sadler would certainly like to wrap up his successful career with another run at the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship.

Monday’s Lilly Diabetes 250 (10 a.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) could be a pivotal race in Sadler earning a second consecutive regular-season crown along the way.

RELATED: Xfinity Series playoff standings | Full weekend schedule | Entry list for Indy

Sadler’s JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier – a four-time race winner this season – leads the standings by only 16 points over Sadler with two races remaining to set the playoff field. But when it comes to the historic and intimidating Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Sadler has shown himself to be most proficient on the championship team.

He won the pole position last year in his No. 1 Chevrolet and has two top-five and five top-10 finishes in six races at the Brickyard. He is looking to hoist his first race trophy since 2016.

Allgaier is on a competitive roll with 12 consecutive top-10 finishes, including three wins and an average showing of 4.3 during that span. He’ll need to tap into that vibe this weekend, however, as he has only a 21.2 average finish on Indy’s big track.

The seven-race NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs begin Sept. 21 at Richmond Raceway with the regular-season champ receiving a 15-point playoff bonus as a sendoff.

Acclaimed actor Burt Reynolds died Thursday at 82. He leaves behind a rich portfolio of memorable roles in film, and his historical influence on the stock-car racing community continues as an enduring legacy.

Reynolds headlined several automotive-themed movies — “Stroker Ace,” “Smokey and the Bandit,” and both “Cannonball Run” movies — where cars shared the stage with him and his co-stars. But he was also part of a star-studded NASCAR team ownership group that fielded entries through the 1980s.

“Burt was as much of a showman as anyone in Hollywood,” NASCAR legend Richard Petty said Thursday in a statement released by his team. “He had his own signature look, style and charisma. He made himself stand out, and the times I met him, he was as nice as a person you could meet and talk to. He will be missed by many.”

Reynolds partnered with stuntman-turned-producer/director Hal Needham and fellow actor Paul Newman, an accomplished racer in his own right, to form Skoal Bandit Racing ahead of the 1981 season. The team’s name borrowed from the smokeless tobacco sponsorship and the “Smokey and the Bandit” movie title.

Harry Gant and the Skoal Bandit No. 33 in the mid-1980s.
Racing One | Getty Images

Stan Barrett, also a longtime stuntman and land-speed record holder, was the team’s first driver. The car was initially numbered 22, a nod to a jersey number Reynolds sometimes wore as a running back during his college football playing days for Florida State.

“I’ve never owned a race car before, but I love stock-car racing and I sure envy Stan Barrett,” Reynolds told the Palm Beach (Fla.) Post in January 1981. “When Hal Needham and I put this new race car idea together, we tossed around all kinds of notions, but it was obvious from the beginning that we would wind up with a stock car and that it would be a ‘bandit.’ Then when Paul Newman, who’s a winning driver, heard about our idea, he wanted in, too, and the thing just snowballed from there.”

Harry Gant replaced Barrett as the team’s driver midway through the 1981 season. The team changed to No. 33 and forged a long-running combination that gave Needham and Reynolds nine victories from 1981-89. The car’s distinctive green-and-white paint scheme often sported “Burt & Hal’s” on the fenders or roof pillars.

Reynolds’ involvement in racing added a dose of show business to the NASCAR circuit. In return, Reynolds and Needham brought stock-car racing to the silver screen with “Stroker Ace,” a campy comedy that debuted in July 1983.

“He’s hot on the track … and off,” was the tawdry tagline from the movie, which was adapted from the William Neely novel “Stand on It.” The film was shot on location at a handful of NASCAR tracks and featured cameo appearances from several drivers, including Gant, Dale Earnhardt, Terry Labonte, Cale Yarborough and Tim Richmond.

Name: Ashley W.

Hometown: Dekalb, IL but I now live in Southern California

Favorite NASCAR track:Chicagoland Speedway

Favorite Monster Energy Drink: Peach Rehab Tea

Favorite Monster Energy event (besides NASCAR): Supercross

Favorite Monster Energy athlete: Kurt Busch

Which character would you be in Talladega Nights: Ricky Bobby

Monster Girl Ashley Wilke

Talladega or Daytona: Daytona

Car or Truck: Car

JetSki or Snow ski: JetSki

Beer or wine: Wine

What would you name your boat if you had one: Waynes World (after my dog who runs my life)

You might not know this about me: I’ll forever be a country girl at heart and spend a lot of my time volunteering at a farm sanctuary.

Best part of being a Monster Girl: Getting to travel!

Best/craziest fan story/encounter: When little girls come up to you and tell you they want to be just like you when they grow up!

