CONCORD, N.C. – In a turn of events that bordered on the unbelievable, Christopher Bell found his only path to the Round of 8 in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

On fresh tires, thanks to a strategic pit stop under caution on Lap 105, Bell passed Kevin Harvick to the outside through Turns 1 and 2 after a restart on Lap 111 and pulled away to win Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course.

With the victory, Bell transferred to the Round of 8 and simultaneously eliminated reigning series champion Kyle Larson, who brought his No. 5 Chevrolet to pit road on Lap 98 after hitting the wall and breaking the right-rear toe link on his car.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

Larson finished five laps down in 35th and was ousted from the playoffs by two points. After spinning in the backstretch chicane on Lap 107, Chase Briscoe recovered to finish ninth on fresh tires and grabbed the eighth and final berth in the Round of 8 by the two-point margin over Larson.

The NASCAR Playoffs Grid, with the Round of 8 updated

Bell didn’t have the fastest car on Sunday, but he and crew chief Adam Stevens took advantage of two late cautions to make the winning move.

“Man, you’ve just got to be there at the end of these things,” said Bell, who entered the race 45 points below the cut line for the Round of 8. “I keep watching all these races where the fastest car doesn’t always win. No secret that road courses have not been our strength this year.

“We were just there at the right time. We obviously weren’t in position to win (before taking tires). We rolled the dice, gambled, and it paid off for us.”

A chagrined Larson blamed himself for his ouster.

“I just made way too many mistakes all year long,” Larson said. “Made another one today. Ultimately cost us an opportunity to go chase another championship.

“Just extremely mad at myself. I let the team down a number of times this year, and let them down in a big way today.”

Austin Cindric and Daniel Suárez also suffered elimination. Cindric spun entering the backstretch chicane after the final restart on Lap 111 and finished 21st, missing the Round of 8 by 13 points. Suárez fought his No. 99 Chevrolet after his power steering failed during the third stage and came home 36th, leaving him nine points behind Briscoe for the final transfer spot.

Christopher Bell's No. 20 Toyota leads the pack at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Briscoe restarted outside the top 20 on Lap 111 and took advantage of Cindric’s spin, his own aggression and a block from Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Cole Custer, who held up cars Briscoe needed to pass on the final lap.

“Yeah, man, what a wild day,” Briscoe said. “It took every bit of it there at the end. To be easily in, then that debris caution comes out (on Lap 104). Still, I thought we had a really good shot of making it in. Get wrecked on the backstretch. Crazy at the end of these races, especially the road-course races, how much can change so quickly.

“I had no idea we were even going to have a shot (on the final restart). Truthfully, I knew we were probably out. I saw the 2 (Cindric) wreck, I thought maybe there’s still a chance. We had so much fresher tires than anybody. (Crew chief) Johnny (Klausmeier) pumped them way up to qualifying pressures, let me go attack, have the ball in my hands.”

What had been an orderly race for 103 laps descended into chaos after NASCAR called the third caution of the race on for debris in Turn 6, ending a 50-lap green-flag run.

That’s when Bell brought his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to pit road for tires. He restarted 12th on Lap 107, and by the time he returned to the finish line — due in part to a pile-up in Turn 1 — Bell was pursuing Tyler Reddick for the second position.

On Lap 108, Bell slipped past Reddick and was chasing Harvick when a second debris caution for a melee in Turn 2 forced the race to overtime. On the final restart, Harvick was a sitting duck on older tires, but he managed to hold off Kyle Busch for the second spot.

Joining Bell and Briscoe in the Round of 8 are Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, William Byron and Ross Chastain. Elliott led a race-high 30 laps and appeared headed for his third victory at the Roval before the caution on Lap 104.

After the Lap 107 restart, Elliott, who had qualified for the Round of 8 with last Sunday’s victory at Talladega, spun through the grass outside Turn 6 after contact from Reddick and came home 20th.

Logano, the pole winner, took the first stage wire-to-wire but was buried in traffic after a pit stop on Lap 27 and finished 18th.

AJ Allmendinger ran fourth after leading 24 laps, followed by Justin Haley, Chris Buescher, Bubba Wallace, Reddick, Briscoe and Austin Dillon.

