See where your favorite driver will pit on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, ESPN)

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge for chance at $100,000 prize

When the Challenger Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup ends in the AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway (Sunday, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN), pole-sitter Kevin Harvick will have the first stall off of pit road heading into Turn 1 as he attempts to clinch his spot in the Contender Round.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

CHASE BUBBLE

Pos. Driver +/-
3 Kevin Harvick +41
4 Jimmie Johnson +31
5 Kyle Busch +28
6 Dale Earnhardt Jr. +28
7 Jeff Gordon +21
8 Matt Kenseth +8
9 Carl Edwards +8
10 AJ Allmendinger +7
11 Kasey Kahne +6
12 Ryan Newman +6
13 Denny Hamlin -6
14 Greg Biffle -6
15 Kurt Busch -8
16 Aric Almirola -10

Joe Gibbs Racing teammates and fellow Chase competitors, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin, qualified second and third and chose the 10th and 43rd stalls respectively.

Busch will have an opening in front of him with Chase leader Brad Keselowski across the opening in the ninth stall while Hamlin will have no one behind him as he rolls into the first stall at the Turn 4 entrance to pit road.

Here’s a list of where the 12 remaining Chase drivers will pit as they attempt to make the top 12 that will advance to the Contender Round next weekend at Kansas Speedway:

Matt Kenseth – Pit stall 3
Joey Logano – Pit stall 5
Greg Biffle – Pit stall 11
Jimmie Johnson – Pit stall 16
Carl Edwards – Pit stall 19
AJ Allmendinger – Pit stall 20
Ryan Newman – Pit stall 23
Aric Almirola – Pit stall 27
Jeff Gordon – Pit stall 29
Kurt Busch – Pit stall 31
Dale Earnhardt Jr. – Pit stall 33
Kasey Kahne – Pit stall 41

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

At first race, Morehouse senior sat atop pit box, met Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Students are encouraged to work as active media members at the racetrack and ultimately tell the story of their unique experience at a NASCAR event. Following each immersion, one student will have the chance to see their work published on NASCAR.com.

Last month, David Fortune, a senior at Morehouse College, attended the race weekend in Hampton, Georgia and filed this story.

Before arriving at Atlanta Motor Speedway I had some preconvinced notions of what might take place at a NASCAR event. I pictured drunken crazy fans and everyone wearing cowboy boots. Yes, I should be hunted down with fork knives and pitchforks. Clearly, I watch too much TV because that was not the case.

Growing up, all I ever watched was basketball, baseball and football. The only time I watched NASCAR was when there was absolutely nothing to watch on television. I thought this would be an opportunity beyond anything I could have asked for. That is the beauty of exposing yourself to something new. You can only speculate about something until you go out and see for yourself.

After we received our credential passes for the day, we were met by our first host, Trent Bailey, manager of competition communications for NASCAR. This guy was so cool, it felt like you knew him before you even met him. He toured us around the media center where all of the game reporters, producers and other media staff members worked. I remember going to an Atlanta Hawks NBA game, and there were not nearly as many people working in the media room. I soon understood the magnitude of NASCAR and the coverage it has on a global spectrum.

We then were introduced and had the pleasure of interviewing the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Managing Director Richard Buck. The meeting started off as a formal interview, but later turned into a 30-minute casual conversation. One of the biggest takeaways I got from Mr. Buck was the work that NASCAR officials put into their job. NASCAR has one of the longest season in professional sports. It lasts from February to November, traveling to 26 different cities and hosting 38 races. That is not including a three-month offseason, which is not really an offseason due to the time that is spent working on award banquets, ceremonies and planning for next season. I realize it requires passion and a great deal of sacrifice to do their job.

Afterwards, we met Zack Albert who is a writer for NASCAR.com. Albert brought us to the racer’s garage to see their trailers and vehicles. Zack seemed to know everything about race cars and more. I do not think there was a question I did not ask. I gained a lot of knowledge just by being around him. My classmates and I stood out the in the blazing sun for about 45 minutes learning about the functions of a NASCAR vehicle. Despite the near death experience it was all worth it all when I saw Danica Patrick standing in her green Go Daddy driver suit. She slowly swung her hair back and gazed passionately into my eyes. Well, that’s not exactly how it happened, but the .2 seconds glance she gave to me was enough. I did not think my day could have gotten better than that.