Thirty-nine points separate Kevin Harvick from Kyle Busch heading into Sunday’s regular-season finale at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. That gap, if closed and surpassed, would net Harvick the Regular Season Championship and 15 beneficial playoff points.

While a driver hanging a 60-point performance on his competition — 10 points apiece for two stage victories and 40 points for the overall race win — isn’t some routine thing, Harvick has the statistical profile of a driver that could do it, or at the very least, come close. Per MotorsportsAnalytics.com, Harvick ranks first in both Production in Equal Equipment Rating and Adjusted Pass Efficiency, and his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford ranks first in Central Speed.

It’s a good bet Harvick will be competitive this weekend; however, his leaping Busch for the Regular Season Championship would require a poor outing for the driver of the No. 18 team. Aside from the popular “Busch crashes out in the first few laps” scenario, there’s another plausible path to a result worse than 15th place, the finishing position needed for Busch to clinch without factoring in any stage points.

RELATED: Indy clinching scenarios

Might Busch’s personal ambition interfere with the safe, secure drive that would assuredly net him the spoils of being the Regular Season Champion?

Busch’s unabashed effort to score 200 race victories across NASCAR’s three national series has given us hard-charging highlights and hilarious GIFs through the years. Considering he’ll attempt to rectify the race that got away in 2017 — he crashed out of last year’s Brickyard race after leading 87 of the first 110 laps — playing things safe, with a tempered aggression and a conservative pit strategy, wouldn’t fit with the No. 18 team we’ve come to know.

Adam Stevens, crew chief for Busch, is a relatively aggressive pit strategist. To date, he’s pitted Busch before or after the majority of the field during green-flag stops 15.79 percent of the time, the eighth-most unorthodox percentage among full-time crew chiefs this season. His antagonist, Rodney Childers, has maintained a conservative approach when pitting Harvick, short-pitting or long-pitting on just 8.33 percent of green-flag stops.

RELATED: All-time national series wins

The kind of aggressive strategy Stevens displayed at times has the ability to net large sums of track position, but comes with great risk. At Phoenix, he long-pitted Busch during the race’s final green-flag pit cycle from the lead, bucking the safe approach. This decision cost the No. 18 team the lead and gifted the race win to, of all people, Harvick and Childers.

Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick
Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick have run near each other all season — typically toward the front. Photo: Jeff Zelevansky | Getty Images

Indianapolis will see minimal lap-time falloff as tires wear, and while this means a conservative strategy may make for the best strategy, a few teams could opt for unorthodox pit timing, banking on cautions dropping in their favor in order to upgrade their running whereabouts. This may include foregoing good stage finishes in order to properly gun for an outright race win.

If a crew chief’s driver is mired in traffic, such bold strategy may suffice as a sound track position workaround. This is especially so if the driver is stifled when attempting to pass. Though you wouldn’t expect it from a driver with such an impressive results line, Busch’s weakness is long-run passing when consuming dirty air.

Busch scored a positive surplus passing value — meaning he scored a pass differential better than expected from a driver with a similar average running position — just eight times in 20 non-restrictor plate oval races. If by chance the No. 18 hits a snag in qualifying and starts the 400-mile contest without the clean air necessary to drive away from the pack, Busch, now smack in the middle of a close-proximity peloton, will face tall odds when sifting through the morass. At this point, he’d fit the criteria of a driver in need of some off-kilter pitting.

If Busch does qualify well, as his series-best 8.0-place average starting spot suggests, it could provide the motivation for him to push the pace in search of his third Brickyard trophy. The degree to which the 22 points he needs to clinch the Regular Season Championship elude him hinges on the steadfastness of his desire for instant gratification.

It’ll be a sight to behold regardless of how the weekend breaks.

At some point early in the race, we’ll learn whether Busch values being the Regular Season Champion more than becoming a three-time Monster Energy Series race winner at Indianapolis. That choice will directly impact the magnitude of what could be a banner day for his biggest foe.

David Smith is the Founder of MotorsportsAnalytics.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DavidSmithMA.

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Team Penske announced today that BODYARMOR Sports Drink has agreed to a multi-year extension that extends and expands its partnership with the No. 12 Ford Mustang team and driver Ryan Blaney through the 2019 NASCAR Cup Series season and beyond. The 2018 season marked the first-ever race team partnership for BODYARMOR, which has enjoyed a personal relationship with Blaney since 2017.

“BODYARMOR has been a great addition to our team this season and we are excited about the opportunities with the company for the future,” said Roger Penske. “BODYARMOR brings a lot of energy and excitement to the partnership with Team Penske and we look forward to having them back with our team and Ryan (Blaney) for 2019 and beyond.”