With points reset entering the Round of 8, Elliott holds the top spot in the NASCAR Cup standings with a 20-point edge over second-place Logano.

The Cup Series’ next race is the South Point 400, scheduled next Sunday, Oct. 16 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The event opens the three-race Round of 8, which will determine the Championship 4 field for the season-ending title race Nov. 6 at Phoenix Raceway.

NOTE: Inspection is complete in the Cup Series garage with no issues, confirming Bell as the race winner. The Nos. 2 and 48 will be taken back to the NASCAR R&D Center for further inspection.

Contributing: Staff reports


Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find USA Network | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock | FloRacing | How to watch NASCAR International

Monday, Oct. 10
10 a.m., IMSA: Prototype Challenge at Road Atlanta (tape delay), USA
11 a.m., IMSA: Michelin Pilot Challenge at Road Atlanta (tape delay), USA
1 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West: NAPA Auto Care 150 at All American Speedway (tape delay), USA
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, Oct. 12
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Thursday, Oct. 13
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
10 p.m., Race for the Championship: The Cutoff, USA

Friday, Oct. 14
1:01 a.m., Race for the Championship: The Cutoff (re-air), USA
7:30 p.m., Whelen Modified Tour at Thompson Speedway (tape delay), USA
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Qualifying at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, USA

Saturday, Oct. 15
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, USA
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 302 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, NBC

On PRN:
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 302 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway,

Sunday, Oct. 16
6 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Las Vegas Motor Speedway, FS2
7 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — 2022 season, FS2
8 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Boundless — Betty Skelton, FS2
9 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Las Vegas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
Noon, NASCAR RaceDay: Las Vegas Motor Speedway, FS1
2 p.m., Countdown to Green, NBC
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: South Point 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, NBC

On PRN:
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: South Point 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway

Kaulig Racing announced Sunday that Daniel Hemric will return to its No. 11 Chevrolet in the 2023 Xfinity Series.

The agreement was revealed Sunday morning at Charlotte Motor Speedway, ahead of the Bank of America Roval 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) in the Cup Series Playoffs.

RELATED: Xfinity playoff standings | At-track photos

Hemric, 31, was last year’s champion in the Xfinity Series. He transitioned away from Joe Gibbs Racing after his title-clinching win to his first year with Kaulig Racing this season.

News of the extension came as part of the Kaulig Giving philanthropic group’s announcement that it would provide additional support to Hemric’s Be The Change Scholarship endowment. The annual scholarship program began in 2019, and will now assist two students on a path through the Rowan-Cabarrus Community College’s motorsports, welding or mechanical engineering fields of study.

“I was going to come here today and talk about the scholarship program with the Be The Change Scholarship and all that Kaulig Giving has done for myself, my family and our community,” Hemric said. “When they told me they wanted to bring me back on top of that, well that was … let’s tie it all together, right? So knowing this was happening today made it a little easier to sleep last night, given what had happened, but I also don’t rest easy on that, either. I know that there’s a lot for this race team, a lot for Kaulig Racing to do still left in this year.”

Hemric was eliminated from championship eligibility in Saturday’s Xfinity Series playoff race at the Charlotte road course. He has two top-five and 10 top-10 finishes with the Matt Kaulig-owned No. 11 team this year, including a pole in their first race together at the season-opener at Daytona.

The announcement shores up the Kaulig Racing lineup for 2023. AJ Allmendinger was introduced Wednesday as a full-time Cup Series teammate to Justin Haley next year. Chandler Smith will debut next season as a full-time replacement for Allmendinger on the Xfinity side, joining Hemric and the returning Landon Cassill in its three-car lineup.

“We thought it was no better time to announce that with what he does, and all of the givings that they do,” said Kaulig Racing president Chris Rice. “We think Daniel has had a year that’s probably been trying. That’s no means … it’s not where everybody wants to be, but we don’t take that lightly. We know as a race team, we’ve got to be better and we feel like with AJ Allmendinger going to Cup, Daniel Hemric can continuously help us with Chandler Smith, with those guys in the Xfinity Series just to continue the wins and continue to compete for championships.

“So really excited for Kaulig Racing. Super cool what Matt does for the racing program each and every week, but also all the givings he does. So just really excited to have Daniel back next year.”

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting
analysis here.

