LANSING, Mich. — Even as the group first walked inside the door to the massive Lansing Grand River Assembly Plant — wearing clear plastic eyeglasses, sporting tape over any metal pieces on their clothing — it was immediately clear the awe and excitement this particular “tour” was generating; and it went both ways. 

The many hard-working plant assembly workers were obviously delighted to host Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet drivers Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace and Alex Bowman and their crew chiefs earlier this week in advance of Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway (at 2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Full schedule for Michigan | Best moments in the Irish Hills

And the drivers were equally as intrigued by what awaited them inside the building — part of 3.4-million square feet of hyper-organized assembly space for the street-version of their Camaro ZL1 Cup cars.

“This is a lot bigger than what I was expecting,” Larson said smiling. “I guess I didn’t really know what to expect but I was really surprised at how smoothly everything looks like it’s run, and all the technology that goes into here to build one car is pretty spectacular.

“There’s stuff from floor to ceiling moving, bicycles riding around with parts, people in here and everything’s running so smooth.”

This was a sort of behind-the-curtains look at an automotive “Oz” for the drivers and a much-appreciated red carpet access for all the proud workers, eager to show off their wares and offer encouragement for “their” NASCAR racers.

One stop on the assembly line where the chassis was “married” to the fully constructed underbody amazingly lasted no longer than a minute and a half. Each station in the building was so refined and efficient it amounted to roughly a minute per job from dashboard installation to the check ride at the end. Complete build — very start to fine finish — for a car is 48 hours.

Yet as mechanically interesting as this opportunity was, it was definitely a reminder of the strong human connection the sport has maintained and benefitted from. Especially here, where it all begins.

One woman working at a station near the windshield assembly proudly pointed to a computer screen flashing a huge color screenshot of Bowman’s famed No. 88 Chevrolet.

Everywhere the drivers walked through the building — navigating a carefully routed walkway alongside and underneath amazing assembly machines — it was very obvious how much the hundreds of workers loved the sport and these competitors.

One man installing dashboards wore a vintage No. 24 shirt honoring NASCAR Hall of Fame’s newly elected and longtime Chevy driver Jeff Gordon. Alongside another work station a large piece of cardboard read, “If you’re not first, you’re last” — referencing the popular racing movie, “Talladega Nights, The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.”

MORE: Sizzling paint schemes | Larson could join elite company

There were bright red “42” hats, a nod to Larson’s Chip Ganassi Racing car number. And the Cup rookie Bubba Wallace generated a long line of “selfie” seekers, eager for a chance to meet their favorite driver.

Wallace, who drives Richard Petty Motorsports No. 43 Meijer Camaro ZL1, was as interested in the process as the people manning the process were in him. 

“I think about we’re in 2018 and we’ve already got robots and assembly machines, so what’s it going to be like in the next 10-20 years? What are we going to see?” he said smiling as he looked all around. “It’s really … really cool to be here today and see how the Camaros are built from start to finish.”

Alex Bowman echoed the sentiment. His family owns a body shop in Arizona and the afternoon definitely hit home for him in many ways.

“I think it’s just cool to see how everything is all scienced-out and efficient, how quickly everything goes together,” said Bowman, who drives the No. 88 Nationwide Chevrolet. “I grew up in a body shop and worked on cars my whole life, really mechanically inclined. So I know how long things take to fix at a body shop so to see a whole car get built here so quickly is really cool.

“Everything comes ready-to-go and in the right order, and it’s cool how the dashes come in all ready and then the drivetrains. … It’s pretty incredible.”

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Before his arrival at Michigan International Speedway for a weekend of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series racing in the Irish Hills, Brad Keselowski was busy raising money for a good cause.

With NASCAR Salutes in full swing to honor United States military servicemembers past and present, Keselowski and his Checkered Flag Foundation have focused on helping veterans and their families since inception in 2010. On Thursday, Keselowski held his second annual fundraising event at The Huntsman Hunt Club in Dryden, Michigan, benefiting the construction of a brand new Fisher House in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Keselowski was also accompanied by fellow Ford Performance drivers, including Team Penske teammates Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Aric Almirola.

