KANSAS CITY, Kan. — William Byron posted the fastest 10-lap and 20-lap averages in Saturday’s Cup Series practice session, but wall contact in qualifying derailed the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports’ driver’s starting position.

Byron will be credited with a 36th-place starting spot in Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) as the team made repairs to the right side of Byron’s green, black and white Chevrolet.

MORE: Starting lineup at Kansas | Full Kansas preview

In time trials, Byron carried significant speed into Turn 1 and, like most competitors, pinned his No. 24 car next to the outside retaining wall. But that speed proved too strong, forcing his car to push upward and into the wall, scraping against the SAFER barrier through Turn 2 and ruining the lap.

“I just was a little tight coming up to the green there and then just overcommitted a little bit,” Byron explained Saturday. “There’s definitely a lot of throttle to get out there to have a fast lap, and I’ve got to look back but probably a combination of my angle and a little too much throttle and a little tight balance. So just all those things and hit the wall. I hate it, but our car’s really good, so we’ll just have to work a little bit harder.”

Byron, already a three-time winner in 2024, was not concerned with the damage to his vehicle as the body simply scraped against the wall without a hard impact.

“It’s just the right side,” Byron said. “You know, the right sides are really tough in these things, but we obviously want to get the toe and everything, you know, fixed as good as we possibly can and and all the components. Looked like the fenders were a little bit caved, so we’ll probably have a little work to do, which I hate, but our car is really good. So we just gotta, like I said, I have to pass a lot of cars.”

With 13 career wins — 11 of which have come since the introduction of the Next Gen car in 2022 — Byron appeared in a light mood despite the Saturday setback. That stems from a deep-rooted confidence that permeates the No. 24 team, led by crew chief Rudy Fugle. But there was a tinge of reflection upon last week’s race at Dover Motor Speedway, where a mistake on pit road mired Byron back in traffic before he was eventually collected in a crash, leading him and the team to an earlier qualifying position than usual.

“I mean, I’m frustrated. Like, I’m really frustrated,” Byron said. “But it’s just like, typically qualifying is really good for us. Our metric from last week hurt us a little bit, going a little bit sooner. So probably just took less grip in the race track and overestimated all those conditions and hurt us. So, typically, qualifying is pretty solid for us. It’s part of it.”

Sunday will feature a charge from the rear of the field if Byron wants to contend for his first career victory at Kansas, the 1.5-mile oval where he scored a personal-best third-place finish last spring.

“I think the only thing that’s different is just that it’s cool out so it’ll probably be a little tougher to pass,” Byron said. “But you know, try to get a chunk of them at the beginning and have our balance close and have a good cycle. Probably miss out a little bit on Stage 1 points which stinks, but (we’re) just really after the end of the race, so should be good.”

RELATED: Cup standings

The points chase is no small item on the team’s to-do list in search of the 2024 regular-season championship. Byron enters Sunday’s contest sixth in points, 62 markers back of points leader and Hendrick teammate Kyle Larson.

“We’re really down on stage points,” Byron said. “We have 59 stage points. I think Kyle has like (126). I just looked at that before coming out here. So this isn’t gonna help that. But I mean, we’ve just got to keep working on that, getting points throughout the race. Even when we run really well, it seems like we’re not getting a ton.”

But if the No. 24 team exudes the same speed Sunday that it displayed Saturday, Byron could be celebrating a big payday by evening’s end in the Midwest.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Still fresh to the NASCAR scene, Kaden Honeycutt has yet to get a plethora of opportunities. But he’s finally found a stable situation with Niece Motorsports in the Craftsman Truck Series.

In a schedule that is currently set to be 11 truck races throughout the 2024 season, Honeycutt notched his first career top-five finish in a national series race with a fourth-place finish at Kansas Speedway on Saturday night.

Honeycutt entered the weekend with a ninth-place average finish in three prior starts this season. He kicked off the season with a sixth-place finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway before returning to his short track core, earning a 12th-place finish at Bristol Motor Speedway and a ninth-place outing at Martinsville Speedway.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Kansas was the first time visiting a true intermediate track with one of the top teams in the series. His preparation work backed that up, knowing that the No. 45 team’s crew chief, Phil Gould, would be bringing a hot rod to the track.