With practice and qualifying wrapped up for Sunday’s Bank of America ROVAL 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, Sirius XM NASCAR) bettors can now turn their attention to analyzing the on-track data from those sessions.

In addition to on-track data, we have a solid five-race sample size from road courses in 2022 to help guide us.

One trend that’s been noticeable across all the road course races is the lack of speed in the Toyotas.

This trend continued in practice and qualifying. With this group of drivers all similarly struggling, there’s a large value bet hanging out there among the Toyotas.

RELATED: Bell best among Toyota crowd | Full race-day odds

Let’s dive in.

NASCAR Pick for Charlotte

*Odds as of Sunday morning

Christopher Bell is clearly class of the field in the Toyota camp both this year, and on track this weekend.

Bell had the fastest five-lap average among the group, and also qualified the best.

However, his top Toyota odds are simply too short to bet.

Turning to the next fastest driver this weekend, we come to Bubba Wallace.

Wallace isn’t known for his road-course prowess, which is why his odds are so long, but he has definitely improved. While his finishes haven’t been great, his performance has actually been quite solid.

In the one race he finished, Bubba took home a top five in the chaotic Indy race.

At Road America, he worked his way forward, running as the second Toyota at one point before mechanical issues struck.

In fact, other than Indy, Bubba has had a parts failure at all four of the other road courses.

However, the same has been true for most of the Toyota stable. Not only have they struggled to find speed, but they’ve also struggled in the reliability department.

Bubba has the second-fastest car among the group.

That means the 18-1 price that Caesars Sportsbook is hanging is simply too long in a seven-car field.

One added bonus: He can race for the win knowing he’s not in the playoffs.

My model might be a bit too high on him, but it shows fair value on his top Toyota odds at +330. Certainly he shouldn’t be any worse than average among the seven Toyotas, making +600 a fair bet.

For a bit of breathing room, I’d take this down to +800.

The Bet: Bubba Wallace Top Toyota +1800 | Bet to: +800

Throughout the 2022 season, many story lines have remained the same at road courses. Trackhouse Racing is strong, Tyler Reddick is merciless and Toyota has struggled. Those all remained true after Saturday’s practice and qualifying session – even with Ross Chastain slipping up – at the Charlotte Roval. Enter Joey Logano, who won his third pole of the season and first on a road course since 2011.

RELATED: Starting lineup for Sunday | Set your Fantasy Live lineup

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Chase Elliott
Starter 2: AJ Allmendinger
Starter 3: Daniel Suárez
Starter 4: Austin Cindric
Starter 5: Tyler Reddick
Garage pick: William Byron

NEXT IN LINE: Chase Briscoe, Joey Logano, Christopher Bell, Michael McDowell

MORE: Updated race-day odds

RISING: Much has been made of Toyota’s struggles on road courses during the 2022 season. But one thing has remained the same: Christopher Bell leads the camp with speed when turning left and right. That proved to be true once again on Saturday at the Roval, with Bell starting eighth while his three Joe Gibbs Racing teammates will start 19th on back. The one concern for fantasy players using Bell should be that he’s only concerned about winning and could forego stage points.

It’s been more than 11 years since Joey Logano won his last pole on a road course (Sonoma, 2011), but the No. 22 Ford will lead the field to the green flag on Sunday. Logano ranked fourth in practice as well and has consecutive top-10 efforts on road courses in the Next Gen, including a third-place outing at Watkins Glen.

FALLING: Entering the final round of qualifying, Ross Chastain was sitting pretty, guaranteed to start inside the top 10. But on his warm-up lap, the No. 1 Chevrolet went off course in Turn 5 and smacked the tire barriers. The Next Gen car is extremely durable, but the Trackhouse team will have to repair the left-front fender and will have to drop to the rear. With Chastain’s Cinderella-type season, it wouldn’t be surprising if he has a strong rebound on a track type he’s performed well at in 2022.

In last year’s Roval race, Cliff Daniels had to throw just about everything but the kitchen sink to repair the No. 5 car during the race. So, the fact that Kyle Larson will line up 18th on Sunday shouldn’t be too concerning. But with Larson winning the last road-course race at Watkins Glen, it seems like he’s third-best out of the Hendrick Motorsports camp thus far in Charlotte.

