RELATED: Full starting lineup | See every car in the field | Best 10-lap averages

The First Data 500 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Martinsville Speedway has major fantasy implications with 500 laps scheduled for the 0.526-mile track. There will be plenty of points on the line for laps led and fast laps at “The Paperclip.” NASCAR.com fantasy expert RJ Kraft offers a quick look at some under-the-radar choices that could pay off big in Sunday’s race.

MORE: Top fantasy picks, sleepers | DraftKings Rankings: Best buys for Martinsville

Kyle Busch ($27.50): Busch won here in the spring of 2016 and will start 14th. “Rowdy” posted the best 10-lap averages in both practices so the long-run speed in there in the 18 camp. On top of that, he has four top-fives in his last six Martinsville races with 651 laps led and the best average finish (of 6.3) over that stretch.

Clint Bowyer ($23.25): Bowyer will start fifth on Sunday and posted 10-lap times in the top five in both practices on Saturday. He has been solid at Martinsville for much of his career and finished seventh in the spring. Next to the pole sitter Joey Logano, Bowyer is the driver most likely to spoil the playoff party today.

AJ Allmendinger ($10.00): Allmendinger qualified 27th, but posted top-seven speeds in the 10-lap average category in Saturday’s practices. The ‘Dinger has had some success here with six top-11 finishes in his last seven starts and the sixth-best average finish (13.1) in that stretch. Don’t be scared by the starting spot; he started 30th here in the spring and finished sixth.

RELATED: Full lineup

Wheeling his No. 22 Team Penske Ford at 96.504 mph, Joey Logano jumped to the top of the leaderboard on Sunday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway to secure the Coors Light Pole Award.

This marked Logano’s first pole since Phoenix in March and 19th career pole in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

With a fast lap of 96.479 mph, last week’s Kansas Speedway winner Martin Truex Jr. will start second alongside Logano in the First Data 500 later today (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App) in his No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota.

“I think the last time we were here Truex got us be a few thousandths, so it’s cool to flip-flop that again,” Logano said upon winning his fourth pole in six races at Martinsville. “I’ve got something to race with this week. I’m really excited about the race and starting up front is always a big deal here. We may not get the good pit stall that we would want, but starting towards the front is always a nice thing to have. You can set your own pace and kind of take care of your car.”

Chase Elliott’s No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet will roll off the grid third, while fellow sophomore driver Ryan Blaney qualified fourth in his No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford. Clint Bowyer rounded out the top five in his No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford.

RELATED: See every car in the field for the First Data 500

Round of 8 contender Jimmie Johnson wheel hopped and spun in the second round, skimming the wall and stopping the clock momentarily. He did not attempt another lap, although credited with a starting position of 24th, will move to the rear of the field.

Kevin Harvick was on the track when Johnson spun, which resulted in his lap not counting once the caution flag flew. He made another lap, qualifying 13th after Erik Jones’ late lap knocked him out of the top 12. Harvick was one of three Playoffs drivers that did not make the final round of qualifying, along with Johnson and Kyle Busch (14th). All eight NASCAR Playoffs drivers made it to the second round.

The Monster Energy Series will return to the track shortly at Martinsville, with the First Data 500 race beginning at 3 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Junior on support for Truex over the years |  Dale Jr.’s biggest fear

Another Andretti in NASCAR racing? It’s not that far-fetched. 

IndyCar legend Mario Andretti ran 14 races in what is now the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, winning the 1967 Daytona 500. John Andretti, Mario’s nephew, competed in 393 Cup races, winning at Daytona and Martinsville. 

Jeff Andretti, Mario’s youngest son, tried his luck in three NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races in 1999, all ending as DNFs because of mechanical issues.

And on Saturday morning at Martinsville Speedway, Dale Earnhardt Jr. acknowledged discussing the possibility of providing a NASCAR XFINITY Series ride for Marco Andretti, Mario’s grandson.

Only one problem: with four Chevrolets set to compete full-time for the XFINITY title next year – with drivers Elliott Sadler, Justin Allgaier, Michael Annett and Tyler Reddick — Earnhardt doesn’t have an “all-star car” to make occasional starts with a variety of drivers. 