“This was probably the most studied track that I’ve had on my schedule,” Honeycutt said. “I’ve struggled here the last couple of years, just not knowing what to do. Now with all our partners at Chevrolet that have helped us on sim and for me to get better and know what to do when I show up, it’s so helpful to have all the backing that we have from Chevrolet.”

Throughout Saturday, Honeycutt continued to improve as he laid more laps down at Kansas. The No. 45 Chevrolet was middle-of-the-pack in practice and qualified in a dissatisfying 23rd place. As soon as the green flag waved, however, he charged through the field and finished fifth in the opening stage.

During the second stage, Honeycutt continued to impress and even contended for the race lead early in the stage. He bettered his position to fourth with the halfway point looming.

When the final stage went green, Honeycutt shined. He battled series points leader Corey Heim fearlessly for the lead until a cycle of green-flag pit stops began. Heim pitted one lap before Honeycutt, who had made just one green-flag pit stop in his career prior to Kansas. He keyed up his veteran spotter TJ Bell on the radio, wanting to know what his marker was for getting on to pit road.

It wasn’t perfect, but Honeycutt managed the deficit, losing just two spots.

“That was my second green-flag stop ever,” he said. “My first one was here in the playoffs. TJ did an amazing job spotting for me, telling me where my mark was and not speeding on pit road. I didn’t make a whole lot of mistakes and was able to get in and out and still salvage a top five.”

Kaden Honeycutt talks to reports after the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Kansas.
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR.com

Over the final 40 laps, Honeycutt maintained his track position and took the checkered flag in fourth. It was his best career finish in 24 truck starts – and the best finish for Niece Motorsports through the first half of the regular season.

“Whenever you run up front and contend for a win like that, you want to finish the job off,” Honeycutt stated. “Just needed to be better myself on pit road and being able to navigate the air better, attack the corner differently when I was racing [Heim] to try to take the lead from him.

“It’s still an amazing night for my guys. Another career-best finish for myself. I wanted to win, right? Phil is fantastic at this race track and my guys are as well. We will come back to Charlotte and be better, clean up my mistakes and try to win this year. You’ve got to crawl before you walk, and that’s the next goal.”

Aside from his partial schedule with Niece, Honeycutt is competing in the zMAX CARS Tour in both a late model stock and a pro late model, in addition to competing in dirt late models throughout the 2024 season. He’s also a highly-touted simulator competitor and qualified for the NASCAR iRacing Road to Pro Series, which led to a move to JR Motorsports in the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series last season.

Honeycutt is trying to follow in Carson Kvapil’s footsteps, who nearly missed out on winning his first Xfinity Series race last weekend at Dover Motor Speedway. While a fourth-place effort at Kansas stung, Honeycutt can also see the bigger picture.

“That we’re hard-nosed, grassroots racers,” Honeycutt added. “This is what we want to do; this is what we fight for every day of our lives. Every opportunity that I have and Carson has, we try to maximize it the best we can. That’s why I’m a little hard on myself for not winning, but you have to remember you have to take steps at a time in order to get to the win and run up front.

“Being my first time ever even running in the top five in that scenario, I felt like I did a good job.”

Honeycutt won’t return to the Truck Series until late this month at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Between now and then, he will compete at North Wilkesboro Speedway the week of the NASCAR All-Star Race in the pro late model race and late model stock events.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Corey Heim took control of Saturday night’s Heart of America 200 in the final stage and charged to his second NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory of the season, despite fighting a loose handling condition in the closing stages.

Heim took the lead from Nick Sanchez on Lap 70 of 134 at Kansas Speedway and stayed out front the rest of the way, gaining time through a cycle of green-flag pit stops in the middle of the final stage.

Runner-up Zane Smith, the 2022 Truck Series champion running a part-time Truck Series schedule this season, closed on Heim over the final 10 laps but was still 1.088 seconds behind when Heim crossed the start/finish line.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

The victory was Heim’s first at Kansas and the seventh of his career. The driver of the No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota claimed his first victory of the season on March 23 at the Circuit of The Americas road course in Austin, Texas.

“I can’t say enough about these guys at Tricon Garage, man,” said Heim, who has finished in the top 10 in all eight Truck Series races this season. “Top to bottom, we executed so well today with the pit crew, everyone back at the shop…

“What a truck! It was free for most of the race, so I can’t say it was easy. Even with the balance I had, the truck had so much potential to get better. I’m kind of out of breath now—it was a handful those last 30 laps.”

