RELATED: Live radar updates | Channel finder for CNBC

BRISTOL, Tenn. — The start of Sunday’s rain-delayed Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, postponed from Saturday night, went green at approximately 4:45 p.m. ET, nearly four hours after the scheduled 1 p.m. ET start.
 
Teams completed 48 laps before rain halted Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event, forcing officials to reschedule the continuation of the race for Sunday. Morning rain in northeast Tennessee kept NASCAR and track officials busy trying to dry the track between frequent cloud bursts.
 
The race can be seen on CNBC while radio networks PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR are also providing coverage.
 
Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota) restart today’s race out front, with Sunoco Rookie of the Year contenders Chase Elliott (Hendrick Motorsports) and Ryan Blaney (Wood Brothers Racing) in second and third.
 
JGR teammates Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth complete the top five.
 
Records indicate this is the first time the annual night race at BMS has been run the following day since the track moved the event under the lights in 1978. NASCAR Hall of Fame member Cale Yarborough won that event, then known as the Volunteer 500.
 
It is the third time this season a race has been delayed one day due to rain, with the other two both coming at Pocono Raceway.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Bristol was scheduled to resume at 1 p.m. ET Sunday on CNBC, although it is currently in a delay. See below for a channel guide.

 

CHARLOTTE
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Time Warner Cable: 205
AT&T Uverse: 1216


DAYTONA BEACH

DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Brighthouse: 1219
AT&T Uverse: 1216


NEW YORK

DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Fios: 602
Time Warner Cable: 205

LOS ANGELES
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Time Warner Cable: 205
AT&T Uverse: 1216


CHICAGO

XFINITY: 266
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216


PHILADELPHIA

XFINITY: 819
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Fios: 602
AT&T Uverse: 1216


DALLAS/FORT WORTH

DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Time Warner Cable: 205
AT&T Uverse: 1216


SAN FRANCISCO

XFINITY: 762
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216


BOSTON

XFINITY: 795
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Fios: 602


WASHINGTON, D.C.

XFINITY: 819
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
Fios: 602


ATLANTA

XFINITY: 836
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216


HOUSTON

XFINITY: 645
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216


INDIANAPOLIS

XFINITY: 1115
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216
Brighthouse: 1305


MIAMI

XFINITY: 470
DirecTv: 355
Dish: 208
AT&T Uverse: 1216

RELATED: Full race results 

A late-race battle for the lead transformed into an 11-car melee in Sunday’s rain-plagued NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway, ending Kurt Busch‘s historic streak of lead-lap finishes at 22.


Busch was battling for the lead just after a Lap 372 restart when his Stewart-Haas Racing No. 41 Chevrolet pitched loose out of Turn 2 on the .533-mile track. His car collected Brad Keselowski‘s Team Penske No. 2 Ford, sending the front-runners scrambling behind them.


Austin Dillon, Matt Kenseth, Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Chase Elliott, Paul Menard, Kyle Larson, Brian Scott and Jimmie Johnson were the other drivers listed as involved in the ninth caution period of the rain-delayed Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race. Of those, Dillon, Logano and Johnson drove away with only minor damage to salvage top-10 finishes.


Busch wound up completing 372 of the 500 laps Sunday, sidelined by a DNF for the first time this season. He said that he misjudged the sticky rosin applied to the low side of the turns, triggering the pile-up.


“I think I just missed the bottom groove by a few inches, got loose and the wreck was on,” said Busch, who ended up in 38th place. “The way that our car was restarting it felt comfortable, it felt good. That inside with the rosin and the VHT (traction compound) if you don’t hit it exactly right, you lose a lot of time. I tried to make up for it and got loose. I feel really bad for the Monster Energy guys. We had a win in our sights and I just drove the car at 101 percent instead of that 99.”


Keselowski, who finished 33rd, said he had little room to escape.


“He got loose and by the time I saw it, I was already making contact with him,” Keselowski said. “It was kind of one of those Bristol things. I hate it because we were making improvements on the car and we had gotten up to third there and the race was kind of coming to us.”


Kenseth, a four-time winner at Bristol, now has three consecutive finishes at the .533-mile track of 35th or worse. His Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota was nudged into a spin by Elliott then sideswiped by fellow rookie Blaney.


“I didn’t really see what happened except for there were cars wrecking up there and I slowed down as much as the guy in front of me,” Kenseth said. “I couldn’t slow down any less than that or I would hit him. Chase busted out of nowhere, ran me over and the 21 (Blaney) came through there wide open — I still don’t know if he’s lifted yet or not — and finished us off. As the wreck happened, you’ve got to slow down. Just not much I could do.”

