AJ Allmendinger passed Chase Elliott on the second-to-last lap of Saturday’s Monster Energy Open at Charlotte Motor Speedway to win the final stage and transfer to Saturday’s main event, the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1). The JTG Daugherty Racing driver overcame the Hendrick Motorsports driver as well as Darrell Wallace Jr., whose team took only two tires at the break between Stages 2 and 3, so the No. 43 could start from the front.

Erik Jones finished second to Allmendinger, 0.327 seconds behind the leader. Elliott, Paul Menard and Chris Buescher rounded out the top five. The winners of the three stages of Saturday’s Open all advanced to the main event. Elliott, the winner of the Fan Vote, completed the field. Here’s a recap of the earlier stages in Saturday’s Open:

RELATED: Monster Energy Open resultsDrivers in All-Star Race

Stage 1 (20 laps)
Alex Bowman passed pole-sitter Aric Almirola on Lap 12 and drove away to win Stage 1 in the Monster Energy Open. Bowman took advantage of Almirola moving up the track in an attempt to block and scooted past on the inside just before the start-finish line. With the win, Bowman advances to the feature race in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

With five laps to go, Almirola and Chase Elliott battled, with Almirola coming close to the back of Elliott’s No. 9 Chevrolet. Elliott eventually finished third in the stage, while Almirola faded to eighth place. Erik Jones finished in second place, 0.355 seconds behind Bowman. Elliott, Paul Menard and Darrell Wallace Jr. rounded out the top five.

Stage 2 (20 laps)
Daniel Suarez and Chase Elliott went back-and-forth, but it was Suarez who reclaimed the lead from Elliott on Lap 35 en route to the Stage 2 victory. Suarez will take the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to the main event, joining Alex Bowman, the winner of Stage 1.

Elliott took the lead from Suarez on Lap 33, but only held it for two laps as Suarez quickly regained his momentum. AJ Allmendinger finished second with Elliott in third and Darrell Wallace Jr. and William Byron rounding out the top five.

Paul Menard scraped the wall in Turn 3 late in the stage and finished 14th in the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford.

 

The format and rules package for the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race are set. Only finalizing the field remains.

Heading into All-Star Race weekend, 17 drivers are qualified for the event. Others can still qualify by winning one of three stages in the preceding Monster Energy Open event or winning the All-Star Fan Vote.

MORE: Vote for your favorite driverFormat revealed
ENTRY LISTS: All-Star Race | Monster Energy Open

The annual Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race is scheduled for Saturday, May 19 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Here is a look at the starting lineup as the final spots are set based on the results of the Monster Energy Open and the winner of the Fan Vote.

Starting Spot Driver Team/Car
1. Matt Kenseth Roush Fenway Racing/No. 6 Ford
2. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing/No. 17 Ford
3. Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing/No. 14 Ford
4. Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing/No. 4 Ford
5. Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Racing/No. 78 Toyota
6. Ryan Blaney Team Penske/No. 12 Ford
7. Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing/No. 18 Toyota
8. Brad Keselowski Team Penske/No. 2 Ford
9. Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing/No. 3 Chevrolet
10. Joey Logano Team Penske/No. 22 Ford
11. Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports/No. 48 Chevrolet
12. Jamie McMurray Chip Ganassi Racing/No. 1 Chevrolet
13. Ryan Newman Richard Childress Racing/No. 31 Chevrolet
14. Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing/No. 11 Toyota
15. Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing/No. 41 Ford
16. Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing/No. 42 Chevrolet
17. Kasey Kahne Leavine Family Racing/No. 95 Chevrolet
18. Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports/No. 88 Chevrolet
19. Daniel Suarez Joe Gibbs Racing/No. 19 Toyota
20. AJ Allmendinger JTG Daugherty Racing/No. 47 Chevrolet
21. Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports/No. 9 Chevrolet

Here are how the drivers became eligible for the All-Star Race:

Rank Driver How qualified
1.  Ryan Blaney 2017 Pocono-1 win
2. Clint Bowyer 2018 Martinsville-1 win
3. Kurt Busch 2017 Daytona 500 win
4. Kyle Busch 2017 Pocono-2 win
5. Austin Dillon 2017 Charlotte-1 win
6. Denny Hamlin 2017 New Hampshire-1 win
7. Kevin Harvick 2017 Sonoma win
8. Jimmie Johnson 2017 Texas-1 win
9.  Kasey Kahne 2017 Indianapolis win
10. Matt Kenseth 2017 Phoenix-2 win
11. Brad Keselowski 2017 Atlanta win
12. Kyle Larson 2017 Auto Club win
13. Joey Logano 2018 Talladega-1 win
14. Jamie McMurray Former All-Star Race winner
15. Ryan Newman 2017 Phoenix-1 win
 16. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 2017 Talladega-1 win
 17. Martin Truex Jr. 2017 Las Vegas win
 18. Alex Bowman Open Stage 1 winner
 19. Daniel Suarez Open Stage 2 winner
 20. AJ Allmendinger Open Final Stage winner
 21. Chase Elliott Fan Vote winner

MORE: All-Star fast factsAll-time winners

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 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Enjoy!

CONCORD, N.C. — This year’s Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race is expected to be wide open — both in trying to identify a favorite and with drivers mashing the gas pedal all the way to the floor for the majority of the way around Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Saturday morning practice offered a sneak preview, with one driver making a direct comparison to Mario Kart-style racing.

Drivers won’t have turtle shells or banana peels at their disposal, but sweeping aerodynamic updates and engine restrictions intended to tighten the competition are in place for Saturday night’s showdown (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM). The non-points event presents a perfect opportunity for experimentation, but with intermittent rain curbing much of Friday’s on-track schedule at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the sample size left many teams trying to anticipate the unknown.

RELATED: Starting lineup | Full All-Star schedule

That changed to a degree Saturday morning with a compelling one hour of track time that gave teams at least a taste of what the evening might hold. Packs formed and the familiar restrictor-plate concepts of momentum and drafting were recurring themes, with two- and three-wide action springing up through the hour. Spotters were far more animated in guiding their drivers through traffic, almost at a Talladega-like cadence.

“I still think you’re going to have that gaggle of cars and some excitement within there,” Clint Bowyer said after exiting his No. 14 Ford. “You can still get runs, so that’s going to lead to blocking. Cars get side by side and that punches a bigger hole, and that car behind there gets an advantage. You get a million dollars on the line, we’re going to make it interesting, I promise you that.”

The package for the annual invitational uses a variety of aerodynamic modifications and an engine restrictor plate in place for the first time on the 1.5-mile track. The aero changes were on display in the garage Friday, most visibly the 6-inch tall spoiler with 1-foot-wide, 2-inch tall “ear” extensions to add drag.

Teams will also use manufacturer-specific air ducts in an effort to minimize the advantage of leading cars in undisturbed air. The ducts were deployed at an Xfinity Series race last season at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, a change that produced a record for lead changes for the series at the 2.5-mile track.

NASCAR competition officials are hoping for more of the same in Saturday night’s Monster Energy Open qualifying race and the main event. Friday’s on-and-off precipitation at the track prevented a full-fledged preview, with no cars turning more than five laps in the abbreviated attempts at practice. That prompted officials to add Saturday morning’s hour-long session, a boon for number-crunching crew chiefs.

“Obviously, we’ve got a lot more data now than we had before,” said Mike Wheeler, crew chief of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota for Denny Hamlin. “We made a bunch of long runs there to get an idea what happens on the long versus short runs, how it drives in traffic. … Fortunately, we made it through with the same car. That was one of the big goals. Didn’t damage anything in the process and we’ve really got our work cut out for us. There’s no clear person that’s ahead of somebody else, so we’ve really got to try to see if we can get a little more out of the thing to be one of the top-five cars.”

The major discovery for teams that got on track Friday was how much the aero and engine changes reduced speed. Kyle Larson’s top speed in Saturday’s practice of 173.305 mph was well below the chart-topping 189.274 mph he established in All-Star practice last season. And in single-car qualifying, telemetry showed speeds barely inching toward 165 mph with drivers at full throttle.