Despite his second-place finish, Smith was disappointed with the result. After winning the second stage, Smith lost seven positions, thanks to a slow stop under caution on pit road and couldn’t catch Heim to challenge for the win.

On Lap 104, following a cycle of green-flag pit stops, Smith trailed Heim by 3.743 seconds and cut all but roughly one second off that margin before the finish.

WATCH: Smith discusses Kansas performance

“You can’t lose (seven) spots on pit road,” said Smith, who was making his fourth start of the season in the No. 91 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet. “That one got away there.”

Christian Eckes finished third, followed by Kaden Honeycutt, whose fourth-place run was a career-best.

Brett Moffitt, the 2018 Truck Series champion, came home fifth in his first start of the season. Sanchez was sixth after starting from the rear of the field, due to his No. 2 Chevrolet failing pre-race inspection three times.

Tanner Gray, Dean Thompson, Daniel Dye and Matt Crafton completed the top 10.

Heim holds the series lead by seven points over Eckes.

MORE: 2024 Truck Series standings | 2024 Truck Series schedule

Both Heim and Smith will race in Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 Cup Series race (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Kansas, Heim as a substitute for injured Legacy Motor Club driver Erik Jones and Smith in his full-time ride with Spire Motorsports.

The Truck Series will next race at Darlington Raceway on May 10 in the Buckle Up South Carolina 200 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NOTE: Post-race inspection was completed without issue in the Craftsman Truck Series garage, confirming Corey Heim as the winner.

It was a standard practice session at Kansas Speedway. The teams that were expected to be the frontrunners entering the weekend backed up that educated guess. Qualifying was a different story, with just two Toyotas advancing to the final round and William Byron, who had the fastest car on 10 and 20-lap averages in practice, slapped the wall and will start 36th. I’m still leaning Toyota heavy this weekend, believing that the manufacturer will show out in the AdventHealth 400.

RELATED: Set your Fantasy Live lineups

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Denny Hamlin

Starter 2: Kyle Larson

Starter 3: Christopher Bell

Starter 4: Martin Truex Jr. 

Starter 5: Tyler Reddick

Garage pick: Bubba Wallace

NEXT IN LINE: William Byron, Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott, Noah Gragson 

RISING: The Noah Gragson comeback tour made its most recent stop at Kansas. The No. 10 car looked to be the best Ford in the field through practice and qualifying, cracking the top five in single-lap speed and dropping to 12th – still the fastest Ford – on 10-lap averages. Gragson backed that speed up in qualifying with a career-best third-place starting position. Gragson is coming off consecutive top-10 finishes and continues building momentum. 

After a dismal month of April, Christopher Bell needed something to go his way. It finally did at Kansas, as he scored his first pole award of the 2024 season. Toyota has been lights out at Kansas in the Next Gen era, and the No. 20 team has three top 10s in those four races. It feels like this is the weekend where Bell can get his season turned in the right direction.  

FALLING: With how fast Byron was in practice, it’s possible that I regret pulling the No. 24 car from my lineup entirely. But he even said following scuffing the wall through Turns 1 and 2 on his qualifying lap that it’s going to be an uphill battle to earn stage points in the opening stage. Knowing how strong Byron has been to start 2024, this is more of a strategic maneuver as there will be opportunities aplenty to have the No. 24 car in your lineup this season.

Qualifying 25th isn’t ideal for Wallace, but that’s where he will take the green flag from at one of his best race tracks. The 23XI Racing cars were both inside the top 10 on the long run in practice, which is why he’s still in my lineup.
 
FEATURED MATCHUPS:
  

Denny Hamlin vs. Kyle Larson: Kansas is in the wheelhouse of both drivers, as they’ve combined to win four of the last nine races. And I feel like a broken record, but Hamlin was another Toyota driver who didn’t turn down a heater in qualifying yet cracked the top five on 10-lap averages in practice. Larson was solid across the board and qualified fourth, so I’m going to flip my pick from earlier this week and go with the No. 5 car. 

Bubba Wallace vs. Chase Elliott: Elliott had a solid practice and qualifying session on Saturday and is the most recent winner on an intermediate track. Wallace will be disappointed in his qualifying effort, but it shouldn’t affect his race much as he’ll need to weave throughout the field. Sticking with a recent Kansas winner in Wallace, though Hendrick Motorsports once again showed up with speed that rivals Toyota. 