RELATED: Race results


Kyle Busch‘s path to a dominant day came to an early end with involvement in a multicar crash Sunday at Bristol Motor Speedway.


Busch’s Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota sustained significant damage in the Lap 357 stack-up during the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, which was postponed to a Sunday start after Saturday evening showers stopped the event 48 laps in.


Busch had complained over his team radio for a number of laps about a possible broken shock affecting his car’s handling. Busch’s car finally let loose in Turn 1, where it was drilled by the No. 46 Chevrolet of Justin Allgaier, a late-hour substitute for the ailing Michael Annett.


Busch’s car limped behind the wall at the .533-mile track, done for the day and earmarked for a 39th-place finish after leading 256 laps.


“It finally did break and it was breaking, but it finally did break and I couldn’t hold onto it there and it spun out and then spun out the wrong way and it’s frustrating,” said Busch, the defending series champ and a four-time Sprint Cup winner this year.

“We’ve had really, really fast race cars here. The guys do a great job setting them up, but, man, we’ve got parts failures, you know? You can’t have parts failures in this business. That’s stupid. My Camrys have been fast.

“We’ve just got to stop making stupid mistakes that take us out of races and beyond that the 46 spotter needs to be fired and the damn driver, too. He’s an idiot. I’ve been wrecking for half a lap and they come through and clean us out. I mean, there’s plenty of room to miss me. Everybody else seemed to be able to do a good job of it.”


Allgaier, a NASCAR XFINITY Series regular for JR Motorsports, was tapped as a last-ditch fill-in by HScott Motorsports on Saturday as Annett battled flu-like symptoms. He wound up last in the 40-car field in his only Sprint Cup start of the season.


“The No. 22 (Joey Logano) ducked in front of me getting into (Turn) 1 and I had to jam on the brakes pretty hard,” said Allgaier, who apologized to Busch after exiting the No. 46 Chevy.

“I got really loose and I was just trying to catch it. That is when the spotter was telling me that the No. 18 was spinning and he kept rolling down the hill, so at first I committed to go below him because I was already on the bottom and then he was still coming down the hill so I tried to go out around the outside of him and unfortunately I just didn’t make it. The No. 22 was right there and just really a shame. I hate it for these guys.”


Martin Truex Jr. was also tangled up, sustaining minor damage in the stack-up before his involvement in a larger crash 15 laps later.

RELATED: NASCAR on TV channel finderFind NBCSN in your area

All times ET

Monday, August 22
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, August 23
6 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series UNOH 200 (re-air), FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Scan All Special (re-air), NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN

Wednesday, August 24

3 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Dale Earnhardt Sr. Moments (re-air), NBCSN
3:30 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Memorable Moments (re-air), NBCSN
4 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Rookie Seasons (re-air), NBCSN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Iconic Cars (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR: The List – Daytona Memories (re-air), NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN

Thursday, August 25
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: UNOH 200 (re-air), FS2
7 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race: Watkins Glen International (taped), NBCSN
8 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race: Evergreen Speedway (taped), NBCSN

Friday, August 26
Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS2
4 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FS2
5 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Series: Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park (taped), NBCSN
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Series: Bristol Motor Speedway (taped), NBCSN
9 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice (re-air), FS1
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice (re-air), FS1
Midnight, NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race: Watkins Glen International (re-air), NBCSN

Saturday, August 27
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, CNBC
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FS1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, CNBC
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Setup, FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 Presented by Cooper Standard and Brad Keselowski‘s Checkered Flag Foundation, FS1–start delayed by rain, coverage shifts to FS2
2:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville, NBCSN
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 Presented by Cooper Standard and Brad Keselowski ‘s Checkered Flag Foundation (re-air), FS1

Sunday, August 28
1:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 Presented by Cooper Standard and Brad Keselowski‘s Checkered Flag Foundation (re-air), FS2
11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN
1:30 p.m., WeatherTech SportsCar Championship: Virginia International Raceway, FS1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Pure Michigan 400 , NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Post-Race Show, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lap, NBCSN
10 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Series: Watkins Glen International (re-air), NBCSN
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FS1




RELATED: Find NBCSN in your area | Watch live online at NBCSports.com

MORE: NASCAR on TV channel finder

The NASCAR Sprint Cup and Camping World Truck Series will gather for a doubleheader showing at Michigan International Speedway this weekend while the XFINITY Series makes a stop at Road America. Check out the full schedule below.