MORE: Larson leads final All-Star practice

“I’ve never been in anything like this,” Jimmie Johnson said after Friday’s qualifying. “This is way different. I did have a few laps in a late-model stock car years and years ago, with the scale of this track and the power and just the way the car drives it kind of reminds me of that. Everything I’ve ever raced had way too much power, so this is a much different environment.”

Drivers spent more time in that environment Saturday morning, with the early reviews from those directly involved largely positive. Those raves ranged from NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell’s “excited to see what happens tonight,” to Darrell Wallace Jr.’s forecast of “real life Mario Kart rainbow road type insane.”

The new-look All-Star style of racing may well mean a new challenge for drivers, but also for crew chiefs. Justin Alexander, crew chief of the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet for Austin Dillon, said that the process of applying the parts and pieces was relatively simple, but adjusting to the unknown with limited track time presents a weekend-long trial.

“It’s to give the fans something else to see and maybe we don’t end up with this package in the future, maybe we end up with some sort of modified version of it, but whatever makes the racing better, I’m a fan of,” Alexander said. “Throwing this, especially into the All-Star Race, a non-points race … when we have to do this stuff on a points weekend, it gets stressful and it’s tough. But a non-points race, right here racing for $1 million, it doesn’t really matter. We’ll just go out and it’s fun.

“We get to work on it, we get to do some changes that we don’t typically make on the cars and kind of go see what it’s got.”

Kyle Larson paced the field in final practice for tonight’s Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

After rain hindered Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers and teams from making any significant runs in Friday afternoon’s brief session, it was the first real opportunity to test out the new rules package. The hour-long session saw packs of cars racing two- and three-wide around the 1.5-mile oval. Both All-Star and Open starters were able to hit the track in a combined practice.

RELATED: Final All-Star practice speeds | Final Open practice speeds

Larson laid down a lap 173.305 mph in the hour-long Saturday morning practice, followed by a duo of Stewart-Haas Racing machines — Clint Bowyer (173.255 mph) and Kevin Harvick (173.049 mph). Aric Almirola was the fastest of the Open drivers, with a top speed of 168.629 in his No. 10 Ford.

MORE:  Starting lineup for All-Star Race

The Monster Energy All-Star Open will kick off the action at Charlotte, beginning at 6 p.m. ET on FS1.

CONCORD, N.C. — As drivers battled for position behind him, Johnny Sauter pulled away his No. 21 GMS Racing Chevrolet during the final 10-lap run to win Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“We won Charlotte!” an elated Sauter screamed over his radio as he crossed the finish line 1.340 seconds ahead of Kyle Busch, who was frustrated in his attempt at a series-record tying 51st victory.

RELATED: Full race results | Crafton gets colorful on the radio

A few minutes later, in Victory Lane, Sauter, the pole winner, reveled in the significance of the victory, his third of the season and the 20th of his career.

“This is a tough place,” said Sauter, who turned 40 on May 1. “Everyone wants to win here. I never thought I’d win here. To win this race is just super special. I never thought 40 would be so good.

“This is the biggest race of my career, and I’ve won a lot of big races. We kept making adjustments on the truck all night and made it better and better.”

Sauter scored his 20th straight top-10 finish on a 1.5-mile intermediate speedway, a streak that includes four victories. He also scored points in the first two stages of the race (won by Brett Moffitt and John Hunter Nemechek, respectively) to run his string of in-the-money stage finishes to 30.

MORE: Sauter: ‘Never thought I’d win here’ | Kyle Busch expresses frustration

Busch’s effort was hampered by a pair of pit-road penalties, both incurred when members of his crew came over the wall too soon. Nevertheless, he twice came from the back of the field to finish second, passing Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate and third-place finisher Brandon Jones for the runner-up spot on Lap 133 of 134.

Asked how he managed to charge through the field, Busch said dourly, “Pure talent. That’s about it. My pit crew did absolutely nothing to help me out tonight. My truck drove like (crap) … But somehow, some way I was able to get back to the front. Had a blast.”

Moffitt ran fourth, followed by Ben Rhodes. Stewart Friesen, Parker Kligerman, Noah Gragson, Nemechek and Todd Gilliland completed the top 10.

Sauter took control of the race when he passed Moffitt for the lead on Lap 87, one circuit before Josh Reaume’s spin brought out the fifth caution of the race. Sauter went on to lead a race-high 71 laps and increased his series lead to 59 points over second-place Gragson and 65 over Moffitt in third.

CONCORD, N.C. — Roush Fenway Racing’s crewmembers had attaboys all around Friday evening, moments after playing a significant role in securing the top two spots in qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1).

Matt Kenseth and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will share the front row in Saturday night’s non-points feature, the 80-lap invitational for a select field. Their team’s cheers for seeing the No. 6 and No. 17 sitting 1-2 on the Charlotte Motor Speedway scoring pylon were not only a welcome boost to team morale but also the result of some pit-road ingenuity in the unique three-lap qualifying format.

“You know, we’ve had some adversity this year and the guys needed a little bit up,” said crew chief Matt Puccia, in his second race with Kenseth in place of Trevor Bayne behind the wheel of the No. 6. “This might be what it is here. We’ll see what we’ve got.”

RELATED: Full All-Star schedule | Qualifying results

What they had, for starters, was a well-orchestrated but unorthodox approach to the mandatory four-tire pit stop in All-Star qualifying. Stenhouse’s No. 17 crew debuted the new method, opting to change the left-side tires first before whipping around to change the right-sides.

That technique turned conventional pit-stop wisdom on its head, but both RFR crew chiefs explained that All-Star qualifying rules that require drivers to come to a complete stop before servicing the car opened that loophole. On normal race weekends, pit crews may leave the pit wall on the car’s approach to get a head-start on the right-side tire change.

“This is new, freakish, one-off,” said No. 17 crew chief Brian Pattie. “You can’t leave until the car stops, so that’s where it pays dividends.”

A handful of other teams followed suit, including Stewart-Haas Racing’s three All-Star-eligible teams and the Joe Gibbs Racing teams of Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin.

Puccia said that fine-tuning the choreography in pit practice this month became a point of emphasis, one that delivered Friday night. The top four qualifiers — Kenseth, Stenhouse, plus SHR’s Clint Bowyer and Kevin Harvick — all used the left-then-right system in their mandatory stops.

“It just makes sense in what you have to do to make the best pit stop,” Puccia said. “The guys have done an incredible job this year working on our pit stops and digging there, and this is just a testament to that. They worked really hard the last few weeks working on this.

“They knew this was coming and they put a lot of work into it. A lot of teams just take it with what they’ve been accustomed to doing, but our group really did a good job and it seems like it’s showing today so far.”

CONCORD, N.C. — On Friday at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Matt Kenseth put an exclamation point on his return to racing at NASCAR’s highest level, winning the pole for Saturday night’s Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race (6 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

In the unique All-Star qualifying format, which features three laps and a four-tire stop with no pit road speed limit, Kenseth posted a total time of 2:07.644 for an average speed of 126.915 mph to edge Roush Fenway Racing teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (126.427 mph) for the Monster Energy Pole Award in the exhibition race that pays $1 million to win.

RELATED: Qualifying results | Lineup in photos

The driver of the No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford won his third pole for the All-Star Race, his last coming in 2007. Kenseth won the event in 2004, the year after he secured his series championship.

Behind the Roush Fenway drivers are two more Fords, the No. 14 of Clint Bowyer and the No. 4 of Kevin Harvick, winner of the last two Cup series events and five this season.

Kenseth was the 10th driver to make a qualifying run, and he had to wait for the remaining seven drivers to complete their attempts. When Kyle Larson, the last qualifier, shot down pit road like a cannonball and slipped three stalls past his pit box, Kenseth knew the pole was his.

Kenseth secured the top starting spot without the opportunity to practice, thanks to a downpour that ended the session before some cars had a chance to run.

“The car drove good,” Kenseth said. “It seemed fine. It was our first laps on the track today with all the rain, and Ricky (Stenhouse) was a huge help to me going out early and helping me with my braking on pit road and his spotter up there helping me. That was a big help to get us up there like that.

“To have both cars on the front row is really a tribute to these guys — the pit stops, obviously the engines and all the restrictor-plate stuff. This was more about the car and the team than it was about me.”

For the first time, NASCAR incorporated a competition package for Charlotte that included restrictor plates on the engines — offset by larger rear spoilers designed to add downforce and drag.

Both Kenseth and Stenhouse had little trouble mastering the new feel of the cars, and their pit stops — expedited by changing left-side tires first — were among the best of the night. Stenhouse qualified second despite running over a drainage grate trying to cut the corner near the entrance to Turn 1 after his pit stop.

“I thought I would cut the corner as low as I could, and I got right past the wall and saw that pothole and I was wide open and I hit it,” Stenhouse said. “Yeah, that was not good on the equipment, but my guys did an awesome job. No penalties. That was big.

“Any time you do a format like this, being penalty-free is good. I do think I could have gotten to pit road better. Right now, I’m glad that we beat the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) and the 2 (Brad Keselowski) because those cars were really good at doing this last year. Track position will be pretty key come tomorrow night.”

Reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr. will start fifth next to Ryan Blaney. Kyle Busch, Keselowski, Daytona 500 winner Austin Dillon and Joey Logano will start sixth through 10th, respectively. Busch is the defending winner of the race.

Jamie McMurray posted the fastest time (2:06.595 mph) but drew a five-second penalty because of a loose lug nut. McMurray will line up 12th, one spot behind Johnson, whose effort was foiled by a 19.9-second pit stop.

Qualifying for the Monster Energy Open, which will advance its three stage winners to the All-Star Race, was a victim of the rains that played havoc with track activity on Friday afternoon. The field for Saturday’s qualifying race was set by owner points, with Aric Almirola getting the pole position and Erik Jones the outside of the front row.

Hendrick Motorsports teammates Alex Bowman and Chase Elliott will start third and fourth, respectively, in the 50-lap Open, which will be contested in stages of 20, 20 and 10 laps before the main event. The final starting spot in the All-Star Race will be determined by the Fan Vote.

CONCORD, N.C. — If there’s one name on the ballot considered a shoo-in for the next NASCAR Hall of Fame class, it belongs to four-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon, who occupies the third rung on the all-time victory list with 93.

Gordon is taking nothing for granted with respect the upcoming vote on Wednesday. In fact, he’s trying to keep the possibility of Hall of Fame election in the back of his mind.

“On the one hand, I’m excited,” Gordon said during a Friday press conference at Charlotte Motor Speedway to unveil the throwback rainbow paint scheme on the car William Byron will drive later this season at Darlington. “On the other hand, I’m too young to be in a Hall of Fame or have a throwback paint scheme.

“I’m really just kind of waiting till next week and trying not to think too much about it. I’ve gone to the Hall of Fame for the inductions many time and seen some great speeches and legends of our sport. So whenever that day comes, it’s a huge honor.”

CONCORD, N.C. — Twelve races into the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series schedule, and Kyle Busch has already won 25 percent of the points events in NASCAR’s premier series.

Compared with the success Kevin Harvick has enjoyed, however, three victories aren’t quite good enough. Harvick claimed trophies in five of the first dozen races, including the last two, and the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford shows no signs of slacking off.

RELATED: Harvick tops lone All-Star Race practice | Fresh paint from every angle

As a consequence, Busch is looking for still more speed in his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

“We’ve got to catch up a little bit on speed overall, I’d say,” Busch acknowledged on Friday at Charlotte Motor Speedway, after running the better part of one lap in opening All-Star Race practice. “I think our Toyotas are close, but it seems the Blue Ovals (Fords) have got a little bit of an advantage this year. You kind of see it weekly. You look at the rundown on the pylon, and it’s lots of Fords lined up in the top 12 spots.

“So it’s pretty obvious based just off of last year and looking at the pylon and kind of seeing a little bit more spread there between Chevys, Fords and Toyotas. All in all, we’ve just got to go to work and figure out what we got to do in order to get better. I think some of the aero changes that have kind of come down this year have benefited them a little bit more so than us, and we’re trying to work through some of those things as we go right here throughout the season.”