FEATURED MATCHUPS

Chase Elliott vs. Kyle Larson: Because of their recent battles on road courses, I thought this would be another case of oneupmanship between the HMS teammates. But with Elliott’s track record at the Roval, it’s awfully hard to bet against the No. 9 team. Since he will only be going after the race win, Elliott should be in your lineup.

Christopher Bell vs. William Byron: Throughout his Cup career, Byron has shown glimpses of speed at road courses. And even though he has just one top-10 finish on road courses in 2022, he’s likely going to chase stage points on Sunday, just 14 points above the playoff cutline entering the race. Bell, however, will be solely going after the checkered flag and is a realistic threat to win. These two cars looked to be the best from their respective teams, but the advantage should go to Byron, even if he doesn’t finish higher than the No. 20 car after 109 laps.

Austin Cindric vs. Chase Briscoe: After his qualifying performance, Briscoe was upset with himself, believing he left a couple of tenths on the table. Cindric was steady, as he has been all season on road courses. Because of his starting position and the fact that he has four top 10s in five road course races this year, Cindric is the choice.

Daniel Suárez vs. Joey Logano: This is about as even as it can get, with Suárez and Logano starting in the first two rows. From COTA to now, Logano has shown great improvement on road courses in the Next Gen car. Suárez, though, has been one of the front-runners all season on these tracks, with a trio of top-five efforts. I’d give the nod to Suárez; plus, it allows for you to save Logano for an upcoming event.

CONCORD, N.C. — No matter what a driver has accomplished in their career, playoff elimination is always a disappointing moment.

After Saturday’s Xfinity Series Round of 12 elimination race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, there may have been no driver more disappointed than last year’s series champion.

RELATED: Official results | Playoff standings

Nearly a year after his surprising and thrilling championship victory at Phoenix Raceway, Daniel Hemric will not defend his Xfinity crown as he finished Saturday’s race 11 points below the elimination line.

After grabbing third on the starting grid, odds appeared to be in Hemric’s favor to point his way through the 72-lap event with favorable track position. However, on Lap 3, his day was ravaged as he went off-course in Turn 5 and slammed the outside barrier. The damage wasn’t enough to end the defending champ’s day but the No. 11 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet was grounded toward the rear of the field.

Hemric lugged his car to a 17th-place finish and was blunt on his playoff exit.

“Just made a mistake that you can’t make,” Hemric said. “The rest of the day kinda took care of itself so gotta be better than that. Just wasn’t good enough and when you aren’t good enough, you get beat. That’s what happened today.”

Joining Hemric among the Xfinity Series’ first-round playoff exits were Riley Herbst, Jeremy Clements and Ryan Sieg.

Herbst had the most eventful day of the 12 playoff drivers as he crashed multiple times in the final Stage. The No. 98 Ford ran up front for a majority of the race, scoring second and fifth-place finishes in Stage 1 and Stage 2, respectively. However, the remaining laps spiraled downward for the Las Vegas native, beginning with James Davison running into the back of Herbst’s car on a restart. The left rear of the No. 98 suffered heavy damage, dropping Herbst to the back of the field. Herbst then got caught in a chain reaction stack-up in Turn 2 that elevated his damage, and the final blow came on the first overtime restart as he crashed off Turn 4, ending his day scored in 32nd.

Sieg was the closest of the drivers eliminated to the cutline as he fell just two points below Brandon Jones when the checkered flag flew. Those lost two points came in Stage 2 after a costly mistake from the driver of the No. 39 Ford.

“I messed up and missed the backstretch chicane and lost out on two spots and two points that probably would’ve gotten us in,” Sieg lamented.

Sieg produced great results throughout the Round of 12 with top 10s across the board, including a fourth-place run at Talladega Superspeedway that matched a season-best that also came at Talladega in the spring. While being eliminated from the playoffs, Sieg said he has a lot to be proud of given the circumstance of being a small team going up against the likes of Joe Gibbs Racing, Stewart-Haas Racing and Kaulig.

“I was pretty confident. We made some adjustments and got better after Stage 2, ” Sieg added. “Just had to fight hard and do all I could do to gain points because they were letting me know every lap how many we were out. Just wasn’t enough at the end but good fight from our CMR Ford all day long. Just wish I had Stage 2 back. Great day though at a road course for myself and the team. Nothing to be ashamed of. We’ve just got to fight harder because we wanted to be on the other side of it.