Earlier this year, BODYARMOR Sports Drink served as a primary sponsor for Blaney and the No. 12 Ford Fusion in July’s race at Daytona International Speedway, in addition to this weekend’s event at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The company has also been an associate sponsor with the team at four additional Cup Series races this season.

“Ryan Blaney and Team Penske have been tremendous partners this season,” said Michael Fedele, VP Marketing, BODYARMOR. “BODYARMOR Sports Drink is excited to continue this relationship and we look forward to hydrating Blaney and his team in 2019 and beyond.”

BODYARMOR Sports Drink launched its “BODYARMOR Heroes” promotion earlier this year. Consumers across the country honored a military hero of their choosing by posting to social media using the #BODYARMORHeroes hashtag with a photo and short description of their hero through Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. The winner, Marcus Hayward, had his image and likeness featured on Blaney’s No.12 BODYARMOR Ford Fusion at the Daytona race in July.

BODYARMOR Sports Drink, the better-for-you hydration option with natural flavors and sweeteners, first joined forces with Blaney last year when the brand partnered with the Team Penske driver before the start of the 2017 season.

“It’s great to continue to build on the relationship with BODYARMOR for the future,” said Blaney. “BODYARMOR continues to partner with some great athletes and organizations in many different sports and we look forward to increasing their presence and brand through our team in NASCAR.”

If the final 11 races of the NASCAR season become part of a Kasey Kahne farewell tour, this weekend presents a special stop along the way.

Kahne enters Monday’s Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, IMS/MRN, SiriusXM) as the defending race winner at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The 38-year-old driver has a long-held affection for the historic track, and his performance there has provided another source of anticipation.

“Very special place and always has been,” says Kahne, who’s scored top-10 finishes in half of his 14 Monster Energy Series starts there. “I always went into the Brickyard feeling really good about the opportunity to race at that track. I watched so many races there before I got to actually race there. To actually drive the track is pretty incredible, and to win there last year was unreal.”

RELATED: Full schedule for Indianapolis

Much like last year, Kahne heads to the Indianapolis race in a moment of career transition. Last season’s Brickyard victory came with rumors swirling about his future at Hendrick Motorsports. Two weeks later, the organization announced that Kahne would not return in 2018, setting the stage for his move to his current team, Leavine Family Racing.

This year’s Indy race finds him at another career crossroads, one where he dictated the terms. Kahne announced Aug. 16 that he would step away from full-time racing in NASCAR at season’s end, opting to spend more time with his son, Tanner, and to focus his motorsports efforts on his sprint-car operation.

Now nearly three weeks removed from his announcement, Kahne says he’s more convinced that the decision was the correct one.

“I kind of wondered how that would go, but actually I’ve just been way more at ease about it,” Kahne said. “Really happy with my decision and already trying to think ahead and think about things and ways to go racing with the sprint-car guys and enjoy that, spending time with Tanner, not just during the week but on the weekends. Vacations, things like that with him, and then I have some thoughts on other things to do as well. I’m really happy with my decision and think it’s the right time for it for numerous different reasons, but it’s going to be really nice.”

MORE: Kasey Kahne’s career in photos

Kahne will have plenty of reminders of last year’s triumph when he arrives for the storied Brickyard 400-miler, which will mark its 25th running this year. Kahne outlasted several late-race challenges, a pair of overtimes, chaotic crashes around him and a finish in near-darkness after an early race delay for a thundershower. The drain — both physical and emotional — was enough to send Kahne to the infield care center after Victory Lane for fluids.

Success has been tougher to come by this year, with Kahne sitting 27th in Monster Energy Series points and needing a Hail Mary victory to clinch a postseason berth. The goals for closing out the final 11 races this year are modest, with Kahne hoping to place LFR’s No. 95 on better footing for his successor.

“I want to finish the best that we can and enjoy it with the guys,” Kahne said. “It’s a good group there, so we’ll finish the best we can and go from there. I think they’re working on ideas and things for their future as well, which is going to be great for them.”

Voting begins soon in the Ford Hall of Fans Contest, and superfan Wallace Strader received the VIP treatment at Darlington Raceway after his son submitted his story to the contest.

RELATED: Enter the Hall of Fans Sweepstakes | How it works

Longtime Ford owner and NASCAR fan Wallace Strader and his family attend the race at Darlington and meet the Wood Brothers and the No. 21 Ford team.
Photo courtesy of Ford

Strader has been attending NASCAR races since the 1960s and is a Ford man through and through, owning more than 30 Ford vehicles throughout the years. It was only appropriate that Strader and his family meet one of the longest-standing racing families and Ford teams: The Wood Brothers.

