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.”

NASCAR announced this offseason that it will standardize at-track team rosters across all three national series in 2018, providing a structure for the number of personnel working on each vehicle during the course of a race weekend.

Official team rosters for Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Michigan (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) have been released. Click the print icon above, or the link below.

ROSTERS: Michigan race

RELATED: Overview of 2018 rules updates

Ryan Blaney topped the leaderboard in Friday’s opening Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Michigan International Speedway at a blistering 202.617 mph in the No. 12 Team Penske Ford.

MORE: Full results | Weekend schedule

Right behind him was points leader Kyle Busch in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at 201.935 mph.

Rounding out the top five were Brad Keselowski in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford (201.867 mph), Kevin Harvick in the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford (201.478 mph) and Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet (201.134 mph).

Kyle Larson, who has won the past three MIS races, was 16th at 199.242 mph in the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet.

Three cars were held 15 minutes to begin the session — the Nos. 99 of Garrett Smithley (late to inspection) and Nos. 9 of Elliott and 22 of Joey Logano (failed inspection twice).

The practice started after a short delay to clean fluid off the track. It was extended 10 minutes to 12:30 p.m. ET.

The next on-track activity for the series is Busch Pole Qualifying at 4:10 p.m. ET (FS1).

A beloved member of NASCAR Nation finds himself in a time of need, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. is lending a helping hand.

The 26-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series winner and NASCAR history lover is helping his friend Sam Bass — the first officially licensed artist of NASCAR — in his search for a Type-B kidney transplant. Earnhardt has partnered with the Flood Sisters Kidney Foundation, a non-profit kidney foundation in New York that matches patients in need of living kidney donors for transplant.

Together, they’re hoping to spread awareness for Bass’ need and the many other patients in need of donors. With awareness, donors nationwide can contact the organization to match potential donors with recipients.

Bass has helped design paint schemes and programs for some of the sport’s top stars and marquee events, with his Cup background including paint scheme designs for Junior, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and plenty more.

RELATED: Throwback scheme inspired by Bass

Earnhardt released the following video to help spread the message.

Austin Dillon’s No. 3 Chevrolet will pay tribute to veterans as the driver unveiled his “Dow Salutes Veterans” paint scheme on Thursday at Dow Diamond in Midland, Michigan ahead of Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The paint scheme features the names of more than 1,300 employees and contractors from Dow, Richard Childress Racing and the USA luge team, who happen to be veterans, as well as the immediate family members of employees and contractors who have served or are currently serving in the U.S. Armed Forces.

RELATED: Michigan paint schemes for this weekend

Dow has been a sponsor for Dillon since he began his full-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career in 2014. The company and RCR have been collaborating for the past four years in appreciation of the service of veterans serving in the U.S. military brances. This initiative has been coordinated in partnership with Dow’s veterans employee resource group, VetNet.

NASCAR is honoring U.S. military servicemembers through the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona this summer through the NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola program.

MORE: Patriotic NASCAR paint schemes

As Chase Elliott visited with students at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Wednesday, he had a perfect view of Daytona International Speedway next door to the school campus. Having earned his private pilot license as a teenager in high school, the school is a place Elliott appreciates. And as a rising star in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the speedway is a venue representing historic potential.

For Elliott, who has won two Daytona 500 Busch Pole positions and nearly won the sport’s greatest race, the setting was a gentle reminder of what may also await the popular 22-year-old later this week as the series races at Michigan International Speedway — another venue where Elliott has proven to be an almost instant Cup success story.

RELATED: Michigan schedule | Elliott’s driver stats

The Hendrick Motorsports driver finished runner-up in the first three of his four visits to the two-mile Michigan track. His worst showing? Eighth place, in last year’s August stop. Still a top-10 finish and, in all, the effort good enough to make Elliott a top-rated driver as the series returns this weekend for the FireKeepers Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“I look forward to going to Michigan,’’ Elliott said from Daytona Beach on Wednesday, where he was promoting the upcoming Coke Zero Sugar 400 summer race before travelling north to Michigan.

“I don’t really know why Michigan has been good to us. We didn’t have as good a run there last fall as we had in other races, but it’s been a good place for the most part and I certainly look forward to going there.”

If history continues to be an indicator of what to expect in this weekend’s FireKeeper’s Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway, then NASCAR’s best young drivers have plenty to look forward to.

Ironically, those with the least history have historically fared well at Michigan in the last few races.

Fifth-year Monster Energy Series driver Kyle Larson 25, is not only the defending race winner, but the Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet driver boasts a three-race winning streak at the track. Michigan-native Erik Jones, 22, has finishes of third and 13th in his two starts. As with Elliott, they are among the top-ranked drivers in competition. Larson’s driver rating (101.1) is third-ranked and Jones is fourth-ranked (98.4) heading into Sunday’s race.