“We had three top 10s and one top five in those three races and didn’t make it. Not a whole lot more we could’ve done except get a few more points. Everything kinda didn’t work out too well and found ourselves not getting stage points. We had the right strategy but I just messed up a little bit and cost us a few points.”

Like Sieg, Clements competed and hung with the top teams in the sport to put themselves into the playoffs. However, Clements said the writing on the wall for his postseason came with their engine failure at Texas Motor Speedway that opened the Xfinity Series playoffs.

“Going into Texas, we were excited and then we broke really early,” Clements said. “I knew that was going to be hard to get out of that hole we were in. It was fun to be a part of the playoffs for sure. We won Daytona and that was just badass. We had nothing to lose but unfortunately that engine failure at Texas really put us behind and then Talladega went like none of us thought it would. Here, we didn’t have enough speed and finished 14th.”

This is the second year in a row and third time Clements has been eliminated in the opening playoff round, and while he said he knows the team still has work to do to compete at a high level, he’s positive on where the team is going.

“Racing’s tough and when you are a small team, your back is against the wall all the time so we’re just always trying to get better,” Clements said. “We’ve got some engineering support coming from Chevy and that’s all we can do to make our team better but we definitely got a couple steps to get up there, but we will and I feel good about where we’re at and where we’re going.” 

The Xfinity Series Round of 8 begins next Saturday, Oct. 15 with the Alsco Uniforms 302 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

CONCORD, N.C. — Two points. When the checkered flag flew on Saturday afternoon, that’s all that separated Brandon Jones from elimination in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs.

That barrier proved strong enough as Jones wheeled the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to a seventh-place finish at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, narrowly advancing to the Round of 8 in the Xfinity Series’ postseason battle.

RELATED: Official results | Weekend schedule

Jones battled through multiple late-race restarts as the Drive for the Cure 250 wound into overtime, his nerves rattling as each lap wound down and spotter Drew Herring fed him all the right info. In the end, he finished two spots ahead of ninth-place Ryan Sieg, who wound up on the other side of the elimination line by that thin margin.

“I’m an adrenaline junkie and that was definitely some adrenaline for sure to keep listening to those numbers and it keeps getting tighter and tighter every restart,” Jones said.

Jones, in his swan-song season for Joe Gibbs Racing, wanted Herring to keep him updated on points throughout the entire event. That proved helpful — if perhaps a little more stressful, too.

“Man, I think at first it was good to hear. And then once it got down to the wire, like Drew’s voice escalated on the radio a little bit, and I’m just thinking, ‘Man, let’s just not have any lockups or anything crazy,'” Jones said. “And that’s what we had to do, man. We did our job today.”

The team, headed by crew chief Jeff Meendering, opted for stage points in Stage 2 and snagged the stage victory, resulting in an additional 10 points for Jones total. He needed all of them by the time the round concluded.

“I think as far as coming into this race, and being just extremely solid, did a phenomenal job of flipping that stage and getting that stage win,” Jones said. “That’s probably really what saved our butts a little bit was getting that stage win to just have a couple of extra points there to go into it.

“I mean, like I said, I don’t think we could have played this out any better.”

MORE: At-track photos

Jones now sets his sights on a run to the Championship 4. He finished sixth in the final points rundown in 2020 and seventh in 2021. This year, Jones’ lone victory came at Martinsville Speedway, which also serves as the elimination race that decides the four drivers who will compete for the Xfinity Series Championship.

He likes his chances.

“I know we talked about how close it was today, but it doesn’t matter now,” Jones said. “It all resets and it goes down to back to everyone’s equal, so I think that these next couple of tracks are the key to getting to Phoenix for me, man. I’m so good at the rest of the mile-and-a-halves. The short track, Martinsville, we’ve proven ourselves there. We’ve won. So there’s so many tracks that we can go out here and heck, we can we can have a couple more wins before we get to Phoenix, I think.

“Get me to Phoenix. I’ll have a good time there. And maybe we’ll be getting a championship.”

Jones sits seventh in the reseeded standings, 22 points behind Justin Allgaier for the transfer spot ahead of the three-race Round of 8. The penultimate playoff round begins Saturday, Oct. 15 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

CONCORD, N.C. — No matter their rank in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, drivers feel the intensity of elimination races at the end of each postseason round.

Just ask Joey Logano, the 2018 champion who finds himself 18 points to the good heading into Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), which serves as the event that sets the grid for the Round of 8.

“Yeah. I mean, it’s a lot on the line this week. Trying to keep championship hopes alive,” Logano said Saturday at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “You’ve got to get through this round.”

MORE: Weekend schedule: Roval | Cup playoff hub

The Cup field will race around the 17-turn, 2.28-mile road-course-oval combination in NASCAR’s hometown, but some drivers have more cushion to lean on than others. Logano will start Sunday’s race from the pole position, the first time he’ll do so at a road course since Sonoma Raceway in 2011. That still doesn’t quell his playoff concerns.

Road courses provide the opportunity — or perhaps necessity — to sacrifice stage points to instead compete for the win, creating a murky outlook for crew chiefs trying to strategize a race.

“It’s tough no matter what position you’re in, right?” he said. “You feel more comfortable as that cushion gets bigger, and you feel more desperate the further you are behind it. So it’s an interesting place to live when you think about it, especially how you run this race, right? When you have a [elimination] race at a road course, it makes it pretty tricky on how you’re going to call this race right? Every crew chief right now is wondering, well, do we need stage points? Do we go for stage points? If I take stage points how far back is it gonna cycle me in the back in the field? Am I gonna restart 20th? Am I gonna restart 30th? 15th? I don’t know.

“So every crew chief in the playoffs right now is thinking about that — not to mention, the guys that aren’t in the playoffs that still have reasons to race for points. So it makes it a really hard call for the crew chiefs here on what’s defining success for the day.”

The playoff picture was also reshuffled midweek when William Byron and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team won an appeal of a penalty issued after Byron intentionally contacted Denny Hamlin at Texas Motor Speedway. Byron was initially docked 25 points and fined $50,000, but the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the penalty to nullify the points penalty and up the fine to $100,000.

The outcome: Byron enters Sunday’s race 14 points above the elimination line; Daniel Suárez falls to the eighth and final transfer spot 12 points to the good; and Chase Briscoe and Austin Cindric each enter 12 points out. Briscoe and Cindric were initially locked in a virtual tie for the final transfer spot.

Despite bumping above the elimination line, Byron feels no more comfortable.

“We prepared before Thursday like we were behind,” said Byron, who said he readied for the weekend by karting in Mooresville. “So I think that for us, we just focused on this race a lot. Road courses have been not great for me this year. I feel like mostly it’s just knowing what the car needs and just doing the right things preparation wise to make the right decisions and felt like this week was good.”

Similarly, Suárez said his weekend will go the same regardless of Byron’s situation.

“Honestly, for me, I don’t care,” Suárez said. “That’s something that I can’t control. He can be 20 points below or 20 pounds points above and I don’t care. I can only control one car and that’s the 99 car. You know, for me, honestly, right now to before the whole point situation that happened to them, nothing has changed. Nothing has changed. And the only thing it changed is our position but points wise, it’s exactly the same.

“So we just have to go out there and do our thing. We have a very, very good program when it comes to road course stuff. We have showed that in the past. We have to go out there have fun and do things no different than any of the other road course stuff that we have done. I think that yeah, definitely we’re not in a comfortable position like some of the other guys, but I think we’re gonna be good.”

Briscoe, on the other hand, took umbrage with the timing of the appeal hearing.

“It’s extremely frustrating,” Briscoe, ninth in points, said. “I respect the appeal process. I think it’s something that we need. But there’s, I think, zero reason why we should ever run a race in the playoffs with an appeal [pending]. … We ran a race before the decision was made. If there’s an appeal, we need to have a decision before the playoff race. Because what if that was the [elimination] race? … They would have had to make a decision.”

Briscoe’s focus now shifts to finding a strategy to advance after qualifying 17th.

“I mean, we got to go get points,” Briscoe said. “You know, it’s tough because where we qualified now. It’s made it even tougher. But yeah, I mean, for us, we need to try to get points if we can get them but I mean, I wouldn’t say we’re in a must-win, but we got to go run up front all day long. So yeah, just we’re gonna need a little bit of luck. I think on our side, you know, Bristol, I think we were 11 out going in and we ended up 15. So, you know, I think we’re … 12 down or whatever it is right now. So it’s still a possibility. But yeah, we just have to be 100%. I mean, if we’re at 95% it’s not gonna get the job done.”

Defending champion Kyle Larson enters Sunday’s race sixth in the standings, 18 points to the good on Sunday but qualified just behind Briscoe in 18th.

“Practice, I just felt extremely loose, no grip anywhere,” Larson said. “Just out of control and a lot of the same in qualifying. Just out of the track and honestly, though, the areas that I feel good is where I’m giving up time so just going too slow. So keep trying to plug away and fix the car a little bit and see if I can figure out things to do in the cockpit to go a bit faster and hit my marks better. I just, I’m slow so I’m trying to compensate and carry the car and then I make mistakes and it makes things worse. So frustrating Saturday, but hopefully we’re better tomorrow.”

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin sits fourth up 21 points from elimination. But even he finds himself sweating understanding how his road races have gone in 2022 — underscored by a 24th-place qualifying effort on Saturday.

“Yeah, it’s about trying to get to a number, you know,” Hamlin said of his Sunday approach. “Trying to get to a point number that we feel comfortable with and, you know, you try to run all the simulations and models you can to figure out, you know, everyone’s history at the track, and what do you typically have to do. But ultimately, I’m gonna try to get the best finish possible. You know, if I can somehow get stage points — which certainly where we’re starting, it’s gonna be difficult — we’re going to do it. So whatever we have to do to try to scratch and claw, and certainly in the end of the day, it’s probably going to be pretty close.”

CONCORD, N.C. — While the Next Gen car has seen its fair share of road-course racing this season, the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course marks the first the 2022 Cup Series car has turned competitive laps on the oval/road-course hybrid.

Familiar road-course aces like AJ Allmendinger and Austin Cindric appeared to have adapted seamlessly to the track as they topped Saturday’s practice session but defending Roval winner and Cup champion Kyle Larson struggled to put down consistent runs in both practice and qualifying. The driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet failed to advance to the pole round of qualifying and will roll off 18th, his worst lineup spot at the Roval in four starts.

“For me here this feels way different than before,” Larson said. “Just trying to get a hang of it I guess because I’m way off the pace. It probably feels more normal for guys running as fast as they are but for as slow as I am, I don’t feel the same.” 

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Larson enters Sunday’s playoff race 18 points above the elimination line.

Chase Briscoe has only made one Cup Series start on the Roval and his postseason run took a slight twist Thursday after William Byron’s post-Texas penalty was amended, eliminating the 25-point penalty that was initially handed to the driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet. With Briscoe now being 12 points below the Round of 8 elimination line entering Sunday, he will have to execute a near-perfect day to lock his spot into the semi-final playoff round.

Like Larson, Briscoe will start in Row 9 for Sunday’s race after running a hot lap that placed him 17th.

After qualifying, Briscoe said the track felt unfamiliar despite having made four previous starts (three Xfinity, one Cup) on the 17-turn, 2.28-mile circuit.

“Yeah it’s like a whole new race track with this car,” the second-year Stewart-Haas Racing driver said. “It drives nothing like anything I’ve ever driven before, so yeah I don’t think you can take anything from the past. It’s the same race track and the same apexes but how you drive the car is just completely different.” 

No matter the car, Byron has been one of the better Roval competitors. Despite not winning any of the first four races at the track, he leads all active drivers in laps led with 80 — 16 more than his Hendrick teammate and two-time winner Chase Elliott.

MORE: Lap leaders at the Roval

Byron continued his consistency on the Charlotte road course with a front-row qualifying effort, putting him to the outside of pole-sitter Joey Logano for the drop of Sunday’s green flag. After struggling in the test runs in the Roval’s infancy, Byron credited that day to what allowed to him find success in his four Roval starts.

“I think the first time we came here I crashed really big and after that, I was like ‘it can only go up from here, ” Byron said. “I left the test feeling behind and like I hadn’t learned what I needed to while everyone else was testing. I got a chance to watch the rest of the test outside the track for a few hours so maybe that helped me. Just worked hard at it after that.”

Sunday’s Bank of America ROVAL 400 is scheduled for 2 p.m. ET and can be viewed on NBC and the NBC Sports App, and listened to on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

CONCORD, N.C. – It took a bit of thievery for AJ Allmendinger to preserve his perfect record at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course.

“We got that one — we stole that one,” shouted Allmendinger after spinning his car like a dervish during a celebratory burnout at the finish line of the 2.32-mile, 17-turn road course.

Indeed, the 40-year-old Allmendinger swiped the lead from Ty Gibbs — a driver half his age — after an overtime restart on Lap 68 of the Drive for the Cure 250 presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina, the Round of 12 elimination race in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs.

RELATED: Official results | Weekend schedule

After lagging behind Gibbs into Turn 1 on three previous restarts, Allmendinger kept his No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet to the outside of Gibbs No. 54 Toyota through the first corner, surged ahead into Turn 2 and cleared Gibbs from the inside line through Turns 3 and 4.

“It’s unbelievable,” Allmendinger, who won for the fourth time in four starts at the Charlotte Roval. “Ty was really good there at the end, and I didn’t know if I was going to be able to get him. I knew if I could just get to one restart on the outside of him, at least we’d have a chance.”

AJ Allmendinger drives No. 16 Chevrolet in front of Ty Gibbs in No. 54 Toyota
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Once in the lead, Allmendinger survived a second overtime restart before beating Gibbs to the finish line by .582 seconds. The victory was Allmendinger’s second straight in the series, his fifth of the season and the 15th of his career — 10 of which have come on road courses.

“I was wanting it pretty bad there,” Allmendinger said. “I didn’t think we had a shot, but I’m always going to put it on my back when it’s time to go. We got that one. We stole that one!…

“I drove it in as deep as I could (on the final restart), probably used Ty up just a little bit, but I’d expect the same if the roles were reversed.”

Gibbs was diplomatic in his assessment of the final two restarts.

“I just lost the lead on that one restart and didn’t execute the right way and lost it there,” Gibbs said. “The last one, I caught the fence when I got ran wide, and it just kind of hurt my momentum. … I feel like I gave it my best run, but I was proud of the effort.

“I had fun out there and learned a lot.”

Allmendinger already had clinched a spot in the playoffs’ Round of 8 with last Saturday’s victory at Talladega Superspeedway. So had third-place finisher Noah Gragson, who won his fourth straight race a week earlier at Texas Motor Speedway.

Gibbs clinched his spot in the Round of 8 by finishing second to Allmendinger in the first stage of Saturday’s race. Justin Allgaier, Josh Berry, Sam Mayer, Austin Hill and Brandon Jones also advanced to the next round, with Jones finishing seventh in the race and claiming the final spot by two points over Ryan Sieg.

All four JR Motorsports drivers—Gragson, Allgaier, Berry and Mayer—will be competing for positions in the Championship 4 race at Phoenix Raceway.

In addition to Sieg, reigning series champion Daniel Hemric, Riley Herbst and Jeremy Clements were eliminated from the postseason.

Hemric qualified third but slammed into the outside barrier between Turns 5 and 6 on Lap 3. He recovered to finish 17th but ended the round 11 points behind Jones after contact from Sieg on a late restart.

“I made a mistake on Lap 3 that you just can’t make,” Hemric said ruefully.

Road course specialist James Davison ran fourth, followed by Allgaier, Alex Labbe, Jones, Berry, Sieg and Landon Cassill.

Marco Andretti’s Xfinity Series debut ended with a Lap 45 crash. His No. 48 Big Machine Racing Chevrolet sustained heavy damage when it collided with the spinning No. 27 Chevy of Jeb Burton in Turn 6. Andretti was unhurt and finished 36th in the 38-car field.

The Xfinity Series’ next race is the Alsco Uniforms 302, scheduled next Saturday (3 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, PRN, SiriusXM) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It’s the first event in the three-race Round of 8 that will determine the four-driver Championship 4 field in the Nov. 5 season finale at Phoenix Raceway.

Note: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage was completed without major issue, confirming Allmendinger as the winner. The No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevy driven to a 10th-place finish by Landon Cassill was found with one unsecured lug nut in a post-race check.

Contributing: Staff reports