With Strader’s two sons, Stephen and Kevin, two daughters-in-law and two granddaughters joining him for the 2018 Bojangles’ Southern 500, the Wood Brothers made it a true family affair. They gave the Strader family a tour of the No. 21 hauler and Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series garage, plus one-on-one time with Glen, Leonard, Len and Eddie Wood. The Straders also attended the Southern 500 Driver/Crew Chief meeting, where they met No. 21 Ford driver Paul Menard.

Together, Ford and WBR surprised Strader with a decal commemorating his loyalty to both the sport and Ford. The decal featured Strader and was placed on the No. 21 car for the race.

Fan voting begins Sept. 16, when 16 semifinalists will be posted for public vote. Vote for who you believe is NASCAR’s biggest fan! The top six will be invited to Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway, to compete for top honors. The two winners will receive a VIP trip to the 2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame induction ceremony, along with a new Ford vehicle of their choice.

Do you want to win a trip to Ford Championship Weekend in Miami? Enter the Ford Hall of Fans Sweepstakes for your chance to win a VIP fan experience at FCW by going here.

NASCAR fans can follow Ford Performance NASCAR fandom and join the conversation at #FordHallofFans.

*No purchase necessary. Must be legal U.S. resident 21 or older. Promotion consists of sweepstakes and contest. Sweepstakes ends 11/5/18; contest ends 8/19/18. Contest finalists must attend Ford Championship Weekend, 11/18. For prize, entry, and eligibility details, see Official Rules for the Sweepstakes and Official Rules for the Contest.
Sponsor: Ford Motor Company. Not sponsored by NASCAR.

It won’t take a miracle for Jimmie Johnson to miss the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs for the first time in his career.

No, all it could take — potentially — is a continuation of the rotten luck and spotty execution that has mired the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team in mediocrity over the past 11 races.

Sunday’s Bojangles’ Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway was emblematic of Johnson’s recent struggles, not to mention a paradigm for Murphy’s Law. After running fifth in the first round of knockout qualifying on Saturday, Johnson scraped the outside wall in the second round and had to settle for the 20th starting position.

RELATED: Full driver standings

Unapproved adjustments to his car before the race, however, sent the seven-time series champion to the rear for the opening green flag. Johnson made rapid progress in the early stages of the race.

After the first round of green-flag pit stops cycled out on Lap 54, Johnson was running 14th. That’s when the evening began to go horribly wrong. On Lap 60, Johnson returned to his pit stall with a loose wheel. To compound the issue, he ran too wide at the entrance to pit road and drew a pass-through penalty for a commitment line violation.

Johnson spent the rest of his time on track two laps down, until an oil pump failure knocked him out of the event after 227 of 367 laps. The resulting 39th-place finish added one point to Johnson’s total in the series standings, leaving him within striking distance of teammate Alex Bowman.

MORE: Current playoff picture

Johnson left Darlington 14th in points, 19 ahead of Bowman. Because Daytona 500 winner Austin Dillon is locked into the NASCAR Playoffs with that victory — despite his 18th-place position in the standings — there are only two postseason spots left to be settled in Monday’s Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

A four-time winner at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Johnson can guarantee a berth in the NASCAR Playoffs by scoring 37 points or more. If Bowman wins the race and passes Johnson in the standings, Johnson is still locked in.

RELATED: Most likely to pull upset

But there’s a lot that can still go wrong. Bowman gained 13 points on Johnson at Darlington. If he beats Johnson by 20 points or more at Indy, that puts Johnson squarely in the danger zone. Why? Because four of the last eight winners at the Brickyard are lurking behind Johnson and Bowman in the standings, and a repeat victory by any one of them would eliminate either Johnson or Bowman — guaranteed.

In 2010, Jamie McMurray, then in a contract year, won the Brickyard 400 during his most successful season in Monster Energy Series racing. Currently 21st in points, McMurray hasn’t had the same level of performance as Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Kyle Larson, but his cars have the potential for speed. And with NASCAR “Silly Season” in full swing, McMurray has every reason to be up on the wheel.

Paul Menard, 19th in points, won his first and only Cup race at Indy in 2011. That win came out of nowhere, preceded by consecutive 24th-place runs at Kentucky and New Hampshire. Could lightning strike twice for the driver of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford?

Ryan Newman, 17th in points, was an upset winner at the Brickyard in 2013, collecting his only victory of the season and one of two in the last six seasons.

Kasey Kahne, 27th in points, won last year’s race in double overtime after Johnson wrecked in a three-wide battle for the lead (with Kahne and Brad Keselowski) on the final lap of regulation. Kahne was driving Hendrick equipment at the time, a spot now held by Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender William Byron.