As we continued on our tour, I realized car racing is a team sport, just like basketball or football. Most people think the drivers work independently, but that is false. There is a crew chief and members who work with each other to put together the best vehicle possible. I found it interesting after Kevin Harvick won the race because he used keywords such as, "we," "our," "us" and "together" to describe the team’s performance. Everybody plays a crucial role in the team’s win or loss.

After visiting the garage and locking eyes with Danica Patrick, we came back in the media center to rest. There we were greeted by Matt Humphrey who also works on NASCAR’s competition communications team. I had to say Matt treated us like family. There was no need to break the ice because we immediately felt comfortable around him. He first took us out on the track and infield where you could smell the gas and burnt rubber in the air. It gave you the feel of what the sport is all about. I also took notice of the crowd and their energy. I always thought football fans were a bit obsessive, but NASCAR fans are over the top. When they love a driver, they praise him like he is Caesar, but when they hate a driver, they boo him like he a bad referee. It’s like there was a personal hate-love relationship with the drivers it seemed.

Matt then planned for to us watch the NASCAR Nationwide Series race from Matt Kenseth‘s pit box. When the cars revved their engines, you could feel the energy blasting through your chest and eardrums. The night before the race, I saw a 5-year-old boy jumping around with so much excitement at a football game. I had the same feeling Saturday night. It was like getting on a roller coaster for the first time. I watched every second of the 195 laps, cheering for the No. 20 car mainly because we were watching the race from the team’s pit box. By lap 50, the drivers came in for tire changes and gas. It was exhilarating watching the crew members replace new tires on the car in 12 seconds. You have to admire the work and talents of crew members because they are athletes as well. It takes a special gift and work ethic to do their work.

As the race came to a close and the checkered flag was waved, I reflected on my NASCAR experience. To be a part of this event was more than I thought it was going to be. I met amazing people, found my inner childhood and became a fan of a sport I never considered watching. But wait, I did not even tell you the best part of my day yet. Yes, even better than Danica Patrick‘s glance. Right before I was about to leave, one of my classmates spotted Dale Earnhardt Jr. Now I may not have known much about NASCAR, but I for sure knew who he was.

While he was walking out, my friend Austin suggested we meet him and get a picture. So I nervously walked up and said his name three times, but he could not hear me. I then reached out my hand and touched him on the shoulder. Let me stop there for a second. Dale Earnhardt Jr. is the most popular driver in NASCAR, and I decided to touch him. If this were LeBron James, Tom Brady, Derek Jeter or Kevin Durant, I don’t know if I would have lived to tell about my NASCAR experience. However, like a true professional, he calmly turned and said, "Cool, no problem guys."

It is those small moments I appreciate about NASCAR. I love seeing the families in the pits or the fans walking up and taking pictures with their favorite driver. It’s like we were all one big family. I tip my hat to the NASCAR nation because of the hard work I see put in from sunrise to sunset and the amazing energy from the fans, officials and the drivers. NASCAR has made me into a fan, and I can guarantee that this will not be my last and only race.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

NASCAR.com experts talk Penske pull, Chase surprises, new rule changes

MORE: Horsepower reduction among rule changes | Logano inks extension with Team Penske
RELATED: Track your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge and Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

1. It may sound like a no-brainer, but having won the first two races, is Team Penske the organization to beat in this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup?

Zack Albert: You’ve come to the right place for no-brainers, but early indications say yes. I still think the Hendrick Motorsports crowd will have a strong say in who is crowned before it’s all said and done.

Alan Cavanna: In every Chase year before this year, the answer would be an easy "yes." And while I do think Penske is the best team, it doesn’t really matter at the moment. The two Penske wins mean nothing after the Dover race. In year’s past, those wins would carry an advantage to Homestead. Now they don’t.

Kenny Bruce: I agree with your line of thinking there, Alan. (Scary, huh?) Unless someone won a dozen races this season, I’d have a hard time considering anyone a favorite. The new format will basically put everyone back on equal ground after each round. So a driver winning twice in one round, or sweeping all three races in a round, really doesn’t get the benefit the way he or she would have in the past.