Since 1990, the Fisher House Foundation has provided comfort homes for families of veterans receiving treatments, at no cost to the families. There are 76 Fisher Houses located on 24 military installations and at 32 VA medical centers across the nation, but there hasn’t been one established in the state of Michigan.

That was something Keselowski, a Rochester Hills, Michigan, native, wanted to change through his foundation.

“It was an incredible event,” said Keselowski. “To be able to hang out with some veterans, but also have a lot of fun, raise some funding and do a site visit for the brand new Fisher House being built in Ann Arbor, Michigan. We want to see one come to the state. There isn’t one in the state, which seems absolutely crazy. It just seems so natural. Hopefully we can get them the funding they need to get going.”

Now Keselowski shifts his attention doing something his has never done at his home 2-mile track in the Monster Energy Series — win. Keselowski won back-t0-back Michigan races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2009-10, but victory in the Great Lakes State in NASCAR’s premier series still eludes him.

RELATED: Keselowski’s career stats

Keselowski earned his first Michigan pole last August, and he’ll flank Kevin Harvick on the front row for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Keselowski noted that winning at Michigan would rival even a victory in NASCAR’s biggest event of the year.

“Winning at your home track for a race car driver is like winning the Daytona 500,” Keselowski said. “It would be a huge, huge win. It would be the biggest win of my career if we were able to win.

“A home track means a lot to any race car driver. It is your friends and family and there is a lot of (prestige) that comes with it. It makes the losses sting more and the wins sweeter. The fact we have been so close and not achieved it is very top of mind every time I come here.”

MORE: Will this be the summer of Keselowski?

In 17 career starts, Keselowski has five top fives, eight top 10s and an average finish of 12.8. So far in 2018, the No. 2 Team Penske driver has yet to earn victory, but sits fifth in the regular-season points standings with four top fives and eight top-10 finishes.

“Am I surprised to have not won a race, I don’t know if surprised is the right word,” Keselowski said. “I try not to take success for granted and try to appreciate it as it comes. You never know where life is going to take you.

“Surprised isn’t the right word. I would say disappointed is a better word. I want to win, I want to win a lot of races. I feel like we have a pretty strong team.”

For Keselowski, earning his first win of the season on home turf would be a perfect way to wipe away the disappointment.

MORE: Keselowski meets family of fallen Marine

Rainfall prompted NASCAR to delay and eventually cancel Saturday’s Xfinity Series qualifying session at Michigan International Speedway. The lineup was set per the NASCAR rule book for this afternoon’s scheduled LTi Printing 250 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

Kyle Busch will start in the pole position in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Paul Menard, in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford, will also start on the front row.

RELATED: Complete lineup for Xfinity race

Continued wet conditions also forced the cancellation of the final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, which was scheduled for 11:30 a.m. ET. The preceding Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice was cut about six minutes short when the rain began to fall in the Irish Hills just before 10 a.m. ET.

The Toyota Tundra track-drying team has 14 units on hand in Michigan, plus nine jet dryers and three vacuums (two track vacuums and one Elgin Sweeper) to help with preparing the track for racing.

RELATED: Track weather live | Schedule updates

Kevin Harvick topped Saturday’s opening practice at Michigan International Speedway with a fast lap of 200.719 mph in his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. He’ll roll off the grid fourth for Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series event in the Irish Hills (2 p.m. ET, FOX).

The 50-minute practice was cut short with a little over six minutes remaining, as rain began to fall onto the track.

Three-time Michigan winner Kyle Larson was second-fastest in the session, his No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet notching a 200.083 lap around the two-mile surface. Team Penske’s Joey Logano came up third (199.800 mph) in his No. 22 Ford, while Stewart-Haas Racing’s Clint Bowyer ranked fourth on the speed charts in his No. 14 Ford (199.723 mph).

Michigan native Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five in his No. 2 Team Penske Ford with a fast lap of 199.529 mph.

RELATED: Practice resultsBusch wins Michigan pole

Pole-sitter Kurt Busch was ninth-quickest, his No. 41 SHR Ford laying down a 198.824-mph lap.

Todd Gilliland had a big night in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series PPG 400 at Texas Motor Speedway. While the rookie didn’t come away with the win, he did lead a race-high 62 laps in just his fourth start of the season. Entering Friday night’s race, Gilliland had led just one lap in the series.

The sixth-place finish was the best of his rookie season so far in the No. 4 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota and his third straight top-10 finish in the series.

RELATED: Full race results | Gilliland’s career stats

“We had such a strong Mobil 1 Toyota Tundra tonight and that’s what it’s about — bringing fast trucks out here, giving me the opportunity,” Gilliland said after the race.

“We put on two tires there and we just got them so tight behind — I don’t know if it’s traffic or tires or what, but still very very proud of everyone at Kyle Busch Motorsports. They gave me the truck I needed and now we just need to keep working together.”

Todd Gilliland Texas diploma ceremony.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

The 18-year-old NASCAR Next alum and son of NASCAR driver David Gilliland also received his high school diploma in a pre-race ceremony with track president Eddie Gossage and his family. The ceremony has become a bit of a tradition before the June race at the track known for “No Limits.” Rising talents Erik Jones (2014), Cole Custer (2016) and Noah Gragson (2017) have also taken part in it.

“It’s a very special event to be out here in front of all these people and honestly, just doing what I love — racing,” Gilliland said in a track release. “I was wearing the cap and gown up on the stage, so a very special moment for me and my family because we missed out on a lot of other high school experiences.”

FORT WORTH, Texas — Johnny Sauter continued his uncanny mastery of Texas Motor Speedway Friday night, holding off Stewart Friesen on a three-lap shootout to win the 22nd annual PPG 400 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race.

The series points leader, Sauter posted his fifth career win on the 1.5-mile oval and fourth in eight events this season. But he and crew chief Joe Shear Jr. had to gamble on fuel as the laps wound down and then keep pole-sitter Friesen at bay following a restart on Lap 165 of the scheduled 167.

RELATED: Race results 

Sauter finished 0.092 seconds ahead of Friesen, who was aiming for his first career Camping World Truck Series victory. Sauter took the lead for the first time on Lap 117, passing teammate Justin Haley between Turns 1 and 2.

“I complained about it all night long, just no balance, no grip,” said Sauter, driver of the No. 21 ISM Connect Chevrolet Silverado fielded by GMS Racing. “We made great adjustments and played the track position game. That’s where the speed is at, getting in clean air. This has been a dream start and proud to get this win. I’m speechless … don’t know what to say anymore. Five wins at Texas, it’s awesome.”

Only two-time Truck Series champion Todd Bodine has more wins there, with six.

Sauter has won six of the last 11 series races, and posted top-threes in 10 of the last 12. The native of Wisconsin now has 21 career victories in 229 series starts. With his win Friday night, Sauter now is the third driver in series history to post four or more wins in the first eight races of a season. Kyle Busch and Mike Skinner are the only other drivers to do so.

Sauter has now compiled 16 top-10 finishes in 20 races at TMS. Additionally, Sauter hasn’t started outside of the top-10 and has finished in the top-five in every race this season except for the half-mile Martinsville Speedway, where he placed 19th.

Friesen, however, nearly completed a pole-to-Victory Lane scenario. “I knew he’d be aggressive,” Sauter said of the 34-year-old Canadian. “He was hungry for his first win. I got a good launch and that’s all it took. Justin Haley helped push me along. Going into Turn 3 on the last lap I ran out of fuel, but then it fired up.”

Sauter increased his point lead from 59 over Noah Gragson to 77 over the driver of the No. 18 Safelite Auto Glass Toyota Tundra fielded by Kyle Busch Motorsports.

Friesen recorded his first top-10 finish in three races at TMS, as well has his fifth top-10 result of 2018.

Grant Enfinger held off Friesen during a one-lap shootout to win Stage 2. That restart was set up after the race’s fifth caution on Lap 75, brought out when Bo LeMastus crashed along the backstretch after contact with the truck driven by Norm Benning cut the right front tire of LeMastus’ No. 17 Crosley Brands Toyota Tundra.

During the caution, race-leader Todd Gilliland pitted for four tires and fuel, a move crew chief Marcus Richmond explained was about securing track position in the final stage of the 167-lap/250.5-miler.

Earlier, Friesen scored his second career stage win after 40 laps. Friesen, who won his second career pole earlier Friday afternoon in the No. 52 We Build America Chevrolet Silverado, finished 0.326-seconds ahead of two-time series champ Matt Crafton and his No. 88 Matador Beef Jerky/Menards Ford.

BROOKLYN, Mich. – Clearly, Kurt Busch enjoyed the rush of putting his No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford on the pole on Friday at Michigan International Speedway.

“To go 217 (mph) into the corner — just hauling the mail — I love that feeling,” said Busch, who ran his fastest lap of the day at the 2-mile track to earn the top starting spot for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Qualifying results | Full schedule for Michigan

“This one is fun, because I could trust the car, and I knew I needed to go after it hard. Watching all the Fords in practice, I knew we had a good shot at it. The guys tweaked on the tires the right amount. It’s a new compound, left and right side, and we didn’t want to get caught up too much in chasing the tires…

“Now we need to translate that to race speed.”

The Busch Pole Award was Busch’s second of the season, his third at Michigan and the 24th of his career. Covering the distance in 35.405 seconds (203.361 mph), Busch claimed bragging rights in the back yard of the American auto industry by .034 seconds over fellow Ford driver Brad Keselowski (203.166 mph).

In fact, with Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano, Aric Almirola and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. qualifying fourth through seventh, respectively, Ford drivers earned six of the top seven starting positions for the 15th Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series event of the season.

Toyota driver Kyle Busch, a four-time winner this season and the series leader, was the only interloper in the top seven after a final-round lap of 203.120 mph, good for the third spot on the grid behind his older brother and Keselowski.

A major adjustment to the No. 2 Team Penske Ford between the second and third rounds gave Keselowski plenty of speed, but he felt he left some of the extra juice on the track in the first and second corners.

“I think we were right there for the pole,” Keselowski said. “I made just a small little mistake in (Turns) 1 and 2 that I wish I could have back. Credit to (crew chief) Paul (Wolfe) and the team. They made some good adjustments the last round (to gain more than .2 seconds).

“That’s a pretty big gain. I just didn’t quite get all the gain they made on the car out of it, but we have a good starting spot, and it bodes well for the Miller Lite Ford. Hopefully, we can get a good run Sunday.”

RELATED: Keselowski: win at Michigan would be like winning Daytona 500

Harvick was fastest in each of the first two rounds but slowed to 202.954 mph in the final.

“To be honest I didn’t really expect everybody to pick up two-tenths,” said Harvick, who has five victories in 14 starts this year. “I thought we had a little bit to just keep from trying to screw up but, in the end, I needed to get a little more. It was still a good qualifying effort, so we’ll just go from there.”

Kyle Larson’s quest for a fourth straight Cup win at Michigan hit a major speed bump, thanks to a tight handling condition that persisted throughout opening practice and continued into the time trials.

RELATED: Larson reacts to missing out on advancing to Round 2

“Our car has just been pretty far off, I feel like, all day,” said Larson, who failed to advance from the first round and will start 26th on Sunday. “It’s really tight. I don’t feel like I can turn the wheel very far either. I don’t know why that is.

“But we’ve got some smart people in our race trailer and on our race team that will get it worked out. We’ll get some laps (in Saturday’s practice) and hopefully be better.”

Larson missed out on advancing by just .027 seconds, relegating him to his worst starting spot since he set sail from 38th in the season-opening Daytona 500.

Officials had moved up the start of qualifying by five minutes to 4:05 p.m. ET in hopes of maximizing on-track time against the threat of inclement weather.

Contributing: Staff reports

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Fresh off a long morning bike ride through the serene hills and vast farmland surrounding Michigan International Speedway, Jimmie Johnson spent the hour before opening practice for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) doing a couple media one-on-one interviews by his motorhome in the infield parking lot.

Dressed in jeans, a polo shirt and a baseball cap, the seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion freely discussed his quest and full expectation to return to Victory Lane for the first time in a full season’s length of races. He was optimistic and confident about the quest to find a new sponsor for his No. 48 Chevrolet for the first time in his career and he was open and reflective about the changing circumstances of competition and expectations.

RELATED: Schedule for Michigan | Starting lineup

“It’s on, I can’t help myself,” Johnson said, smiling at the notion of ever turning his mind off or even away from the huge expectations of himself and of his many fans.

Even when you reel off a historic record-tying seven championships — including an unprecedented five consecutively from 2006-2010 — and even when you win 83 races; one shy of tying NASCAR Hall of Famers Darrell Waltrip and Bobby Allison – the competitive focus is on what will you do next, not, what you have done.

Johnson accepts that, embraces it and thrives on it. It’s part of what has separated this laidback Southern Californian talent from the rest.

He concedes that this season, in particular, has challenged his competitive ire. And even his patience. Since his rookie campaign in 2002, Johnson has won multiple races every season – highlighted by a 10-trophy haul in 2007; the second season of his historic five-championship run.

Last season he had three victories, the last coming at Dover International Speedway on June 4, almost exactly a year ago – and it is currently the longest time between wins in his career.

“It’s about being patient and it’s tough to be patient especially in this industry,” Johnson said. “We’re all adjusting to a thousandths of a second every time we’re on track. I’m trying and that’s where I do have some comfort in the process. But we need this to change, we need to see improvement and we need to keep marching forward. We can’t stall out and be content where we are at. We need far better than this.”

MORE: Johnson says, ‘Damn, I want to win’

Getting a handle on the new car, new teammates (Alex Bowman and rookie William Byron), a new shop set-up and getting news that your longtime sponsor won’t return has unquestionably presented a daunting set of single season obstacles.

No matter the circumstances, social media trolls continually remind Johnson of this first-of-his-career span between victories. Even though, no one is more aware than he is.

“I’ve never worked harder but I’ve also never been more excited to work,” Johnson said. “I don’t know if that’s age, what it is. Some of my frustration comes from the wonderful people on social media who want to think that I don’t have the heart or desire. It’s like, ‘You don’t even know me. Just stop.’ I’ve never worked harder or enjoyed it more than I do now.

“I do (see the gains). But summer stretches are tough on us, that’s out there. But we can rally through that and keep building through the summer stretch.

“Since all the (four Hendrick Motorsports) teams have kind of moved in together, it’s just going to take some time to get the new ideas and cars through the system. We’re just now starting to see it. Being patient is part of it, but at the same time we’ve got to be honest with ourselves and know if we’re making the right improvements and closing the gap.”

After his last win — at Dover last June — Johnson closed out the season with eight finishes of 24th or worse, three times he was 35th or worse. A rough start in the 2018 season-opening Daytona 500 (he crashed and finished 38th) followed. That was compounded by a 27th-place finish the next week at Atlanta and then a crash a couple weeks later at Texas Motor Speedway, where Johnson is the all-time winningest Cup driver.

RELATED: Jimmie Johnson’s career statistics

The only Chevrolet Cup victory this season was on Austin Dillon’s last-lap pass in the Daytona 500. For the teams — which switched to the Camaro ZL1 body this year — it’s been a wholly-expected learning curve. And across the board, Chevy drivers say they anticipate an uptake on production. Effort has never been a problem.

Chevrolet’s Kyle Larson — who has won the last three Michigan races — has three runner-up finishes in 2018.

Johnson’s teammate Chase Elliott has three finishes of third or better this season and was the fastest Chevrolet in Friday’s opening practice at Michigan. Elliott has three runner-up finishes here, too.

Statistically speaking, the improvement of Johnson’s team is obvious. He scored his best finish of the year (third-place) at Bristol in April and worked his way into the championship top-12 a week later with a sixth-place at Richmond.

He has three top-10s in the last four races, including a fifth-place finish at Charlotte and an eighth-place at Pocono last week.

“We’re getting there; we’re seeing the gains,” Johnson said. “The way we have converted our operation and all four cars in the same spot, it’s pretty obvious when we’re on or when we’re off. All four cars carry the same speed either good or bad, so that does bring a little bit of comfort from the driver standpoint, even from a veteran’s standpoint.

“Internally there are a lot of small victories, but we just wish we had the real victory in the real Victory Lane.”

MORE: See the best photos from Michigan | Who’s in your fantasy lineup?

It’s a history lesson in championships — what separates the best. Now 18 years into his certain first-ballot Hall of Fame career, Johnson would concede the winning edge is as much mindset as it is driving hard into a corner.

To that end, Johnson shared that his team has adopted a “locker room” mentality — involving all his teammates — a reinvigorated way of approaching races and outcomes.

“It’s easy when things are going good but it’s tough when they aren’t going well,” Johnson said. “We didn’t end last season very well and I felt like the locker room piece is something important for me and that environment is important for me to be relaxed and free and to feel and sense the car and communicate with my team.

“That energy inside the transporter — or our locker room — is something I’ve been working really hard on.”

Certainly no one feels more eager, anxious and overdue for a win than Johnson. Celebrating in Victory Lane has been the norm for his once-in-a-lifetime career. Yet this recent stretch has been both a grueling test and learning opportunity.

It’s evoked strong memories for Johnson himself forced a personal reassurance that as he has many times before, Johnson will right the ship. And that 84th win may well feel like the first — hard-earned and mightily cherished.

MORE: Johnson finds inspiration from Babe Ruth

“One thing that does come to mind is the “cycle of things,” Johnson allowed, thinking about his competition situation.

“I have been in this place emotionally and mentally many times in my career, it just wasn’t in the Cup spotlight. Success on a dirt bike led to opportunities with off-road racing. And things went pretty well there in the lower divisions but then in the higher divisions I was racing against the best of the best and I wasn’t winning much.

“I did have the up-moments racing for the Herzogs and my off-road trucks — but then transitioning into ASA and stock cars my Xfinity days were really tough. And what I’ve been going through recently reminds me of my Xfinity days.

“So to me, it’s more the cycle. As you’re falling down into that valley there’s a point where you can lose confidence and it doesn’t matter if you’re a seven-time champion or someone else, it can happen. But I feel like I’ve come through the bottom and built my confidence back up.

“I know it’s not all just me and I’m starting to climb that mountain again. It’s wild how those cycles go and I can trace it all the way back to being eight-years old on a dirt bike.

“I’ve been here before. And absolutely, I expect to win. I will win.”

BROOKLYN, Mich.— The success of a new high-downforce, high-drag restrictor-plate competition package in last year’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis provided the impetus for the use of a similar package in last month’s Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte.

With additional Cup races contemplated for the All-Star configuration, Saturday’s LTI Printing 250 Xfinity Series race (1:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will again provide a laboratory for the promising aero package.

RELATED: Full schedule for Michigan | Brandon Jones brings out red flag in practice

“I’ve enjoyed the new package,” said Joe Gibbs Racing driver Brandon Jones, who raced under the same rules last Saturday at Pocono. “The one thing I think we all could probably agree on is just our corner speeds were so low at that track.

“When you had your momentum going and you were built up, it was really awesome. You could really race side-by-side. But as soon as your car got a little bit tight, or you got side-by-side with somebody and got choked down, you’d get freight-trained, and guys would go by you really bad.

“I thought you could keep speed up a little bit better at Indy (last year). I think that’s what produced a really great race with that package, and I think it’s going to do the same thing here this weekend.”