Note: All times are ET

SUNDAY, AUG. 28:

PRE-RACE SCHEDULE
— 12:00:00 p.m.: NSCS Driver/Crew Chief Meeting (Michigan Room)  
— 1:30:00 p.m.: NSCS Drivers Introductions w/ NASCAR Special Awards
— 1:58:15 p.m.: Canadian Anthem by: MIS’ Own, Lisa Bascom
— 2:00:00 p.m.: Presentation of Colors: Michigan State Police
— 2:00:20 p.m.: Invocation by: Fr. Geoff Rose
— 2:01:00 p.m.: National Anthem by: US Army Chorus Quartet
— 2:02:10 p.m.: Flyover TOT by: (2) F-16s, 180th Fighter Wing, Ohio Air National Guard (Turn 4 to Turn 1)  
— 2:07:10 p.m.: “Drivers, Start Your Engines” by Jeff Blashill, Detroit Red Wings Head Coach; Flyover TOT by: Breitling Jet Team (Turn 4 to Turn 1)
— 2:15:40 p.m.: Start of the Pure Michigan 400 (200 Laps, 400 Miles)


ON TRACK: MICHIGAN
— 2 p.m.: NASCAR  Sprint Cup Series  Pure Michigan 400 (200 laps, 400 miles), NBCSN/NBC Sports App  (Results)


PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 5:30 p.m. approx.: Post-NSCS race


DAILY ROUNDUP
Who has the advantage among Chase bubble pit crews?
Engine woes hinder Bowman, No. 88 early
No. 18 spins, gets into grass
Buescher has early engine problems
Larson earns first win at Michigan
Elliott foiled on restart, takes second
D4D grad earns first Sprint Cup win
See the best photos from Michigan


FRIDAY, AUG. 26:

ON TRACK: MICHIGAN

— Noon-1:25 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series first practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)
— 1:30-2:55 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series first practice, FS2 (Results)
— 4-4:55 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FS2 (Results)
— 5:15 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
— 11:30 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
11:30 a.m.: Tyler Reddick
— 11:45 a.m.: Cameron Hayley
— 2 p.m.: Austin Dillon
— 2:15 p.m.: Greg Biffle
— 3:45 p.m.: Alex Bowman
— 6:30 p.m. approx.: Post-NSCS Coors Light Pole Qualifying

ON TRACK: ROAD AMERICA
— 10-10:55 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series first practice (Results
— Noon-1:35 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice (Results)
— 6:35 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)

DAILY ROUNDUP
What to know going into Michigan and Road America
Fantasy Fastlane: Pure Michigan 400
Truex, Johnson pace opening Michigan practice
Employer grants Bowman time off to drive No. 88
Logano scores Coors Light Pole at Michigan
See every car in the field for Michigan’s NSCS race
Fun with fitness: Cassill circles Michigan on foot
Tagliani nabs pole at Road America
‘Humbled’ Sadler puts team, sponsor limbo behind him
McDowell, Marks top NXS practices
Reddick, Hayley pace Truck practices
ThorSport draws strength to keep on trucking after fire
See photos of the rebuilt ThorSport shop
Keselowski hits home with Career for Veterans


SATURDAY, AUG. 27:

ON TRACK: MICHIGAN

— 8:30-9:25 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Results)
— 9:45 a.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FS1 (Results)
— 11:30 a.m.-12:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Results)–called early due to lightning in the area
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 Presented by Cooper Standard and Brad Keselowski‘s Checkered Flag Foundation (100 laps, 200 miles), FS2 (Results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 6 p.m. approx.: Post-NCWTS race

ON TRACK: ROAD AMERICA
— 3 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville (45 laps, 182.16 miles), NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)

DAILY ROUNDUP
Stewart, Hamlin top practices at Michigan
Watch: Hamlin spins in final practice
Which drivers had the best consecutive 10-lap averages?
Key story lines to watch for at Michigan
Kahne seeks win while in familiar Chase bubble spot
See where your favorite driver will pit on Sunday
Bowyer’s Darlington scheme honors Parsons
McDowell wins in overtime at Road America
Moffitt scores first NASCAR national series win at Michigan
Townley nabs pole for Michigan Trucks race
See the best at-track action from Michigan and Road America


RELATED: Recap the action so far | Revised race-day schedule

 

With 48 of 500 laps complete at Bristol, here is a look at the running order heading into Sunday’s resumption of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at the 0.533-mile track.

 

1-Kyle Busch (26 laps led)

2-Chase Elliott (14 laps led)

3-Ryan Blaney

4-Denny Hamlin (8 laps led)

5-Matt Kenseth

6-Martin Truex Jr.

7-Carl Edwards

8-Jeff Gordon

9-Joey Logano

10-Kyle Larson

11-AJ Allmendinger

12-Brad Keselowski

13-Austin Dillon

14-Kasey Kahne

15-Ryan Newman

16-Kevin Harvick

17-Kurt Busch

18-Paul Menard

19-Chris Buescher

20-Jamie McMurray

21-Aric Almirola

22-Matt DiBenedetto

23-Trevor Bayne

24-Michael McDowell

25-Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

26-Landon Cassill

27-Danica Patrick

28-David Ragan

29-Jimmie Johnson

30-Brian Scott

31-Tony Stewart

32-Greg Biffle

33-Casey Mears

34-Justin Allgaier

35-Clint Bowyer

36-Regan Smith

37-Cole Whitt

38-Reed Sorenson

39-Josh Wise

40-Jeffrey Earnhardt

 

Biggest mover: Larson, +13

Biggest dropper: Johnson, -13

RELATED: Live radar for Bristol area | Starting lineup

 

Rainy weather forced NASCAR to postpone Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway to Sunday. The race, which had completed 48 of a scheduled 500 laps, started late due to lightning and then was hit with persistent rain.

 

The race will resume at 1 p.m. ET Sunday with TV coverage on CNBC. Radio coverage is on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. It will be the third race of 2016 delayed by rain — both races at Pocono Raceway were postponed to Monday.

 

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch is the current leader, with rookies Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney behind him in second and third, respectively. Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth, Busch’s JGR teammates, are fourth and fifth, respectively.

Joey Logano, the two-time defending race winner, is ninth.

The Bristol Night Race is the 23rd of 36 points-paying races in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. It’s the circuit’s second stop of the season at the .533-mile, high-banked oval. Carl Edwards won the spring race, and he started on the Coors Light Pole on Saturday.

 

Rain has been an issue all week for all three NASCAR national series. Wet weather delayed the start of Wednesday night’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series UNOH 200, which was won by Ben Kennedy. Rain also washed out Thursday’s final practice for the NASCAR XFINITY Series and delayed Friday’s qualifying session for the series.

 

RELATED: Results | Standings | Chase Grid
SHOP: Harvick gear

BRISTOL, Tenn. – For most of the final 200 laps of Sunday’s rain-interrupted Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kevin Harvick was where he needed to be – out front and in control of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

Behind Harvick, who took the checkered flag 1.933 seconds ahead of runner-up Ricky Stenhouse Jr., the race was often out of control, as the essence of traditional Bristol made an emphatic appearance at the .533-mile concrete short track.

Harvick’s victory was his second at Thunder Valley, his second of the season and the 33rd of his career. It was the first Bristol victory for crew chief Rodney Childers and for Stewart-Haas Racing, whose co-owner, Tony Stewart, finished 30th after experiencing mechanical problems in his final run at the high-banked speedway.

RELATED: See all of Harvick’s victories

“We should have won a lot of races this year, but we just had things not go our way,” said Harvick, who was out front for 128 laps and pulled away for the win after a brief rain shower caused the ninth and final caution with 66 laps left. “We made mistakes, or whatever the case may be. But, to get back into Victory Lane here at Bristol feels really good.

“We’ve had some good cars here over the last few years… We knew we had the performance that we needed to have in the cars pretty much every week. And it’s been one of those deals where things have just not gone exactly right. But to have the win now and just try to get that momentum before we get into the Chase and get things rolling is really what we needed.”

Denny Hamlin regained two lost laps to finish third, followed by Austin Dillon and Chris Buescher, who moved into 30th place in the standings with his fifth-place run. By virtue of his Aug. 1 victory at Pocono, Buescher will qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup if he’s still in the top 30 three races hence, at the end of the 26-race regular season.

Pole winner Carl Edwards finished sixth, with Jimmie Johnson, Jamie McMurray, AJ Allmendinger and Joey Logano completing the top 10.

Stenhouse posted the best finish of the season for Roush Fenway Racing, running a paint scheme and wearing a helmet in honor of close friend Bryan Clauson, who lost his life because of injuries sustained in a midget car accident on Aug. 6.

“We really wanted to get this Bryan Clauson tribute car in Victory Lane,” Stenhouse said. “It just wasn’t meant to be today. We made our car a lot faster throughout the race and came from two laps down to get back on the lead lap. 

“We missed some wrecks and gave it all we had. I thought we were matching the 4 car (Harvick) there lap for lap, but he got away from us, and we had to restart sixth there on that last restart, but it was an honor to drive this car.”

On an afternoon where rosin helped provide speed in the low groove, Harvick’s most formidable competition disappeared before the finish of the event, which was suspended because of rain after 48 laps on Saturday night and resumed on Sunday after showers blew through the area by late afternoon.

On Lap 358, Kyle Busch, who led a race-high 256 laps, spun in Turn 2, thanks to a broken suspension part. As Busch’s No. 18 Toyota sat sideways at the exit from the corner, Justin Allgaier delivered the coup de grace, unable to avoid Busch’s car.

Having started the race on Saturday in relief of ailing Michael Annett, Allgaier finished off Busch’s Camry before ricocheting up the track and collecting the competitive cars of Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Larson.

RELATED: See what happened to the No. 18 of Busch

“We’ve been having parts failures here, so something we’ve got to address and fix,” Busch said. “I’m really tired of losing races here with parts falling apart, so they’ll hear about it on Tuesday.”

Busch also had some choice words for Allgaier and his spotter.

“I’ve been wrecking for half a lap and they just come on through and clean us out,” he said. “That’s stupid, so I don’t know – frustrating day. Let’s go home.”

Allgaier said he tried to go low to avoid Busch but then tried to miss the No. 18 on the high side.

“The No. 22 (Logano) ducked in front of me getting into (Turn) 1 and I had to jam on the brakes pretty hard,” Allgaier said. “I got really loose and I was just trying to catch it. That’s when the spotter was telling me that the No. 18 was spinning and he kept rolling down the hill.

“So at first I committed to go below him, because I was already on the bottom, and then he was still coming down the hill, so I tried to go out around the outside of him and, unfortunately, I just didn’t make it.”

Comparatively speaking, that wreck was a minor incident relative to the chaos that followed.

Battling for the lead after a restart on Lap 372, Kurt Busch turned sideways in his No. 41 Chevrolet, clipped the side of Joey Logano‘s Ford and collided with the No. 2 Ford of Brad Keselowski, who subsequently finished 33rd and lost the series points lead to Harvick.

The contact between Busch and Keselowski ignited a wreck that involved 11 cars and eliminated Busch, Matt Kenseth and Sunoco rookie Ryan Blaney from the race.

“I think I just missed the bottom groove by a few inches, got loose and the wreck was on,” Busch said. “The way that our car was restarting it felt comfortable, it felt good. That inside with the (rosin), if you don’t hit it exactly right you lose a lot of time. 

“I tried to make up for it and got loose… We had a win in our sights and I just drove the car at 101 percent instead of that 99. I just over-pushed the groove by a few inches. When you miss your line on a (rosin) grip level, you go for a ride.”

Notes: Harvick came from 24th on the grid to win the race, the deepest in the field a Bristol winner has started since Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the checkered flag from 30th in the 2004 Night Race… Three of Stenhouse’s career top-five finishes have come at Bristol… There were 20 lead changes among eight drivers in a race that produced nine cautions for 106 laps.

RELATED: Byron checks off boxes one milestone at a time

BRISTOL, Tenn. — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team owner Rick Hendrick said this week’s signing of Camping World Truck Series phenom William Byron has nothing to do with driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s recent battle with concussion-like symptoms, and he expects his driver to return to competition as soon as doctors will allow.

“Dale looks great,” Hendrick said Saturday night prior to the Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway. “I had lunch with him and his road crew Wednesday. … We are taking extra effort with the doctors making sure he’s going to be 100 percent. He’s got a doctor’s appointment next week. He’s coming along great and he wants to get back in the car.

“William has nothing to do with Dale at all. William has all to do with our future down the road, what’s going to happen in 3-5 years from now? Nobody knows.”

Earnhardt has been sidelined since early July after being diagnosed with concussion like symptoms following the Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts at Kentucky Speedway. In his absence, drivers Alex Bowman and four-time series champion Jeff Gordon have piloted the team’s No. 88 Chevrolet.

RELATED: Bowman to drive at Michigan — not Gordon — if Dale Jr. can’t go

Byron has won five times this season in the Truck Series while driving for Kyle Busch Motorsports.

He will compete full-time for JR Motorsports, which is co-owned by Hendrick, Earnhardt Jr. and Kelley Earnhardt Miller, in the XFINITY Series beginning in 2017.

Hendrick fields Sprint Cup entries for Earnhardt, six-time series champion Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne and Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender Chase Elliott, son of former series champion Bill Elliott.

Johnson and primary sponsor Lowe’s signed two-year contract extensions with Hendrick in September of 2015, meaning next season is his last under the current contract.

“Jimmie plans to retire there; we plan for him to retire there,” Hendrick said of Johnson, who has 77 career victories. “Beyond that, we’re excited about (William) just like we were Chase.

“If you don’t get someone in the pipeline, when it’s time for someone to retire then you don’t have them. I’d rather bring someone like William along so that we know that we’ve got someone for the future in our company.”