Albert: I think a lot of it depends on whether you believe in the abstract concept of momentum, which the Penske bunch definitely has right now. I think momentum matters – at least until you get to the burbling cauldron of Talladega.

Cavanna: Would I love to be a Penske car right now? Absolutely. But if I’m Kevin Harvick, Jeff Gordon, or Jimmie Johnson, I’m nowhere near as worried as I would’ve been last year.

Bruce: That being said, it’s pretty clear that Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano are hitting their stride at the right time. And, as Zack mentioned, if those (Penske) guys are putting the beatdown on you every weekend, that’s got to be kind of disheartening.

Albert: Would the Captain let you drive, Alan? Are you Penske material based on your years-ago quarter-midget driving experience?

Cavanna: I was a huge Rusty Wallace fan growing up. That has to get my foot in the door.


2. Staying in Chase mode for No. 2 here, guys. While there’s plenty of opportunity for movement with one race remaining in the Challenger Round, who are the surprises, as far as likely to advance and likely to be eliminated?

Cavanna: I’m going out on a limb and saying one JGR driving is sent packing, and AJ Allmendinger has the ride of this life in Dover and makes it to the next round.

Albert: I like the Allmendinger pick, but I don’t have quite as much trust in it. I think Kurt Busch is primed to jump up from his current rank of 15th at Dover and transfer on – a mild surprise given how erratic that team has been this year.

Cavanna: Dinger has three career top-10s at Dover, and the luxury of being "in" the next round at the moment. It’s his to lose. Who doesn’t love an underdog story?

Bruce: I’ll be surprised if Denny Hamlin gets bumped. While not as consistent as he needs to be, Hamlin’s been in the Chase before so his team knew what to expect coming in. Of course, a faulty fuel probe isn’t exactly something a team can prepare for on race day. But if he advances, somebody has to drop. And I don’t have a clue who that might be. Performance-wise, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of difference between all those teams hanging around eighth through 12th in points.

Albert: I cringe to say it but I think that someone moving up may come at the cost of Kasey Kahne. The combination of gobs of bad luck and a baffling performance deficit give me pause at penciling him in for the Contender Round.

Bruce: Allmendinger has definitely gotten it done in the first two races. Maybe not the greatest of runs, but the JTG team has been able to avoid the problems that have others sweating bullets heading into Dover.

Cavanna: You make a good point, Kenny. No matter what the final scenario, a good driver is going to be out of contention. One wreck or incident, and two former champs (Kurt Busch and Matt Kenseth) could not make the top-12. It’s hard to fathom but clearly possible in the new format.

Bruce: The best thing about all of this? Under the right circumstances (as in picking up a win), any of these teams outside the top 12 could still advance.


3. As interesting as this Chase has been so far, let’s jump ahead a little. NASCAR announced its 2015 rules package this week. What is likely to have a bigger impact on the upcoming year, the mechanical changes (horsepower reduction, smaller spoiler, etc.) or the ban on testing?

Cavanna: Certainly the mechanical changes. NASCAR put a lot of research in the changes it announced and it all has to do with on-track product. When that changes, the ripple effect will be huge. Better racing will benefit everyone, and that means a HUGE impact.

Bruce: Alan, thinking big picture. I like that.

Albert: I vote mechanical changes as well since that balance of grip and aero is such a moving target. Still think the testing ban will be a big deal, but teams are sure to re-allocate that money in their budget for simulation-style tests (wind tunnel, shaker rigs) elsewhere.

Cavanna: You hit the nail on the head Zack. The money in the sport isn’t going anywhere; teams will find a way to spend it. Just elsewhere.

Bruce: Think you’re right, Zack. The testing ban may save smaller teams money, but bigger teams will just spend it in R&D, computer simulation, etc. And given that a lot of testing was done on tracks where NASCAR doesn’t race, with tires that won’t be similar to those used in the event, I don’t know that they were making big gains. More like confirmation of things they’d seen in simulation, maybe? But cutting horsepower and taking away downforce should put the drivers back in control of their destiny. If (slightly) slower means Goodyear can soften tires, which would wear more, then that adds another element drivers don’t currently face. It could/should get interesting.