“We’ve got four teams and they are all full,” Earnhardt said. “So it’s probably not got any life, but we are friends and we’ve talked about it for two to three years. He has some interest in coming over and running some road courses and so does (Graham) Rahal and a bunch of other guys. 

“If I had a field full of race cars, we would have a blast, all our buddies racing, but it’s just hard to do. We’re really thankful to be in the position we are in to have four full cars racing for a championship. As fun as the all-star idea and car is, and as many races as we won with (Kevin) Harvick, the real goal is to have a team running for the championship.” 

Though he’s leaving the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet at the end of the season, Earnhardt is committed contractually to run at least one XFINITY Series race next season at a track still to be determined.

When that happens, he’ll have to field a fifth car, but that situation likely won’t be available to other drivers, even if their names are Andretti or Rahal.

“If we did have those opportunities, we certainly would entertain it, and I think it would be great for the sport to have an Andretti out there running in stock car,” Earnhardt said. “No matter where it is at, it would be awesome.”

RELATED: Full Martinsville schedule

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s history with Martin Truex Jr. has plenty of depth, dating back to Truex’s first forays into NASCAR’s national ranks. They’ve grown closer in the years since they were first teammates back in the middle of the 2000s, but Earnhardt has always had an appreciation for Truex’s talent at driving a stock car.

That recognition was so strong that Earnhardt said he lobbied current team owner Rick Hendrick to hire Truex during a time of transition for his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series organization.

“There was a particular time when I think when Rick was making a change on the 5 car, whether it was before Mark (Martin) or after Mark, I’m not real sure, but I like begged Rick,” Earnhardt said Saturday before practice at Martinsville Speedway. “I was like, ‘(I’m) telling you if you get Truex in here, he can do anything that any of these other guys in your company are doing, myself included. I think that he’s got that kind of talent. You’d be surprised at how well he’ll do.’

“And he didn’t have the track record or statistics to be in that conversation, but I tried to push him into that conversation. So, I believed in him since the first race we ran together. …”

So count Earnhardt among the least surprised at Truex’s current tear through the 2017 campaign, a march that’s included a series-best seven victories, a regular-season championship and a surplus of playoff points that make him a sizable favorite for his first premier-series title.

RELATED: Truex tops playoff standings

The two were first closely connected by the Earnhardt family-owned Chance 2 Motorsports, where Truex won two championships in what is now called the XFINITY Series. When Earnhardt suffered burns in a sports-car accident in 2004, his Dale Earnhardt Inc. team turned to Truex as a relief driver making his first premier-series appearance.

From his rookie Cup season with DEI in 2006, Truex’s career has had its share of highs and lows — his six-year wait between his first two wins, his split from Michael Waltrip’s operation and his agonizing first season with Furniture Row Racing, the Colorado-based team he still calls home. The adversity off the track has been gut-wrenching, standing beside longtime girlfriend Sherry Pollex in her fight against ovarian cancer.

Though Truex and Earnhardt went separate ways as on-track teammates after the 2007 season, the two remained close. It’s given Earnhardt an intimate look at Truex’s perseverance.

“The way he ran in our cars in those two seasons when he won the championship and knowing the equipment that he’s been in his entire career and how he performs in it and to me, he’s always overachieved and always at least gotten everything out of the car that the car was capable of getting, if not more,” Earnhardt said. “And so, also, I think he had a lot of years there where he could have allowed himself to get frustrated. I think his ability to remain professional, his ability to be strong-willed and see opportunity down the road says a lot about his personal character.

“He is a guy where if you get a chance to go hang out with him, go deer hunting with him, he’s a tough, tough person mentally. And so, I think that has served him really well. I’m not surprised by his success.”

Truex’s ascension from upstart to championship heavyweight has paralleled Furniture Row’s rise. The Barney Visser-owned organization — a geographical outlier in Denver — made its first postseason appearance with Kurt Busch in 2013, a year before Truex’s arrival.

Truex led just one lap in his first season with Furniture Row, struggling to a career-worst 24th-place finish in the yearlong standings. Buoyed by a new crew chief (Cole Pearn) in 2015 and a technical alliance with Joe Gibbs Racing in its switch to Toyota in 2016, Truex clawed back into week-in, week-out contention.