Tyler Reddick vs. Christopher Bell: With how tough of a month Bell has had, you might think he crossed paths with a black cat, walked under a ladder or even shattered a mirror. After winning the pole, he said his primary goal is to just see the checkered flag on Sunday. Reddick was the first to the checkered flag last fall despite not being content with his speed. The bad fortune must stop sooner rather than later for Bell, and it could come as early as Sunday. Making the switch to the No. 20 car. 

Martin Truex Jr. vs. William Byron: Truex had a quiet Saturday, despite being inside the top five on long-run pace. Byron looked like he was the class of the field until he got into the wall during his qualifying lap. The bodies of the Next Gen cars are incredibly durable and there was no cosmetic damage to the No. 24 car, so the only hindrance he believes will be track position. A lot can change over 400 miles, but I’m sticking with the No. 19 car not knowing if the damage will actually change the handling of Byron’s car.

WINCHESTER, New Hampshire — In more than 75 years of racing in the NASCAR Modified racing, few cars have developed a reputation like Ole Blue.

Owned by Boehler Racing Enterprises, numerous legends like Ryan Preece, Tony Hirschman, Bugs Stevens and Wayne Anderson have taken trips to Victory Lane in the iconic blue No. 3 Modified. Despite this, Ole Blue had not taken home a checkered flag since Rowan Pennink won in the car at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park in 2017.

RELATED: Complete results from the Granite State Derby

Jake Johnson wrote another successful, if not overdue, chapter in Ole Blue’s proud story on Saturday evening at Monadnock Speedway. Reaching this milestone required Johnson to fend off a tremendous challenge from defending NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Ron Silk for what would also be his first series victory.

The significance of the moment was not lost on Johnson, who was determined to park the car in Victory Lane once again when he signed on to be the team’s full-time driver for the 2024 season.

“There’s so many people behind the scenes when it comes to the No. 3 car that make this happen week in and week out,” Johnson said. “It’s just an honor to be here in Victory Lane with them and get that long awaited win.”

Growing up, Ole Blue was one of the first cars Johnson connected with as he took an interest in racing. A diecast of the car signed by Stevens was on display in Johnson’s living room throughout his childhood.

Johnson initially did not imagine one day scoring a victory in the famous Modified. The start of his own racing career saw him pursue several different disciplines, which included winning the Snowflake 100 in a Pro Late Model at Five Flags Speedway in 2020.

Once he reached an agreement with the Boehlers to race for them on a part-time basis starting in 2022, Johnson was ready to embrace the heavy expectations of driving such a famous car. He earned two poles in his rookie season, which he followed up with a career-best runner-up finish at Thompson the following year.

The momentum from Johnson’s season-ending runner-up carried over into the start of 2024. Prior to Saturday’s Granite State Derby, Johnson had yet to record a finish outside the top 10 and sat third in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings behind Silk and Justin Bonsignore.

Patience proved to be crucial for Johnson at Monadnock. Starting sixth following a redraw of the top eight starters, Johnson methodically climbed his way to the front of the field before making the race-winning pass on Silk with 48 laps remaining.

Silk pressured Johnson tremendously over the closing stages until bouncing off the outside wall during the final restart of the evening on Lap 134. That enabled Austin Beers, who started 17th after a poor qualifying effort, to claim second for himself.

Beers believed his poor track position would have been a major detriment on Monadnock’s fresh pavement, but was impressed with his overall speed and how many passing opportunities there were.

He was also grateful the Granite State Derby did not exceed its advertised distance.

“We were actually blowing up at the end,” Beers said. “It started clicking with three to go and I was losing power hoping it would hold on. It was really fun with this repave. I didn’t think we were going to have passing, but we proved there can be passing here.”

Like Beers, Johnson was also pleased with the repave and how competitive the on-track action was all evening.

Navigating his way through traffic gave Johnson plenty of notes to study ahead of the next two legs in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup, which will also take place at Monadnock and feature $20,000 in available bonus money.

Considering how strong Ole Blue was in Saturday’s Granite State Derby, Johnson has plenty of reasons to be confident ahead of a return visit to Monadnock on July 20 for the Duel at the Dog 250.

“The competition was tough today,” Johnson said. “This is a beautiful facility and I’m excited for these next two races.”