Cavanna: And when I think "impact", I think it has to do what the fans can see. Fans can’t see testing. Combine that with the potential for better racing, and I think the mechanical changes win this debate.

Bruce: As long as they don’t show up next year with a wing on the car again, I think everyone will be pleased with the changes.

Cavanna: "The car that shall not be talked about!"

Albert: Well, I’d love it if they brought back the Superbirds from 1970, but I don’t know that the rules changes are going to be that radical.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Track hosted first Cup race in 1969

RELATED: See how Miles the Monster trophy is made

Will lights finally come to Dover International Speedway?

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

Dale Earnhardt Jr. thinks yes — and he tweeted what he considered evidence Thursday afternoon when he arrived to the track.

If the foundation is indeed set as Junior hints, it would be a historic announcement from the track. Since opening in 1969, Dover — originally called Dover Downs International Speedway — has run its NASCAR races in the daytime.

The 1-mile concrete oval has hosted two premier series races per year since 1971. The AAA 400, scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday (ESPN), is the third race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and final event of the Challenger Round.

NASCAR national series events begin in earnest Friday, so perhaps the track will have a response soon.

UPDATE: On Friday, Dale Jr. tweeted what he learned from Dover International Speedway folks.

Dale Jr. isn’t convinced so perhaps there is more to this.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Veteran journalist has been with ESPN since 2007

Veteran motorsports journalist Jamie Little will join FOX Sports in January 2015 and serve as a pit reporter for FOX’s 15th season of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series coverage, the company announced Thursday in a press release.

Little has covered NASCAR for ESPN since 2007, and she’ll also cover races in the NASCAR Nationwide Series — which will then be the NASCAR XFINITY Series.

"Jumping over to FOX will be a big change for me, but this is the perfect time in my life and I welcome the challenge," Little said in the release. "All I’ve ever wanted to do is cover racing, so the fact FOX approached me with the opportunity to continue covering the sport I love so much is a true honor. … Now I’ll have the chance to cover my first Daytona 500 in February. That will be a huge feather in my cap."

Little was the first female pit reporter for the TV broadcast of the Indianapolis 500, and she started her career for SPEED in 2002 and 2003.

FOX extended its media rights agreement with NASCAR in 2013 and will broadcast the first 16 Sprint Cup races beginning next year, as well as the first 14 XFINITY Series races and every NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race through 2024.

The network will announce its full on-air lineup in the near future, according to the release.

"Bringing Jamie into the NASCAR on FOX fold is a huge addition for FOX Sports," said John Entz, EVP, production & executive producer. "While her versatility is remarkable, her ability to think on her feet and report not only the news but also the sport’s human-interest stories, with a down-to-earth presentation, makes her a perfect fit for FOX."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

The No. 51 team has scored four wins in five starts on 1.5-milers

NASCAR Next member Erik Jones leads the No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports team to its owner’s hometown of Las Vegas for his first-career start at the track in Saturday’s Rhino Linings 350 (10 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).

And the odds are quite good there will be a No. 51 Toyota Tundra "sighting" in Victory Lane.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

The No. 51 team has been dominant at 1.5-mile tracks this season, scoring four victories in five starts. Busch, who splits seat time with the 18-year-old Jones, has piloted the truck in all four victories, but his protégé has gained valuable experience at intermediate tracks since his 11th-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway in June. Jones turned in a seventh-place performance in the NASCAR Nationwide race at Chicagoland Speedway in July and ran the truck for Busch at Chicagoland practice earlier this month where he posted the third-fastest time in the first session.

"Erik was able to get a little more mile-and-a-half experience by practicing the truck for Kyle at Chicago and I think it really helped his confidence," said Eric Phillips, the No. 51 crew chief. "He was fast in practice and then Kyle was really happy with the truck in the race and went on to win. I think with those extra practices and running the Nationwide race at Chicago, Erik has a better understanding of what he needs on the bigger race tracks now."

