CONCORD, N.C. — In a must-win situation to advance in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, Kyle Busch was firmly in the hunt late at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course.

The checkered flag flew with the two-time champion running third, however, ending his 2023 postseason hunt in a flash. With it, Busch’s first year at Richard Childress Racing results in a title pursuit that fell short at the midpoint of the playoffs.

“Hell of a job all day, man. Way to fight,” crew chief Randall Burnett radioed on the cool-down lap. “Sorry we came up a little short. Hell of a job, though.”

“All good, man. Thanks. Appreciate the opportunity,” Busch said. “Sorry about the last two weeks, but that rides on me.”

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

In the two weeks that preceded Sunday’s race at the Charlotte road course, Busch crashed out at Texas Motor Speedway for a 34th-place DNF and finished 25th at Talladega Superspeedway without scoring stage points in either event. Standing on pit road on Sunday in Concord, Busch placed the onus for the No. 8 team’s points deficit squarely on his shoulders.

Ultimately, Busch finished the Round of 12 at the bottom of the standings, 12th, 30 points shy of advancing to the Round of 8.

“The bigger defining factor … of today is the last two weeks and not scoring enough points,” Busch told reporters. “So, you know, that’s on me just not doing a good job at Texas when we did have a good car, and then again last week (at Talladega) being in position to score points both times at the end of the stages and losing spots, just looked like I threw out the anchor.”

Busch lined up in prime striking position twice within the final 15 laps. On the penultimate restart at Lap 98, Busch’s No. 8 Chevrolet restarted directly behind eventual race winner AJ Allmendinger in the outside lane, using an excellent launch to clear Ty Gibbs to vault into second place before another quick caution flag waved. When the race went back green, Busch was on the front row to Allmendinger’s left, but Busch spun his tires exiting the frontstretch chicane on the restart, allowing an Allmendinger advantage that ultimately sealed their respective fates.

Even without the race’s final caution period, Busch, a three-time winner in 2023, didn’t believe his car had enough speed or handling to reel in Allmendinger’s No. 16 Kaulig Racing entry for the victory.

“I don’t think so,” he said. “I would have had to move him for sure. I would have had to move him in a chicane where it would have made him … have to stop and so then he wouldn’t come back and retaliate. That’s a tool to use if you can get there and use it. I was hoping William (Byron, runner-up) was going to use it. But he’s got too many wins already so he didn’t care. Yeah, I mean, just racing.”

Allmendinger and Busch have a strong longstanding relationship, Allmendinger explained in his post-race press conference, noting hour-long phone calls they’ve had with Busch detailing advice to Allmendinger. Their respect for one another on and off the track encouraged Allmendinger to further trust Busch despite the heightened stakes for the No. 8 team.

“I knew he was gonna race hard. I knew what he was racing for,” Allmendinger said. “But, you know, I also didn’t think he’d come clean me out or anything on a restart like that. So just about trying to lead into Turn 1 and not really give an opportunity to get to my bumper. And I knew once we could get through a couple of corners, I could clear him and start driving away. So that was always my focus.”

The season has been remarkably up-and-down for Busch. Three of his last four finishes are 20th or worse, but he also owns four top-10 results in the past seven races after a dismal summer spell. Those inconsistencies were nonexistent on Sunday at the Charlotte road course.

Kyle Busch speaks to reporters after the NASCAR Cup Series race at the Charlotte road course
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

“Sorry we came up short. Everybody did a great job. Did what we need to do. Just a little short,” Burnett radioed.

Spotter Derek Kneeland echoed that positivity: “Yeah, 10-4 man, it was a hell of an effort. This team don’t quit. Plenty more wins coming. Just wasn’t our year.”

“The resilience of the team is by far greater than mine probably,” Busch said. “You know, I put ourselves in a lot of bad spots and they’ve just come to work on Monday and fought and battled through it and given us another good car to go to the next week with. So a lot of it rides on me just getting sloppy, not doing a very good job. And I’m not making excuses, but trying to figure this car out, you know? I just lose the balance of it. Did again today. Was able to get a third out of it, but, you know, probably would have been worse off than that if it wasn’t for the track position.”