For now, Johnson and Boehler Racing Enterprises have plenty to celebrate following their victory at Monadnock, as everyone with the organization knows the legacy of Ole Blue in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour is alive and well after so many decades.

Patrick Emerling came home third Saturday evening, with Craig Lutz and Matt Hirschman completing the top five. Rounding out the top 10 were Justin Bonsignore, Brian Robie, Joey Cipriano III, Anthony Nocella and Silk.

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour returns to action in two weeks when the series heads to Riverhead Raceway for the Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200. FloRacing will have live coverage of all the on-track action starting at 8 p.m. ET.

Granite State Derby

Monadnock Speedway

  • Race results
Pos. Car No. Driver Sponsor Laps Diff.
1 3 Jake Johnson Propane Plus/Lin’s Propane Trucks 150  —
2 64 Austin Beers G&G Electrical Supply/Dell Electric 150 1.595
3 1 Patrick Emerling Fleetworks Inc 150 2.009
4 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 150 2.335
5 60 Matt Hirschman Elite 150 2.534
6 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications, Inc. 150 3.446
7 25 Brian Robie Maurice Enterprises 150 3.63
8 15 Joey Cipriano III* Dependable Energy & Bass Plating 150 4.525
9 92 Anthony Nocella Nocella Paving/K and D Associates 150 4.715
10 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine/Future Homes 150 4.973
11 58 Timmy Solomito GAF Roofing 150 5.231
12 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 150 5.625
13 19 Anthony Sesely Franzosa Trucking Co/Karchner Warehousing 150 6.101
14 84 Tyler Catalano* Catalano Motorsports 150 6.52
15 43 Matthew Kimball J&M Towing and Recovery/Poodlack Wealth Mgmt 150 6.957
16 4 Tim Connolly Connolly Companies, LLC 150 10.429
17 56 Trevor Catalano* Catalano Motorsports 150 11.281
18 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood & Restaurant 150 12.017
19 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Inc. 149 1 Lap
20 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 141 9 Laps
21 32 Tyler Rypkema Musco Lighting/Northeast Drilling 91 59 Laps
22 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/MTT/Munns Auto 84 66 Laps
23 79 Jonathan McKennedy Christopher’s Towing 60 90 Laps
24 81 Nathan Wenzel* 1812 Auto Body 34 116 Laps

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Christopher Bell lives for the thrill of qualifying on intermediate speedways.

But at this point, he’d probably give his eye teeth, just to finish a race on Sunday.

Navigating Kansas Speedway in an impressive 29.491 seconds (183.107 mph) in the final round of NASCAR Cup Series time trials on Saturday afternoon, Bell won the pole position for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

He’ll share the front row with Chevrolet driver Ross Chastain (182.704 mph), whose lap was 0.065 seconds off Bell’s blistering pace.

RELATED: Sunday’s starting lineup | At-track photos: Kansas

The Busch Light Pole Award is Bell’s first of the season, his third at the 1.5-mile track and the 11th of his career, all coming since NASCAR introduced the Next Gen car into the Cup Series in 2022.

Even as he accepted congratulations for his pole-winning effort, however, Bell was already looking ahead to Sunday’s race, the series’ 12th of the season.

“I love the high-speed places, the places where you’re on the verge of being wide-open or not being wide-open, and the intermediates have been really good for us,” said Bell, who has more poles in the Next Gen era than any other driver.

Since winning the third race of the season at Phoenix Raceway in March, however, Bell and his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota team have suffered a litany of misfortunes. In his last four starts, Bell has posted a best finish of 17th at Texas Motor Speedway and three results of 34th or worse.

“Honestly, at this point, I’m not looking for a race win, guys,” said Bell, who described his 34th-place run last Sunday at Dover Motor Speedway as “the bottom of the barrel.”

“I’m just looking to see the checkered flag. I know my car has great capability, and if I just see the checkered flag with a clean car, we’re going to have a good, solid day, and that’s definitely what we’re after tomorrow.”

Ford driver Noah Gragson (182.451 mph) qualified third, sustaining the momentum from a pair of top-10 performances at Talladega Superspeedway and Dover. Kyle Larson was fourth fastest at 182.383 mph, followed by Kyle Busch, Ty Gibbs and Austin Cindric.

Michael McDowell, Chase Elliott and Chase Briscoe will start from positions eighth through 10th, respectively.

Reddick fastest in Cup Series practice

23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick topped the leaderboard in practice at 181.002 mph.

William Byron (180.222 mph), Bubba Wallace (179.736 mph), Noah Gragson (179.366 mph) and Denny Hamlin (179.146 mph) rounded out the top five.

MORE: Practice results

Kyle Busch (178.897 mph), Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (178.814 mph), Chase Elliott (178.767 mph), Kyle Larson (178.737 mph) and Michael McDowell (178.684 mph) completed the top 10.

AdventHealth 400

(⏰ Sunday, 3 p.m. ET | FS1 | MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | NASCAR 101

Location: Kansas City, Kansas
Track length: 1.5 miles
Cup Series race purse: $7,894,315
Race distance: 267 laps | 400.5 miles
Stages: 80 | 165 | 267

Starting lineup: Christopher Bell to lead field to green
Pit stall assignments:
See where drivers will pit
Defending winner:
Denny Hamlin, May 2023

Key things to watch

Saturday sessions

Christopher Bell rocketed to his first Busch Light Pole Award of 2024, snagging the top spot in qualifying at 183.107 mph. Ross Chastain will join him on the front row with Noah Gragson, Kyle Larson and Kyle Busch completing the top five on the starting grid.

Tyler Reddick came back to America’s heartland on a mission, with the defending winner at Kansas Speedway posting the fastest lap in Saturday’s practice session at 181.002 mph. William Byron, Bubba Wallace, Noah Gragson and Denny Hamlin completed the top five. Byron was quickest in both the 10-lap and 20-lap averages, with Hamlin, Ty Gibbs, Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Busch being the next four fastest drivers in 20-lap averages. | Full Saturday recap

Big story line

Kansas sets up mid-spring battle of sport’s best in the Midwest

Last spring proved that Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin will do whatever it takes to win a NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway. Hamlin got the edge after Larson’s No. 5 Chevy broke loose in Turn 2, leading Hamlin to contact Larson and send him into the wall before the pair finished 1-2.

That intensity sparked back to life one week ago at Dover Motor Speedway, when the two best drivers in the field statistically went head-to-head all over again. Hamlin is 6-0 in finishes where he and Larson have run first and second, respectively, but the respect level from one rival still stands strong.

“Kyle Larson is just a hard guy to beat, period,” Hamlin said at Dover. “He really is. I know when I’m on the outside of him, I trust him, probably more than he trusts me when I’m on the inside of him, and for a good reason. It does take a lot of trust because I can feel air he’s putting on my car at certain times. It’s pushing me up the track. It tells you how hard we were pushing for track position at that time.”

But that trust was tested a couple times last year. In addition to their last-lap battle at Kansas, Hamlin also walled Kyle Larson in a late restart at Pocono Raceway last summer while battling for the lead.

There is a good chance the duo will fight for victory this weekend once again. The two drivers rank first and second in laps led this season and have had successful trips to Kansas recently. Their latest chapter appears set to be written on Sunday — with eyes also on Larson’s teammates Hendrick Motorsports teammates William Byron and Chase Elliott along with Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr.

“The four or five of us are kind of on a different level compared to the field,” Larson said Saturday. “So yeah, I think when your teams are operating at a high level, then yeah, you’re gonna be battling for wins more often with each other.”

History tells us…

Look out for Toyota. Camrys have held a stranglehold over the 1.5-mile oval in the Sunflower State since 2019, with Toyota claiming the win in seven of the past nine Kansas races.

That dominance includes a streak of four consecutive wins for the manufacturer, with three wins for 23XI Racing’s No. 45 car — one each at the hands of Kurt Busch, Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick — and a victory for team co-owner Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing last spring. The last Chevrolet driver to win at Kansas? Kyle Larson in 2021. The last Ford? Joey Logano in 2020.

He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…

Alex Bowman. Bowman has never won in 16 prior Kansas starts, but he may be a great play this weekend, opening at 25-1 odds according to DraftKings. The driver of Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 48 Chevrolet has three top fives and eight top 10s in his 12 Kansas starts with Hendrick.

It never hurts to have some momentum, either, and Bowman finally has some with three top fives and five top 10s in his last seven Cup races. Perhaps he will find himself in the mix for a victory once again this weekend. | Kansas odds

Speed reads

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles. 