No stranger to Victory Lane, Jones won the NCWTS race at Iowa in June and claims three top-10 finishes in four races since then. The Michigan native will try to give KBM its first victory at Las Vegas, one of only five tracks on the current schedule where the team has yet to earn a win.

Owner points are also at stake for Jones and KBM. The No. 51 truck ranks third in the owner standings, trailing ThorSport’s No. 88 (Matt Crafton) and No. 98 (Johnny Sauter) Toyotas by eight points and one point, respectively.

"Our mile-and-a-half program here at KBM is obviously very fast right now, hopefully we can go out and have another strong run this weekend at Las Vegas and bring home Kyle his first win at his home track," Jones said.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Dillon currently sits 38 points behind leader Chase Elliott in the standings

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

Heading into last Saturday’s race at Kentucky Speedway, Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Sam Hornish Jr. garnered most of the NASCAR Nationwide Series headlines.

The Richard Childress Racing team stole the show.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

RCR drivers Brendan Gaughan, Brian Scott and Ty Dillon swept the top three positions, respectively, and Cale Conley finished sixth to cap off a stalwart showing at the 1.5-mile tri-oval.

The organization goes into the Dover 200 on Saturday (3:30 p.m. ET on ESPN) looking to continue its momentum.

At Kentucky, Gaughan blew past Dillon and Elliott shortly after the final restart to clinch his second victory of the season. He will go for win number three at the Monster Mile where he has a 14.4 average finish in four starts.

"As a driver, Dover International Speedway is such a fun track," Gaughan said. “I like that our runs can and are sometimes 150-laps because I love green-flag pit stops. I would consider myself pretty efficient getting on and off pit road and my pit crew that RCR gives me is outstanding."

Scott’s runner-up finish over the weekend vaulted him to fourth in the points standings. The 26-year-old seems on the verge of his first NASCAR Nationwide Series win, currently riding a string of 10 top-10 finishes in his last 11 races. He heads to Dover looking to improve on his seventh-place finish there at the end of May.

“We can’t go back to the shop and high-five each other because we had a good night at Kentucky," Scott said. “We have to focus on Dover, Kansas, Charlotte and all the races we have coming up and we have to work even harder than everyone else to keep our edge."

Although he finished third, Ty Dillon dominated at Kentucky all weekend, winning the pole and leading 155-of-200 laps. He simply could not close out the race on the final restart. Ranked third in the driver standings, Dillon will try to close the 38-point gap separating him from series leader Elliott at Dover, a place where he claims two eighth-place finishes in three starts.

"Win races," said Dillon when asked about his approach for the final six events of the season. “We have the capability of doing so, we just need to win races. I think this past weekend in Kentucky really showed that we can lead laps, we can run top five and we’re still in contention for this championship."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Rookie has developmental deal with Richard Petty Motorsports

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

Ryan Truex‘s rookie season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series has not gone as he would have liked, and the 22-year-old has found himself out of a ride at BK Racing.

Truex told The Press of Atlantic City, a newspaper in New Jersey, that he has parted ways with the team for which he drove the No. 83 Toyota in 23 races this season. He was on the initial entry list for this weekend’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway but has since been replaced by Travis Kvapil, as he was last weekend at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"I gave it my best effort and they gave me my first full-time Sprint Cup ride, and I’ll always be grateful for that," Truex told the newspaper during an appearance at an annual fan event put on by his brother, Martin Truex Jr.’s, foundation. "But we decided it was time to part ways and move toward the future."

In his 23 starts, Truex had an average finish of 35.6. His best result was a 20th-place finish in August at Pocono Raceway.

"It’s been an up-and-down season for sure," Truex said. "It was my first full season in any of the top three series ever, so it’s been a learning curve for me. Being a rookie and being out there and getting the experience was the biggest thing."

What’s next for Truex? He does have a developmental deal that he inked with Richard Petty Motorsports last year. The two-car organization has an opening in its Sprint Cup garage following the announcement earlier this month that Marcos Ambrose was leaving the team.