With all the pieces in place, Truex won four times last year in a breakout performance that foreshadowed this season’s stunning star turn.

“I think I’m more surprised by the team and how far that team has come,” Earnhardt says. “I think that’s an incredible story. As hard as it is to come into this sport and create a team out of thin air and be an owner that succeeds amongst the teams that are solidified in this sport, it’s so impossible to do that. It’s so hard. There are so much financial resources that have to be poured into it and I think that team should be commended. They found an incredible crew chief and he’s done an amazing job building great chemistry and it’s just incredible to watch.

“Personally, I’ve pulled for Martin to have this chance and this opportunity. And when he went over there I thought this could be the start of something great. And I know I’m not the only one to feel that way. It’s awesome to see.”

That’s a tough admission to make when Earnhardt’s Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jimmie Johnson and Chase Elliott are also locked into the Round of 8, scrapping for one of four slots in the championship phase at Homestead-Miami Speedway next month.

“It makes it harder for me because I want my teammates to do well,” Earnhardt said. “I’m a company man. I want them to win the championship and here’s one of my best friends, regardless of racing, we’re incredibly good pals and it’s hard not to want to see him win it too, you know? I’ve loved seeing him win and celebrate his success. They’ve had such a difficult journey over the last couple of years.”

RELATED: Results | Series standings | Playoff standings | Detailed breakdown

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – Blowing around two-time NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Matt Crafton after a restart with 10 laps left, 19-year-old Noah Gragson scored his first victory in Saturday’s Texas Roadhouse 200 at Martinsville Speedway.

 

The Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender frustrated Playoff competitors Crafton and Johnny Sauter, who finished second and third behind him. After talking the checkered flag, Gragson parked his No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota near the flag stand and climbed to the top of the frontstretch catchfence in celebration.

 

After Bayley Currey spun in his No. 50 Chevrolet to bring out the final caution on Lap 182, Crafton, then the race leader, chose the inside lane for the restart on Lap 191. But Gragson got a perfect drive through Turns 1 and 2, pulled ahead of Crafton on the backstretch and cleared him off Turn 4.

 

The Las Vegas native pulled away to win by 1.486 seconds.

 

“We got that caution there at the end, and you can’t pass on the outside in Martinsville – and I did it,” Gragson said. “To be racing here in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, it’s a privilege, and all those hours of hard work…

 

“I knew to myself this morning, I knew I could get it done. I’ve known it this whole year, and I told myself I’m going to get that trophy today, and that’s what we did.”

 

In a race that saw Playoff driver John Hunter Nemechek crash out after 37 laps because of a brake failure, Gragson held off Sauter during a 38-lap green-flag run that preceded the final caution. Though Sauter tattooed the rear bumper of the rookie throughout the run, Gragson held the position.

RELATED: Nemechek exits Martinsville race early

 

“Those last like 40 laps with Johnny Sauter being off my back bumper, he did that earlier to us in the spring, and I wasn’t going to let him pass me again like that,” Gragson said.

 

That proved decisive, as it put Gragson on the front row for the final restart. Though the bottom at Martinsville historically has been the preferred lane for a restart, Crafton had his doubts as he came to the green flag on Lap 191.

 

“I told (crew chief) Junior (Joiner) I might be crazy, but I thought the top was going to be the place to go on the restart,” Crafton said. “There was no rubber up there where the right-side tires were. I knew we were going to have our hands full…

 

“He had a perfect restart there – and I sucked.”

 

Harrison Burton ran fourth, scoring his first top five in the series 19 days after his 17th birthday. KBM teammate Todd Gilliland was fifth, followed by Stewart Friesen and Kaz Grala. Playoff drivers Christopher Bell, Ben Rhodes and Austin Cindric were eighth, ninth and 10th, respectively.

 

Crafton won the first 50-lap stage of the race and Sauter the second stage as both drivers chipped away at Bell’s series lead, which stands at three points over Sauter and 15 over Crafton with two races left in the Playoffs Round of 6.

 

A good points day was little consolation to the driver of the No. 88 Toyota.

 

“It just sucks to finish second,” Crafton said. “Just salt in the wound.”

 

Rhodes currently holds the fourth and final Playoff transfer position, with Cindric in fifth 11 points back of Rhodes, and Nemechek in sixth trailing Rhodes by 32 points after his 30th-place finish on Saturday.

 

RELATED: Updated Playoffs standings | Full Martinsville schedule

A look at the drivers that ran 10 consecutive laps and their average speeds over that run at Martinsville Speedway.

Final practice: Full results

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 18 Kyle Busch (P) 3 12 93.186
2 78 Martin Truex Jr. (P) 2 11 93.064
3 48 Jimmie Johnson (P) 3 12 93.032
4 2 Brad Keselowski (P) 1 10 92.916
5 14 Clint Bowyer 7 16 92.867
6 47 AJ Allmendinger 4 13 92.857
7 31 Ryan Newman 2 11 92.844
8 1 Jamie McMurray 2 11 92.810
9 22 Joey Logano 2 11 92.768
10 24 Chase Elliott (P) 5 14 92.759
11 42 Kyle Larson 2 11 92.668
12 11 Denny Hamlin (P) 3 12 92.631
13 19 Daniel Suarez # 2 11 92.550
14 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 44 53 92.542
15 21 Ryan Blaney (P) 2 11 92.517
16 5 Kasey Kahne 2 11 92.504
17 27 Paul Menard 5 14 92.493
18 3 Austin Dillon 9 18 92.369
19 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 3 12 92.269
20 20 Matt Kenseth 20 29 92.232
21 4 Kevin Harvick (P) 16 25 92.214
22 95 Michael McDowell 45 54 92.001
23 32 Matt DiBenedetto 2 11 91.925
24 43 Aric Almirola 3 12 91.917
25 77 Erik Jones # 2 11 91.916
26 41 Kurt Busch 8 17 91.895
27 6 Trevor Bayne 29 38 91.884
28 38 David Ragan 3 12 91.798
29 10 Danica Patrick 26 35 91.798
30 34 Landon Cassill 6 15 91.748
31 13 Ty Dillon # 25 34 91.688
32 83 * Gray Gaulding # 1 10 91.190
33 23 Corey LaJoie # 13 22 90.979
34 72 Cole Whitt 1 10 90.955
35 7 * Hermie Sadler 1 10 89.118
36 33 Jeffrey Earnhardt 3 12 88.237
37 66 * Carl Long(i) 3 12 87.391

Practice 1: Full results

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 18 Kyle Busch (P) 8 17 94.460
2 42 Kyle Larson 8 17 93.930
3 11 Denny Hamlin (P) 11 20 93.882
4 14 Clint Bowyer 3 12 93.821
5 24 Chase Elliott (P) 47 56 93.686
6 20 Matt Kenseth 27 36 93.624
7 47 AJ Allmendinger 3 12 93.548
8 78 Martin Truex Jr. (P) 20 29 93.542
9 19 Daniel Suarez # 15 24 93.523
10 31 Ryan Newman 19 28 93.493
11 21 Ryan Blaney (P) 4 13 93.486
12 95 Michael McDowell 5 14 93.465
13 48 Jimmie Johnson (P) 16 25 93.385
14 1 Jamie McMurray 2 11 93.357
15 3 Austin Dillon 25 34 93.171
16 2 Brad Keselowski (P) 2 11 93.103
17 41 Kurt Busch 37 46 93.008
18 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 13 22 92.986
19 37 Chris Buescher 4 13 92.949
20 5 Kasey Kahne 37 46 92.928
21 13 Ty Dillon # 4 13 92.840
22 43 Aric Almirola 9 18 92.760
23 4 Kevin Harvick (P) 31 40 92.758
24 38 David Ragan 4 13 92.629
25 32 Matt DiBenedetto 10 19 92.497
26 10 Danica Patrick 4 13 92.330
27 34 Landon Cassill 17 26 92.289
28 72 Cole Whitt 1 10 92.146
29 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1 10 91.405
30 83 Gray Gaulding # 4 13 91.258
30 27 P. Menard / D. Hemric (i) 32 41 90.261
30 23 Corey LaJoie # 1 10 88.995
30 7 *Hermie Sadler 22 31 88.576
30 66 *Carl Long (i) 22 31 86.974

* Car must run 10 consecutive laps on the track to be included in the above chart.
(#) Driver is running as a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate.
(i) Driver is not eligible for points in this series.
(P) Driver is running in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

RELATED: Truck Series Playoff standings

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — John Hunter Nemechek’s path to landing a spot in the Championship 4 just got significantly more difficult.

On Lap 36 during Saturday’s playoff race at Martinsville Speedway, Nemechek lost control of his brakes and whacked the wall with the truck’s rear … ultimately ending his day at the Virginia short track.

“I don’t really have any emotions right now,” Nemechek said after exiting the race. “It sucks for our team. We had a fast truck. Just lost brakes trying to get into Turn 1. I just never slowed down. Instead of taking a frontal impact, it spun out a little bit.”

Nemechek is one of six drivers vying for a spot in the Championship 4 of the Camping World Truck Series Playoffs. Entering the Texas Roadhouse 200, the driver of the No. 8 was tied with veteran Matt Crafton in third place at 3014 points.

The 20-year-old will have one more shot at advancing next Friday at Texas — and says he won’t have any issue keeping his head up. All eyes are on one prize.

“We’re coming for them,” Nemechek said. “They won’t know what’s going to hit them in Texas.”

RELATED: Nemechek looks ahead to Texas

 

 

RELATED: Full schedule for Martinsville

At a Glance

What: First Data 500
Where: Martinsville Speedway, .526-mile oval
Green flag: 3:13 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Forecast: Showers likely early then mostly cloudy with a high temperature of 52 degrees, according to the National Weather Service. Chance of precipitation 70 percent, with northwest winds 8 to 14 mph.
National anthem: The Gaither Vocal Band.
Grand Marshals: Frank Bisignano, First Data CEO and Chairman.
Race distance: 500 laps, 263 miles
Pit road speed: 30 mph
Caution car speed: 35 mph
Competition caution: Lap 45
Stage lengths: Stage 1 ends on Lap 130. Stage 2 ends on Lap 260. Final stage is scheduled to end on Lap 500.

RELATED:  Final practice resultsBest 10-lap times

Joey Logano topped the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice leaderboard at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday, wheeling his No. 22 Team Penske Ford around the track at 94.416 mph.

Chase Elliott led all NASCAR Playoffs drivers as the second-fastest entry, driving his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet at 94.326 mph.

Monster Energy Series points leader Martin Truex Jr. was third, pacing his No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota at 94.289 mph.

Clint Bowyer and Kasey Kahne rounded out the top five.

Two other playoff drivers were among the top 10 fastest cars — Brad Keselowski was seventh in his No. 2 Ford while Kyle Busch was eighth in his No. 18 Toyota.

The only mishap of the late afternoon practice came when Erik Jones suffered damage to the right rear of his No. 77 Furniture Row Racing Toyota almost midway into the session when he skidded into the outside wall. Jones will be going to his backup car for Sunday’s qualifying session and race.

Several cars served 15-minute practice holds in the afternoon’s final, 55-minute practice, including the No. 18 of Busch, the No. 21 of Ryan Blaney, the No. 24 of Elliott, the No. 10 of Danica Patrick, the No. 20 of Matt Kenseth and the No. 37 of Chris Buescher. The No. 13 of Ty Dillon served a 30-minute practice hold.

The Monster Energy Series will be back on track for Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 12:05 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App) ahead of the opening race in the Round of 8 for the NASCAR Playoffs, the First Data 500 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

First practice results 

Denny Hamlin paced the field in Saturday’s first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Martinsville Speedway, turning a lap at 95.415 mph in his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

Hamlin topped four of the remaining eight drivers competing for the championship who recorded practice times in the top 10.

Kyle Larson, who was ousted from the playoffs last week as the field was whittled to eight, was second-fastest at 95.299 mph.

Ryan Newman joined playoff drivers Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch to round out the top five, respectively.

Among playoff drivers, Chase Elliott was 17th-fastest, Martin Truex Jr. was 21st and Jimmie Johnson was 22nd.

Kevin Harvick had the slowest lap time among playoff drivers, ranking 23rd with a lap at 93.924 mph.

The No. 77 Furniture Row Racing Toyota of Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Erik Jones did not turn a lap in opening practice due to a steering box issues, according to a team spokesperson.