MORE: Playoff Pulse: Inside the grid | Postseason standings

Joining Busch on the outskirts of the Round of 8 are Ross Chastain (-12), Bubba Wallace (-17) and Brad Keselowski (-23).

Chastain advanced to the Championship 4 a season ago in his inaugural year at Trackhouse Racing, but a Stage 1 crash at Talladega resulted in a 37th-place finish, undoing the benefits of a runner-up result at Texas and a 10th-place finish at Charlotte.

“We knew coming in that it was going to be tough,” Chastain said. “We put together a heck of a day for us on road courses this year in this No. 1 Worldwide Express Chevy. Lately, we’ve just been lacking speed and I can’t get over the curbs.”

Wallace, who has notoriously struggled at road courses, excelled as the fastest driver in Saturday’s practice session before qualifying fourth. He earned 13 stage points but ultimately finished 16th.

“It was a great effort from everybody,” Wallace said. “We did not take ourselves out of it. We did everything that we could. It’s childish — I’m saying that now — it’s childish to be pissed off about that, right? So just accepting that and moving on.”

Keselowski, the 2012 Cup champion, entered Sunday’s contest two points above the provisional elimination line, with Tyler Reddick next in line to attack. The driver and co-owner of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford was already at a disadvantage after Saturday’s qualifying, with Reddick earning the pole position while Keselowski started 19th.

Keselowski is still seeking his first race victory since departing from Team Penske, but a Round of 12 appearance marked considerable improvement of the program’s overall performance.

“Just major progress from where we were last year,” Keselowski said. “Not where we want to be, but a lot closer to it and we can see it.”

THOMPSON, Conn. – Ron Silk needed a big day on Sunday at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park if he wanted to keep pace with Justin Bonsignore in the battle for the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship.

He got that and so much more.

Silk powered to his fifth NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory of the season during the World Series 150 pres. by FloSports.com to regain the points lead and put himself in prime position to claim his second series championship with one race left in the 2023 season.

RELATED: Complete results from the World Series 150 at Thompson

Like he has for most of the season, Silk found himself dueling with Bonsignore during the second half of the World Series 150 at the five-eighths-mile asphalt oval.

The two traded the lead multiple times in the final 50 laps, with Silk emerging as the race leader following a back-and-forth battle shortly after a Lap 101 restart.

Multiple caution flags would follow, but Silk held the lead ahead of Bonsignore during each restart. The final restart with 12 laps left would prove vital to Silk not only winning the race, but potentially winning the championship.

When the green flag waved with 12 laps left, Silk launched successfully from the outside to retain the lead, but Bonsignore’s No. 51 didn’t get going on the bottom and stacked up the entire inside line.

Bonsignore quickly fell off the pace and dropped to the tail of the field before he eventually got his car back up to speed.

Silk took full advantage of Bonsignore’s misfortune and held off Jake Johnson to claim his 22nd career victory. It was also his sixth career NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory at Thompson.

“We struggled the first half of the race, really loose. We made some good adjustments at the (pit) stop,” said Silk. “I thought we turned a little bit better then everyone around us at the end there. They all looked to be a little bit tight. Just an awesome day. A lot of effort goes into all this. Just can’t thank everyone involved enough. Just really feels good to get back to Victory Lane.”

Bonsignore was able to gain a few positions after his late-race mishap to finish 13th. He explained after the race an error on his part during the final restart cost him a potential win and, perhaps more importantly, crucial points in the battle for the title.

“I just went to pull it into high (gear) and I don’t know if I was just nervous or choked, but I pulled it into reverse just about,” Bonsignore said. “I thought it was in and just broke and then finally through (Turns) 1 and 2 I smacked it back down and got it into high again. Just gave that away. It happens.

“We’ll just have to go win (Martinsville) and hope he (Silk) does something as dumb as I just did.”

The victory by Silk unofficially gives him a 13-point lead on Bonsignore heading into the season finale at Martinsville Speedway on Oct. 26, but he’s not taking that advantage for granted.

Silk knows anything can, and probably will, happen.

“You never know what’s going to happen,” Silk said. “I’m confident that we can do it. We’ve got to have nothing silly happen and race to our potential and I think we’ll be alright.”

Defending race winner Eric Goodale finished third Sunday afternoon, followed by Kyle Bonsignore and Bobby Santos III.

Anthony Nocella, Andrew Krause, Craig Lutz, Woody Pitkat and Austin Beers completed the top-10.

A replay of the World Series 150 presented by FloSports.com is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 14 at 10 a.m. ET on CNBC.

The 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season comes to a close when the series returns to Virginia’s Martinsville Speedway on Oct. 26. The green flag for the 200-lap finale will wave at 8 p.m. ET. FloRacing will provide full coverage of the event.

World Series 150 presented by FloSports.com

Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park

20141217085344 Thompson Speedway Logo

  • Race results
Pos Car No. Name Sponsor Laps Diff
1 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine & Future Homes 150  —
2 3 Jake Johnson* Propane Plus/Lin’s Propane Trucks 150 0.374
3 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 150 2.146
4 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/MTT/Munns Auto 150 2.969
5 44 Bobby Santos Harshaw Paving/Olivas Market 150 3.214
6 92 Anthony Nocella Nocella Paving/K and D Associates/Airgas 150 3.944
7 24 Andrew Krause Supreme Manufacturing Co. 150 4.376
8 82 Craig Lutz Horton Avenue Materials 150 4.413
9 6 Woody Pitkat Koopman Lumbar 150 4.943
10 64 Austin Beers AP Marquadt & Sons/Lumiere Electrical/Andrew James Interiors 150 4.987
11 89 Matt Swanson Cervado Auto 150 5.358
12 21 Anthony Bello* Bello Motorsports/SKM/JB Mgmt 150 5.565
13 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications Inc. 150 5.777
14 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises 150 5.917
15 19 Anthony Sesely Wanick Construction Inc. 150 6.212
16 32 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Driling/MUSCO Lighting 150 6.299
17 50 Ronnie Williams Empower Financial Advisory/RP Enterprises 150 7.091
18 26 Max Zachem Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply 148 2 Laps
19 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood Market & Restaurant 147 3 Laps
20 34 JB Fortin A&R Materials/John’s Fuel Oil 141 9 Laps
21 06 Sam Rameau Quality Fleet Services/Dennison Lubricants 128 22 Laps
22 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 127 23 Laps
23 1 Eric Berndt Ferguson Motorsports 94 56 Laps
24 59 Brett Meservey* BNP Machine 62 88 Laps
25 2 J.R. Bertuccio Gershow Recycling 43 107 Laps

Another quartet of drivers were eliminated from title contention after the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs elimination race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course on Sunday, resetting the standings board and setting the Round of 8.

WINNER

AJ Allmendinger spoiled a handful of playoff drivers’ dreams to bid their way into the next round with a victory and took the third checkered flag of his Cup Series career.

RELATED: Race results | Full playoff grid 

ELIMINATED DRIVERS

Bubba Wallace, 23XI Racing
Ross Chastain, Trackhouse Racing
Kyle Busch, Richard Childress Racing
Brad Keselowski, RFK Racing

ADVANCING TO THE ROUND OF 8

William Byron, Hendrick Motorsports, 4,041 points
Martin Truex Jr., Joe Gibbs Racing, 4,036 points
Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing, 4,032 points
Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports, 4,024 points
Chris Buescher, RFK Racing, 4,021 points
Christopher Bell, Joe Gibbs Racing, 4,016 points
Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing, 4,016 points
Ryan Blaney, Team Penske, 4,014 points

WHO’S HOT? 

William Byron. He won at Texas Motor Speedway to start the Round of 8 and then scored back-to-back runner-up finishes at Talladega and Charlotte to storm into the next round as the points leader. He heads to Las Vegas, Homestead and Martinsville next, which are all tracks where he has won before.

Tyler Reddick. Not the best of rounds for the driver of the No. 45 Toyota, but Reddick is through to the Round of 8 and has a very favorable track in the midpoint of the round at Homestead. If tough luck goes away, expect Reddick to find his way into the Championship 4.

WHO’S NOT? 

Martin Truex Jr. The Regular Season Champion continues to survive and advance despite the lack of quality results. Still not a single top-10 finish in the playoffs but Las Vegas, Homestead and Martinsville all bode well for the 2017 champion to turn it around when he’s going to need it.

Christopher Bell. Bell is going to enter the Round of 8 eight points below the Champ 4 elimination line, and Vegas and Homestead are tracks where Bell has yet to prove he can produce quality results on a consistent basis. It may take another walk-off moment similar to last year at Martinsville if he wants another shot at the title.

NEXT RACE

The Round of 8 opens at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the South Point 400 on Oct. 15 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

CONCORD, N.C. — Road course aficionado AJ Allmendinger stole some thunder from the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff drivers with a convincing victory in Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course.

Driving the No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet, Allmendinger led twice for a race-high 46 laps, including the last 33, and beat runner-up William Byron to the finish line by 0.666 seconds to win his first Cup race of the season, his first at the Charlotte road course and the third of his Cup Series career — all on road courses.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Kyle Busch finished third at the 2.32-mile, 17-turn circuit, two spots short of the win he needed to advance to the playoffs’ Round of 8. Joining Busch on the playoff elimination list were Ross Chastain (who finished 10th), Bubba Wallace (16th) and Brad Keselowski (18th).

Allmendinger took the lead for the final time when Ryan Blaney pitted from the top spot on Lap 77 under caution for a wreck in the frontstretch chicane involving Denny Hamlin, Ty Dillon and Mike Rockenfeller.

The 41-year-old veteran from Los Gatos, California, survived four more cautions and four more restarts before he completed what he termed “the drive of my life.”

Allmendinger was weeping during the cool-down lap and teared up in his post-race interview.

“I hate crying right now, but it’s a freaking Cup race, man,” he said. “You don’t know when it’s ever going to happen again …

“This is why you do it. This is the only reason you do it. You fight. All the blood, sweat, tears, everybody at Kaulig Racing has just been such … I’d say a down year, but up-and-down year. It’s our second year in the Cup Series.”

AJ Allmendinger's No. 16 Chevy drives under the checkered flag at the Charlotte Roval
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Byron and Ryan Blaney already had advanced to the Round of 8 in the playoffs by virtue of their respective victories at Texas and Talladega.

Joining them in the next round starting next Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway are Tyler Reddick (who ran sixth from the pole on Sunday), Denny Hamlin (37th), Christopher Bell (15th), Chris Buescher (seventh), Kyle Larson (who started from the rear in a backup car and finished 13th) and Martin Truex Jr. (20th).

MORE: Playoff Pulse: Inside the grid | Updated postseason standings

The regular-season champion, Truex, claimed the final berth in the Round of 8 by 12 points over Chastain, the first driver out.

Ill fortune that befell Chase Elliott near the end of Stage 2 facilitated Allmendinger’s victory. Just as Elliott, the race leader, was approaching pit road to “short” the stage, Josh Bilicki’s crash in Turn 4 caused the second of seven cautions and forced NASCAR to close pit road.

Elliott steered back to the racing surface and won the stage but lost critical track position after pitting during the stage break and never regained it. He finished ninth behind Hendrick Motorsports teammate Alex Bowman.

Rookie Ty Gibbs came home fourth, followed by Joey Logano.

After a strong run from start to finish, Busch was philosophical about his exit from the playoffs.

“The guys gave me a great piece today,” he said. “The Lenovo Camaro was pretty fast, just lacked a little bit on the long run, just didn’t quite have the feel of the tire that I was really looking for to be able to turn into the corners and to be able to drive out of the corners and keep pace with the front two there at the end.

“But overall, this rides on me anyways. The first two weeks of this round were obviously not very good, and we didn’t score any points. That’s where it’s at. That’s where it lies. Texas, Talladega, just not being able to execute and do a good job when points were on the line.”

SHOP: Winner’s gear

The Cup Series’ next race is the South Point 400, scheduled next Sunday (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The event will open the three-race Round of 8, which will determine the four drivers who advance to vie for the championship in the season finale Nov. 5 at Phoenix Raceway.

Notes: Post-race inspection in the Cup Series garage was completed without issue, affirming Allmendinger’s win. … Allmendinger became the Cup Series’ 15th driver to score a victory this season. … Byron placed first, second and second in the Round of 12 races, an average finish of 1.67.

Contributing: Staff reports

World Series 150 presented by FloSports.com

Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park

20141217085344 Thompson Speedway Logo

  • Practice results
Pos Car No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 64 Austin Beers AP Marquadt & Sons/Lumiere Electrical/Andrew James Interiors 19.2 117.188 11 21  —
2 3 Jake Johnson* Propane Plus/Lin’s Propane Trucks 19.293 116.623 6 19 0.093
3 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications Inc. 19.297 116.598 19 23 0.097
4 1 Eric Berndt Ferguson Motorsports 19.305 116.55 15 17 0.105
5 44 Doug Coby Harshaw Paving/Olivas Market 19.321 116.454 10 13 0.121
6 32 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Driling/MUSCO Lighting 19.338 116.351 4 19 0.138
7 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine & Future Homes 19.365 116.189 10 19 0.165
8 50 Ronnie Williams Empower Financial Advisory/RP Enterprises 19.369 116.165 12 19 0.169
9 19 Anthony Sesely Wanick Construction Inc. 19.378 116.111 5 13 0.178
10 89 Matt Swanson Cervado Auto 19.413 115.902 21 24 0.213
11 82 Craig Lutz Horton Avenue Materials 19.415 115.89 3 21 0.215
12 21 Anthony Bello* Bello Motorsports/SKM/JB Mgmt 19.428 115.812 20 21 0.228
13 06 Sam Rameau Quality Fleet Services/Dennison Lubricants 19.469 115.568 12 23 0.269
14 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 19.504 115.361 13 23 0.304
15 92 Anthony Nocella Nocella Paving/K and D Associates/Airgas 19.505 115.355 9 19 0.305
16 2 J.R. Bertuccio Gershow Recycling 19.549 115.095 19 21 0.349
17 26 Max Zachem Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply 19.568 114.984 11 17 0.368
18 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/MTT/Munns Auto 19.576 114.937 19 20 0.376
19 6 Woody Pitkat Koopman Lumbar 19.657 114.463 3 23 0.457
20 34 JB Fortin A&R Materials/John’s Fuel Oil 19.747 113.941 19 22 0.547
21 24 Andrew Krause Supreme Manufacturing Co. 19.75 113.924 18 22 0.55
22 59 Brett Meservey* BNP Machine 19.855 113.322 12 14 0.655
23 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises 19.876 113.202 5 21 0.676
24 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood Market & Restaurant 20.106 111.907 10 17 0.906
25 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 20.608 109.181 4 11 1.408

Since winning consecutive road course races last season, Tyler Reddick has become an expert at the craft. He’s elevated 23XI Racing’s – along with Toyota’s – road course program in 2023 and is among the pre-race favorites each time the Cup Series turns left and right. 23XI Racing topped everything on Saturday at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, whether it be single-lap speed (Bubba Wallace, more on him in a bit) and five- and 10-lap averages with Reddick. Entering the race two points below the elimination line, Reddick will be chasing points, but he has a fast enough car to outright win.

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Tyler Reddick

Starter 2: AJ Allmendinger

Starter 3: Chase Elliott

Starter 4: Ty Gibbs

Starter 5: Kyle Busch

Garage pick: Daniel Suárez

NEXT IN LINE: Michael McDowell, Bubba Wallace, Joey Logano, Martin Truex Jr.

RISING: After advancing to the final round of qualifying, Wallace pumped his fists and hit his steering wheel with joy. He walked over to Reddick and greeted him with excitement, satisfied by what the duo achieved. Road-course racing has been a work-in-progress for Wallace, but he continues to improve. Some of that has been from following Reddick around the track in practice, finding ways to maximize speed. This was the best the No. 23 Toyota has looked on a road course yet and Wallace will start fourth.

With how inconsistent Suárez has been in 2023, it can be hard to remember that he’s a top road course driver. His lone win at the Cup level was at Sonoma. That inconsistency has bled over to road courses in 2023, however, with just one top 10 finish (Indianapolis) in six starts. The good news for Suárez, Saturday looked a lot like Indy when he was among the best cars in the field. The only difference is, he will start from the second row and not from the pole.

FALLING: It wasn’t the start to the Round of 12 elimination weekend that Kyle Larson wanted. In the waning minutes of Group A practice, the No. 5 car slipped as Larson transitioned out of the infield section of the course back onto the oval when he pounded the wall. Larson drove straight to the garage for the Cliff Daniels-led team to assess the damage. It was deemed enough to go to a backup car. Larson enters the race with a 15-point buffer over the elimination line.

Surprisingly, McDowell is the only driver to fall from my lineup that I had earlier this week. The No. 34 Ford lacked speed relative to every other road course race this season in which McDowell accumulated the most points. Still, he wheeled his car to 13th in qualifying, which isn’t bad for the speed deficit he looked to have. Hopefully, taking him out isn’t a mistake, but there seemed to be more potential of other non-playoff cars such as Suárez, Allmendinger and Gibbs.

FEATURED MATCHUPS:  

Kyle Busch vs. Ross Chastain

Aside from Reddick, Busch might have won the day when it comes to championship contenders. The chances of Busch leaping four drivers in points, plus making up 26 points on the elimination line are extremely slim. That means he’s going after the win and crew chief Randall Burnett can play his strategy accordingly. Chastain had average speed, qualifying 12th. It’s been a rough postseason for Busch, but I’m sticking with him this weekend.

Tyler Reddick vs. Kyle Larson

Who would have thought that the Roval, a track in which Larson won at in 2021, would bite the No. 5 team two seasons in a row. Hendrick Motorsports had Larson’s primary car transported down the road to its campus to remove parts and pieces and assemble them onto the backup car. So, you’re thinking Larson, in a car he has no laps on at the Roval is going to outrun the pole winner? Not going to happen.

Bubba Wallace vs. Brad Keselowski

As noted in Fastlane this week, Wallace has my trust more on road courses. His improvement at these tracks shouldn’t go unnoticed, while Keselowski continues to have middle-of-the-road numbers. That pace won’t get Keselowski out of the Round of 12, so the 2012 champion might need to hope for chaos.

William Byron vs. Ryan Blaney

With only Elliott advancing to the final round of qualifying from Hendrick Motorsports, it was a slightly disappointing afternoon for Hendrick. The No. 24 Chevrolet laid down a better qualifying lap than Blaney, though, as Byron will start 14th to Blaney’s 17th-place starting position. Having advanced to the Round of 8, neither driver has anything to lose. And though Blaney is tied with Logano and Alex Bowman for the most top 10s in track history (four), Byron won the last race on a road course.

After a sizzling start to the 2023 playoffs, Tyler Reddick has done some fizzling lately and finds himself two points beneath the elimination line as the field gets ready to shrink from 12 to eight drivers after Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course (2 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

The good news is that it is a road course staring Reddick straight between the eyes, a track type where he has not only experienced success but also success at such a high level that it makes him stand out even among his playoff-battling counterparts.

PLAYOFFS: Playoffs hub page | Playoffs Grid Challenge game

Check out some of these red-hot Reddick stats:

The driver of the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota has averaged 33.3 points per race at the Charlotte road course, good for tops among playoff drivers not locked into the Round of 8. Reddick also is the only driver with multiple road-course wins in the Next Gen car.

Reddick has three road-course wins in the Next Gen car, including one earlier this season at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas. His other wins came last year while driving for Richard Childress Racing at Road America and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.

If Reddick wins this weekend while coming from below the elimination line, it means somebody who is currently above the elimination line is not moving on to the next round. The fact Reddick is the first driver out probably has some people’s attention, including Brad Keselowski, who is currently the last driver in and only two points to the plus side of the equation.

PLAYOFF PICTURE

CHASE ELLIOTT: Elliott isn’t in the playoffs, of course, but he could affect the playoff picture very much this weekend by winning at a track where he has won before and on a track type where he has been one of the most dominant drivers of his time. Another scary thought? Elliott likes October, too, with his most wins coming in this month (four in his career).

CHRISTOPHER BELL: Bell got the first of two walk-off wins in the 2022 NASCAR Playoffs here at the Charlotte road course. He’s not as desperate this time around, entering this year’s race 22 points to the good, but it’s important to note he’s averaging 33.0 points at the Roval, which is just a tick or two behind Reddick’s mark of 33.3.

CHRIS BUESCHER: The “other” Christopher, as Dale Earnhardt Jr. sometimes calls him, has been lights-out on road courses recently. Behold the Buesch-man’s bushel of stats: Top 11 in the past 10 road-course races, top six in the last two Roval races and an average finish of eighth on road courses this year.

ROSS CHASTAIN: He of the video-game move faces another uphill climb as he sits 10 points beneath the elimination line with a road-course resume that includes finishes of 17th or worse in six of the last eight road-course races and a best finish of 22nd on the Roval.

BRAD KESELOWSKI: We mentioned he has Reddick bearing down on him in the rearview mirror, but like Chastain, Keselowski will also need to buck his road-course stat trends: Winless in 42 road-course starts, only two top fives in the past 27 road-course races and an average finish of 20th on road courses in the Next Gen car. Ouch.

Projections as of Sunday, Oct. 8:

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE BANK OF AMERICA ROVAL 400

Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula includes current track, current track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to arrive at a projected winner and full race results.

FinishCar NumberDriver
145Tyler Reddick
29Chase Elliott
320Christopher Bell
417Chris Buescher
516AJ Allmendinger
624William Byron
75Kyle Larson
834Michael McDowell
911Denny Hamlin
1054Ty Gibbs
1119Martin Truex Jr.
1248Alex Bowman
1399Daniel Suárez
148Kyle Busch
151Ross Chastain
1622Joey Logano
1712Ryan Blaney
184Kevin Harvick
192Austin Cindric
206Brad Keselowski
2123Bubba Wallace
2214Chase Briscoe
233Austin Dillon
2431Justin Haley
2541Ryan Preece
2647Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2743Erik Jones
287Corey LaJoie
2910Aric Almirola
3051Todd Gilliland
3142Mike Rockenfeller
3221Harrison Burton
3377Ty Dillon
3478Josh Bilicki
3538Zane Smith
3615Andy Lally
3762Austin Hill

CONCORD, N.C. — Daniel Hemric was inches short of advancing to the Round of 8 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs.

The driver of the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet used a three-wide dive exiting the frontstretch chicane as the checkered flag waved at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, putting himself to the left of Kaz Grala and Parker Kligerman. In the end, he was 0.038 seconds shy of the two pivotal positions — and points — he needed to advance while Sheldon Creed snagged the eighth and final position in the penultimate postseason series.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Charlotte

“I thought did exactly what we wanted to do, what we needed to do, short of winning both stages, right?” Hemric said. “I mean, we maxed out the day and felt like we were going to possibly win the second stage but the yellow came out there coming to the white. So yeah, I mean, so with that, maybe one more point. But at the end of the day, we missed it by two. But we gave up a chunk, you know, closer to 25, 30 points probably at Texas. So yeah, I don’t want us missing the playoffs taking away from the great job this race team did today.”

Daniel Hemric's No. 10 Chevrolet rolls through a chicane at Charlotte Motor Speedway's road course
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Indeed, Hemric’s results at Texas Motor Speedway on Sept. 23 — a 24th-place DNF — cost the Kannapolis, North Carolina native his chance to advance after issues at the Fort Worth track. Hemric clipped the frontstretch grass on Lap 19 there, causing significant issues for the No. 10 team.

He and the team returned in strong fashion to the Charlotte road course, netting a race-high 48 points — bolstered by the 18 tallies he earned by scoring runner-up finishes in both stages. The effort was valiant, but the results were just short.

“I mean, I thought with the 48 (Kligerman), I saw the move he was gonna put on the 26 (Grala) there coming to the start-finish line or coming to the (frontstretch) chicane, and it played out almost like I wanted it to,” Hemric said. “But yeah, I mean I could have ran over him. I don’t know. But I wasn’t gonna do it. You know, I’m extremely proud of this race team and the way we executed today. We had a plan, stuck to a plan.

“We didn’t lose it here today. We lost it at Texas. So yeah, that falls on myself. But I have big shoulders. I can handle it. We’ll continue this journey.”

MORE: Xfinity Series Playoffs standings

Advancing on the other side of the line was Creed, who walked away with a 10th-place finish in Charlotte.

“It’s the happiest I’ve ever been to run 10th,” Creed said with a laugh. “Probably the hardest I’ve had to work for one — maybe not the hardest. I have to work hard for 10th a lot. But just, I don’t know. I’m happy for the guys. I’m happy for the team. Not so much myself, but I’m more happy for everyone else that works on the thing and works in the shop. They put a lot of hours in to make it all happen and to see us make the Round of 8 is a big deal for everyone.

“I just hope we can actually be something in this next round.”

Also on the outside looking in were Parker Kligerman (-5), Josh Berry (-43) and Jeb Burton (-64).

The Round of 8 begins Oct. 14 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, USA, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

CONCORD, N.C. – The NASCAR Xfinity Series has a new road-course ace.

“We may be Allmendinger 2.0,” Sam Mayer quipped after winning Saturday’s Drive for the Cure 250 presented by BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course and clinching a spot in the Round of 8 in the series playoffs.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

The reference was to AJ Allmendinger, winner of the previous four Xfinity races at the 2.32-mile, 17-turn circuit. With Allmendinger ineligible for the race as a full-time NASCAR Cup driver this year, Mayer took over and got the win he needed to advance in the playoffs.

Mayer earned the final spot in the Round of 8 at the expense of seventh-place finisher Daniel Hemric, who ran third in a three-way drag race to the finish line with Parker Kligerman and Kaz Grala — when a fifth-place result would have been enough to survive the round.

“They came out in the bottom of the seventh and hit a home run,” said Hemric, who finished second in each of the first two stages and was bounced from the postseason only because Mayer won from last place in the Xfinity Playoff standings.

Lining up second next to Cole Custer for a restart on Lap 63 of 67, Mayer muscled his way past Custer’s No. 00 Ford through Turns 3 and 4 a lap later and pulled away to win by 0.909 seconds.

“I knew we had time,” said Mayer, who led five times for 50 laps. “Our car was so fast — it really felt unbeatable… We kicked their tails today, and it just feels so great.”

WATCH: Mayer: ‘I have to be perfect’

The victory was the third for the 20-year-old driver of the No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet — all this year and all on road courses.

“This is our second-chance moment,” Mayer said. “I think we can make something out of it. … We can go on and do great things because of this win.”

Kligerman, Josh Berry and Jeb Burton joined Hemric on the playoff sidelines. Kligerman missed out by five points after coming home sixth.

Berry finished third despite battling issues with his power steering but fell short in a must-win situation, as did Burton, who stayed out on old tires for a restart on Lap 60 and crashed into Justin Allgaier’s Chevrolet in Turn 1.

Sheldon Creed, on the other hand, squeaked into the Round of 8 by two points over Hemric after running 10th on Saturday.

“We had no front turn,” Creed said. “I was talking to our teammate Austin (Hill) about it. Both of our cars did not turn all day. … I had to work for that one. I did not think we would be in by two — I thought we would be better than that.”

MORE: Mayer’s smoky burnout after Charlotte win

After the Lap 63 restart, Hemric’s fate was in the hands of Custer, who couldn’t keep Mayer behind him.

“We struggled on the short run, for sure,” Custer said. “It’s frustrating. There are definitely things on the replay I could have done different, but our guys did a great job all day, getting our car to where we could compete for a win — but we just needed a little more.”

Riley Herbst ran fourth, with Kaz Grala fifth. Kligerman, Hemric, Stage 2 winner John Hunter Nemechek, Hill and Creed completed the top 10.

Justin Allgaier and Burton briefly shared the top two spots, opting not to pit and gaining track position during a late caution period. The two crashed into the Turn 1 barrier in their contest for the lead on a restart with eight laps to go.

That handed the lead to Custer, who held the top spot until Mayer slipped by with four laps left.

The Xfinity Series’ next race is the Alsco Uniforms 302, scheduled for Oct. 14 (3:30 p.m. ET, USA, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The event opens the three-race Round of 8, which will determine the final four drivers who will race for the championship in the Nov. 4 finale at Phoenix Raceway.

Note: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Mayer’s victory.

Contributing: Staff reports