• Turning Point: Trends from Dover, arriving in Kansas | Read article
• Welcome back, Ricky:
Stenhouse Jr. signs multiyear deal to remain with JTG Daugherty | Read article
• Jones cleared, but Heim in at Kansas: Corey Heim to drive No. 43 this week, Jones plans return at Darlington | Read article
• Throwbacks keep rolling in:
A look at the blasts from the past set for next weekend | Photo gallery
• Honoring and remembering:
Ryan Blaney pays respects at Arlington National Cemetery | Read article
• Kyle Petty Charity Ride returns:
Homecoming, milestones as Victory Junction turns 20 | Read article
• The Field of 16: Last four in, first four out for Cup Series Playoffs | Latest projections
• Through the years at Kansas: Take a trip through legendary moments | Photo gallery
• NASCAR Classics: Picks to click from our Kansas video archives | Read article
• 36 for 36:
NASCAR survivor pool picks for Kansas | Read article
• Fearless prediction:
Racing Insights projects Sunday’s final race results | Read article
• Fantasy Fastlane:
Lineup pointers for Kansas | Sleepers, drivers to avoid
• Paint Scheme Preview:
Truck, Cup colors shining in Sunflower State | Pick your favorite
• Power Rankings:
Once foe, now friendly Kansas coud click for Kyle Busch | Latest driver rankings

Fast facts

Race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

• Ford has one win on a 1.5-mile track in the last 10 races (Ryan Blaney in the 2023 Coke 600).
• Hendrick Motorsports won four of the last five races on 1.5-mile tracks with three different drivers.
• There were 37 lead changes at Kansas in May 2023, the most in a 400-mile race on a 1.5 mile track in series history.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — When Bubba Wallace woke up Monday morning, hours after his second straight bummer of a NASCAR Cup Series race, he noticed a new candle warmer courtesy of his wife, Amanda.

“Yes. Did you see what it says on it?” she said, as Wallace recalled Saturday at Kansas Speedway. “It says, ‘It’s a new day.’ I got that for you.”

A fitting and thoughtful gift for a driver in search of a good day like Bubba Wallace is right now.

MORE: Cup standings

Wallace has finished 36th and 32nd in the past two Cup races, at Talladega Superspeedway and Dover Motor Speedway respectively. The 23XI Racing pilot has totaled seven points combined in those two events, a stark contrast from the two weeks prior where he scored 51 points at Martinsville with a fourth-place finish and 40 with a seventh-place run at Texas.

“We’re excited to get to Kansas and turn the ship around,” Wallace said.

If ever there was a track for Wallace to look forward, Kansas sure seems like the spot. Wallace scored his second career Cup win at Kansas in the fall of 2022, driving the No. 45 Toyota for 23XI in place of the injured Kurt Busch, who won in that number just months prior. Wallace’s current teammate, Tyler Reddick, scored the victory the last time NASCAR raced in the Sunflower State in October 2023.

For Wallace — now an expecting father — a shift in mindset has been key in helping his approach to future events and the adversity they may present.

“It’s, I think, learning you know how the sport can go,” Wallace said. “You can start your year off the best we’ve ever done and you got to be mindful that it can go south quick — which it has. But that shouldn’t deter you from the path that you’ve set yourself up for the start of the year. And so you can be frustrated and pissed off all you want, but as long as you make it constructive criticism, giving yourself and the team the right feedback to keep the needle forward, that’s what I’ve been trying to do.

“Basically, it’s easier for me to put it to the side, but it’s still frustrating. It’s still hard. It is what it is though. The sport doesn’t stop; time doesn’t stop for you. So no need to sit and dwell on it. There’s a lot of people in your corner that are looking for good things out of this weekend, so we’ve got to go out and do that for them.”

Wallace has three top 10s in 12 Kansas starts, but all of them came within the past four visits to the Midwest — a 10th-place run in the spring of 2022, his win and a fourth-place finish last spring. With that sort of resume at a track that reappears in the playoffs this season, Wallace is doing his best to keep his head up.

“I mean, that’s all you can do,” Wallace said. “You got to look back at the things that you are in control of. You know, we were doing everything right. We weren’t up in the top five all day. We weren’t leading laps at Dover. But we knew it was gonna be a grind. And you know, I ate that up and I was along for the task, along for the ride and things were OK. You know, we were looking at a top-10 day and then your 32nd, so it is what it is.

“I mean, what are you gonna do? You can’t go back and change the results now. Only thing you can do is start a new result this weekend.”