RELATED: Will young talent rise again at Michigan?

While his past showing is certainly encouraging, Elliott is quick to caution about the fast start for himself and his fellow young drivers. He is just hopeful his long-term body of work echoes his early performance.

“One thing I know for sure, those driver ratings are based on four races for me compared to probably 24 races for a lot of other guys,’’ Elliott said. “They’re skewed because we’ve run pretty well every time we’ve gone, but that’s not always going to be the case. In 10 years if I still have a job, we’ll see how the numbers are then. That will be the real test.”

Elliott did allow that he felt more optimistic this week. Chevrolet is looking for its first win since the season-opening Daytona 500 and Elliott echoed a lot of Chevy drivers’ feelings that the next win feels imminent.

Three drivers – Ford’s Kevin Harvick and Toyota’s Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. have won 11 of the first 14 races. But at Michigan International Speedway, Chevrolet has dominated as of late with Larson’s three wins and Elliott’s three runner-ups in the past four races serving notice.

“I think we’ve improved,’’ Elliott said emphatically. “I can’t say we’re perfect. I can’t say we’re the best each week, but we’ve gotten better and I feel like I’ve seen more improvement over the past two weeks than I’ve seen in all year. So that’s encouraging.

“I thought we had our best race of the season and probably best race we’ve had in a while – since last fall – this past week at Pocono. The results really didn’t show it, but we had some strength in our car this weekend I haven’t had all season, so I was proud of that. I hope that carries to Michigan.”

The village of Byron, Michigan, sits approximately 70 miles north of Michigan International Speedway. Every day during the race weekends in the Irish Hills, Byron native Erik Jones makes the trek to and from his childhood home and the race track.

His mom makes him home-cooked meals, he see his buddies at old stomping grounds and he even sleeps in the same bed that he grew up sleeping in.

“When you can go and stay somewhere that’s comfortable to you and somewhere you know, it definitely is a good feeling and a good break from kind of the normal routine,” Jones told NASCAR.com Wednesday. “… Just helps me clear my head and it’s a nice drive — it’s about 45 minutes and all back roads, nice country …

“It just gives me a little bit of time to think and ponder on the day, whether it be after practice or qualifying and especially on race day morning. It gives me time to really process what the day’s going to be all about and how I need to prepare for it. Sometimes I’ll have a buddy come with me and ride with me, sometimes I’ll go by myself. But it’s nice just to reflect and chill out and kind of have a minute away from the whole hustle and bustle of the race track.”

RELATED: 10 things you didn’t know about Erik Jones

The town of Byron is small: Less than 600 people call the village home and the town’s website refers to it as “off the beaten path” — but it also invites visitors to stop in when they’re on the road. Jones is proud to call himself a Michigan native and enjoys returning to his home state — he’s spent several days in the Great Lakes State ahead of race weekend and will spend next week there as well when the series is off.

His roots in Byron are special to him, as is the support the 22-year-old driver has received from the community.

“Not even just from being in Cup but even back in Trucks and Xfinity, there (were) a lot of people that would come out, give me support, cheer me on and get to come out to the race track when we come to Michigan,” he said. “So, it’s really cool to see the support that I get from Byron. … You don’t always have a ton of things to do in a small town, so it’s cool to be the guy that gives people something to root for and cheer for. I really take pride in being from a small town and being able to carry that flag, carry that banner for them.

“I actually have a lot more people that come up and introduce themselves and recognize me up here actually than North Carolina. It’s always fun to meet fans and people who support racing and support my racing up here.”

Jones will have the opportunity to carry a different type of flag — a checkered one — for his town this weekend, as the series heads to Michigan International Raceway for the first of two 2018 races at the Irish Hills track (FireKeepers Casino 400, 2 p.m. ET Sunday, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). During his rookie season in 2017, Jones finished 13th (after a loose wheel set the team back in the field) and, most recently, third at his home track.

MORE: Jones, Kyle Busch have special bond

Still searching for his first win in NASCAR’s premier series, a victory at his home track on Sunday would be perfectly scripted — and he would have “a pretty big party” in Victory Lane.

“It’d be really special to me,” he said. “Michigan’s a place that I went to growing up a few times. Not only that but just a win. I’m pretty proud of being from Michigan and really still love my home state. It’d be neat for me because there’s a lot of people coming down — I think we’ve got 60 or 70 people that are coming out to watch the race and they’ll be in the infield so it would be really neat to have them all in Victory Lane with me and be able to celebrate that first win.

“It’s something I really can’t imagine. It’s hard to think about that and process that moment and I’m sure if it did happen, I’d be probably out of words for it. It’s definitely something that I’ve thought about — I think every driver thinks about their first win and how they’d want it to go and if I could script it perfect, I think Michigan would be the place I’d love to do it at.”