PHOTOS: This week’s paint schemes

And that brings us to another interesting wrinkle. Byron is 22nd in the standings, with a win-or-bust mentality entering the Brickyard 400. Last year, at 19 years, 7 months and 23 days, Byron became the youngest winner of a NASCAR race at Indy when he took the checkered flag in the NASCAR Xfinity Series event.

A breakthrough win by Byron would knock one of his teammates out of the playoffs. So the races within the race on Sunday could involve Johnson vs. Bowman, or potentially Johnson vs. Bowman vs. Byron.

In a real sense, Johnson and Bowman are on an island. The 13 drivers ahead of them are locked into the postseason and can’t be displaced.  The only way either Johnson or Bowman could be “voted off” the island comes with an unexpected victory by a driver behind them in the standings.

In Bowman’s case, that’s unlikely, given that wins in 24 of the 25 races so far have come from drivers in the top 13 in the standings, the only exception being Dillon. In Johnson’s case, it’s a shoot-the-moon long shot, given that the seven-time champ also would have to finish 20 or more points behind Bowman in the race.

But quirky results have come at the Brickyard in four of the last eight years. So until the race is over and the playoff field is set, both Bowman and Johnson will have a reason to sweat that doesn’t have anything to do with the temperature inside their Chevrolets.

The Most Popular Driver Award presented by the National Motorsports Press Association and sponsored by Hooters is the only major NASCAR award to be determined solely by fan vote. This year, it will be the responsibility of the fans to choose a worthy candidate to succeed Dale Earnhardt Jr., who won the award for the past 15 years.

With Earnhardt Jr. retired, now is the time for fans to choose a new people’s champ — and actually it’s three champs because an award will be given out not only for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series’ most popular driver, but also for the NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

RELATED: Vote now for the Most Popular Driver!

The polls are open and will remain open until noon ET on Nov. 27. Vote at the link listed below — or bookmark https://www.nascar.com/mostpopulardriver — early and often. Fans can submit one vote per day. A vote shared on Facebook and/or Twitter will count as double, so be sure to jump on social media, let your friends know who you are voting for and use #MostPopularDriver.

The winners for the Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series will be announced on Nov. 27. Then, the winner for the Monster Energy Series will be announced on Nov. 29 during the postseason banquet in Las Vegas.

Good luck with your decisions as you determine the outcomes for these major NASCAR awards!

MORE: See past Most Popular Driver Award winners

In his former role as a driver and his current role as a broadcaster for NBC Sports, Dale Earnhardt Jr. has a keen perspective on the inner workings of the NASCAR “Silly Season” carousel. Wednesday morning, he used that insight to lob a prediction about a major personnel move that may or may not be drawing near.

On the heels of yesterday’s news that defending Monster Energy Series champ Martin Truex Jr. and his crew chief, Cole Pearn, will be on the move next season, Earnhardt opened up on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio’s “The Morning Drive” about a potential 2019 shift to Joe Gibbs Racing — a theory that would directly impact Daniel Suarez and JGR’s No. 19 team.

“It’s definitely going to move a lot of things around on the competition side with Truex and Cole Pearn going to Gibbs,” Earnhardt told SiriusXM. “It’ll be interesting to see where Daniel ends up, and where Daniel goes moves another domino and so forth. I think that this’ll be one of the most interesting offseasons or silly seasons that we’ve had in many, many years. Seems like there’s a piece of news or new domino falling every single day, and it’ll be interesting to see what happens through the rest of the year.”

RELATED: Martin Truex Jr. through the years

Furniture Row Racing announced Tuesday that it would cease operations at season’s end, leaving driver, crew chief and other team personnel in limbo. Earnhardt speculated that whichever team brings Truex into the fold would strive to keep the chemistry of the driver-crew chief pairing with Pearn intact.

Pearn joined Furniture Row in 2015, one year after Truex landed at the Colorado-based organization. They have combined for 17 Monster Energy Series victories together, including the 2017 championship.

“I think they’ll both stick together and they’ll end up in the 19, more than likely. I think they both complement each other,” Earnhardt said. “I believe that Martin Truex Jr. is as good as anybody in the series, but without a great crew chief, no driver is going to be as competitive as they could be and reach their potential, so they both complement each other. I think they’re a good package if they can stick together.

“I worked with Martin for a long time and we’ve been friends for a long time, and I’ve always thought a lot about his ability. He’s a guy that comes to work, does his job. Anything that they ask of him outside the race car, he does. He’s no-nonsense.”