"That’s a long deal, it’s a multi-year deal," Truex said. "Hopefully we can do something with it. There’s a lot of things going on. I think I have a solid future with them."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Driver has won a career-best four NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races in 2014

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge for chance at $100,000 prize

In the midst of a career-best season, Joey Logano has signed a new "multi-year" agreement with Team Penske, the team announced Thursday.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

Logano will continue to pilot the No. 22 Ford Fusion in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the No. 22 Ford Mustang in the NASCAR Nationwide Series under the terms of the deal.

"Joey Logano has been everything we hoped he would be, both as a driver and as a representative of our organization and for our partners," team owner Roger Penske said. "He continues to put points on the board for us and the continuity and chemistry he has developed within the team has been terrific. We believe he can be a leader and championship-level driver for Team Penske for years to come."

Logano is currently second in the points standings and, with his win last week at New Hampshire, has guaranteed himself a spot in the Contender Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

He has four wins, 12 top-fives and 17 top-10s this year.

"I am fortunate and excited to be a part of Team Penske for the foreseeable future," Logano said. "Mr. Penske gives us everything we need to keep our eye on the prize and compete for wins and championships. I think that is clear by the number of wins we have across the board this year.

"I’m fortunate to represent great companies like Ford, Shell-Pennzoil, AAA, AutoTrader.com, Discount Tire, Hertz and all of the great partners we have here at Team Penske. I think our best years are in front of us for sure."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Truck Series heads to Las Vegas with four-way battle for title

Darrell Wallace Jr. has insisted that he considers "points" a forbidden term in his vocabulary, even as he ventures deeper into the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship fight. His goal remains the same as ever: wins, which — figuratively, at least — he doesn’t consider a four-letter word.

Wallace’s bid for a third victory this season heads to Las Vegas Motor Speedway this weekend for Saturday night’s Rhino Linings 350 (10 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), the 17th of 22 races this season. He enters the final stand-alone event of the year at the 1.5-mile track fourth in the series standings, just 35 points back of leader and defending series champion Matt Crafton.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

While Wallace’s three career wins have come at a short tracks (Martinsville, Eldora) and a relatively flat 1.25-mile layout with short-track characteristics (Gateway), he said his Kyle Busch Motorsports team’s growth on the intermediate-sized 1.5-mile tracks has been measurable. Strong suits aside, the 20-year-old hasn’t strayed from the approach that’s brought him success.

"I’m excited for Vegas," Wallace said last Sunday after a second-place run at New Hampshire. "Got a brand-new Toyota Tundra going there, and we should be OK, but I’m not worried about the championship. I’ll just let the crew worry about that and I’ll go out and try to win races."

Wallace sits at the back end of a four-driver breakaway atop the standings. Johnny Sauter, Crafton’s ThorSport Racing teammate and a winner at Las Vegas in 2009, ranks second with just a seven-point deficit in search of his first title. Ryan Blaney, in his second full season of Camping World Truck Series competition, sits third, just 24 points off the top.

After Wallace, it’s another 37 points back to fifth-place German Quiroga, another second-year driver who’s come oh-so-close to notching his first Truck Series victory. The Mexico native wound up as runner-up to Wallace at Gateway in June by a margin of .329 seconds, then came up short by just .049 seconds — about a fender — to Blaney in a thrilling finish last month at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.

To put his name among the championship contenders, Quiroga will have to make strides from his 21st-place finish — last on the lead lap — in his Vegas debut last season.

"Last year was my first time competing at Las Vegas and we struggled a bit," Quiroga said. "This time around I have a full season under my belt and feel better prepared. I have a lot of friends and family visiting this weekend, so it would be great to capture my first win in front of them."

Two other former Vegas winners are scheduled to be in the field: Defending race winner Timothy Peters, Quiroga’s Red Horse Racing teammate, and four-time series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., who returns to the series with NTS Motorsports after a three-race absence.

Joe Nemechek, who has 15 starts each in the NASCAR Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series at the 1.5-mile track, is scheduled to make his first truck start at Las Vegas this weekend. Nemechek, an occasional competitor in all three NASCAR national series this season, will celebrate his 51st birthday Friday.

After Las Vegas, the series takes two weeks off before returning Oct. 18 at Talladega Superspeedway. That event kicks off a season-ending stretch of races on five consecutive weekends, culminating with the Nov. 14 finale as part of Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView