Kyle Larson had a slide job gone wrong, a save for the ages, a late-race pass for the lead — and ultimately, a second-place showing Sunday at Kansas Speedway.

With nine laps remaining in the AdventHealth 400, Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was passed by the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota of Kurt Busch, who beat Larson to the checkered flag by 1.413 seconds. The final results marked Busch’s first victory of 2022 and Larson’s sixth top-five finish. Larson, the reigning champion, last won on Feb. 27 at Auto Club Speedway.

RELATED: See Larson’s amazing save | Race recap

“We were racing for the win there,” Larson said. “Yeah, he never got into me, so I’m trying to squeeze throttle to get position on him and just got tight, so that was fun racing with Kurt the last half of the race.

“I was trying hard the whole time. I about spun out in front of him there at some point I think in the third stage, and then we just kept fighting through it.”

In the Final Stage, which spanned from Lap 165 to 267, Busch led three different times for 73 laps. Larson led twice for 26 laps. Busch’s younger brother, Kyle, had a three-lap stint out front to complete the 102-lap stretch. Kyle, driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, finished third, 1.991 seconds behind Kurt.

There were six Toyotas in the top 10. That’s all of them.

“The Toyotas are obviously extremely good today,” Larson said. “I think they’re all in the top 10, it looks like. So they had the handling as well as a lot of speed, just raw speed.

“It was hard to hold off Kyle, and then I knew when Kurt got by him it was going to be really hard to hold him off. I did my best, but came up one spot short.”

Larson’s car bounced off the wall multiple times throughout the 13th points-paying event as he ran the high line at the 1.5-mile track, with the final brush coming as he tried to hang on to the lead at the end.

Larson fired off from the third starting position, was 15th when Stage 1 wrapped on Lap 80, and worked his way up to sixth come Stage 2’s conclusion on Lap 165. In total, he maintained P1 for 29 laps.

Kyle Busch won Stage 1. Kurt, Stage 2. Both were firsts for the Busch brothers this season. Kyle earned a win earlier this season at Bristol Motor Speedway, the dirt race on April 17.

Larson and the Busch duo are all provisionally in the NASCAR Playoffs now by virtue of a victory. They’re all former champions, too.

“Thanks to my team for building me a war machine,” Larson said. “I hit the wall a lot today and just struggled. Like people could put air on me and get me really tight and then I hit the wall, so we’ll work on that and figure it out, but happy with my car.”

 

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – In an event fraught with pit-road mistakes and mechanical issues, Kurt Busch ran an impeccable race.

In an intensely competitive run to the finish of Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway, Busch nosed past leader Kyle Larson at the finish line on Lap 259 of 267 and completed the pass two corners later off Turn 2, as Larson scraped the outside wall.

Seven laps later, Busch’s No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota crossed the finish line 1.413 seconds ahead of Larson to win for the first time at Kansas, the first time this season and the 34th time in his career. Busch has now won NASCAR Series Cup races for five different car owners and with four different manufacturers.

“If I can get one Kyle, I can get both,” said an elated Busch, who passed brother Kyle Busch, the third-place finisher, 11 circuits after a restart on Lap 235.

RELATED: Official race results | At-track photos

With 21 laps left Busch began his pursuit of Larson, making up ground as traffic became a factor. On Lap 259 Busch pulled even to the inside of Larson, as the drivers raced side-by-side from the backstretch to the finish line, with Busch inches ahead at the stripe.

Busch widened his advantage through the first two corners of Lap 260 and cleared the No. 5 Chevrolet as Larson brushed the wall near the exit of Turn 2.

“It’s all about teamwork,” Busch said. “I don’t do this alone, and the way that Toyota’s helped us, JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing)… My little brother has been so important, just on the family side of ‘Hey, you’ve got to get through these steps.’

“But this is 23XI. This is our first win with the 45 car, and with Jordan Brand on the hood, I felt like I had to play like the GOAT, race like the GOAT. I had to beat the Kyles. I beat both.”

Larson said his car got tight toward the end of the race but asserted that he and Busch never made contact as they raced side-by-side.

“I wasn’t upset with him or anything,” Larson said of Busch. “It was just hard racing there for the win. I knew when he got to my inside, I was struggling in traffic a little bit and he was able to get by and from there, I just had to hold onto second.

“I just fought really hard today and overdrove it at moments. Just had to work hard for it.”

Busch’s win was also a milestone for fourth-place finisher Denny Hamlin, who co-owns 23XI Racing with NBA legend Michael Jordan. Hamlin started the race in the rear of the field and went to the back two more times under penalty before rallying to score his second top-five of the season.

Bubba Wallace, who scored 23XI’s first victory last year at Talladega Superspeedway, ran 10th despite a late penalty for an uncontrolled tire.

“It’s huge. I’m so proud of Kurt—and Bubba as well,” Hamlin said. “Bubba deserved a shot at the win as well. They were so much better than that. There were just mistakes, and we’re working on that. I feel like I’ve let these guys down with pit road—and it’s just part of it.

“It’s growing pains, but, man, this is what this team is capable of, and I’m so happy for Kurt. Way more joy than if I was winning.”

MORE: Denny Hamlin speaks to co-owner Michael Jordan

Pole winner Christopher Bell finished fifth, followed by Martin Truex Jr., as Toyota claimed five of the top six positions. Ross Chastain, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Alex Bowman ran seventh through ninth, respectively.

Flat left-rear tires, which had surfaced as a major issue during Saturday’s practice, continued to plague drivers during the race itself.

Bell lost the lead under caution after Lap 64 with a flat left rear. The same issue sent William Byron into the Turn 4 wall on Lap 113 and erased a lead of more than 1.5 seconds over Kurt Busch.

Three laps later, front-row starter Tyler Reddick rode the outside wall with a left rear down. Truex slowed with a flat left rear while running fourth within one lap of the end of Stage 2. The recurring problems scrambled the field — and so did a host of errors on pit road.

Hamlin, who started in the rear of the field because of unapproved adjustments to his No. 11 Toyota, twice was flagged for equipment interference.

Kyle Busch came to pit road as the leader on Lap 83 and lost nine positions after stopping his No. 18 Camry too close to the wall. After finishing second to his brother in Stage 2, he drew a pit road speeding penalty in sector 10.

Larson lost track position because of two consecutive slow stops in the first half of the race. Chastain lost 13 positions on pit road during the Stage 2 break when his crew had trouble changing the left rear tire.

RELATED: Larson hits wall, makes huge save

Erik Jones’ crew was unable to remove his right rear tire and had to cut the wheel off before replacing it, costing Jones seven laps before repairs were made.

Chase Elliott had the opposite problem. The left rear tire fell off the No. 9 Chevrolet as Elliott was running sixth on Lap 196. The car became mired in the mud near the apex of Turns 3 and 4 in a grassy strip below the apron, and the reigning series champ lost three laps.

Remarkably, Kyle Busch, Hamlin, Bell, Truex and Chastain all recovered to finish in the top seven. But the one driver who ran a mistake-free race — Kurt Busch — came home the winner.

Up next is the All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway (May 22 at 8 p.m. ET on FS1). Larson won the non-points event last year.

NOTE: NASCAR’s post-race inspection was completed with no issues, confirming Kurt Busch as the race winner. Six cars will return to the wind tunnel and then to the R&D Center: the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford of Brad Keselowski, the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Denny Hamlin, the No. 12 Team Penske Ford of Ryan Blaney, the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota of Bubba Wallace, the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Alex Bowman.

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 FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock | FloRacing

Monday, May 16
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
11 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
1 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Heart of America 200 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1

Tuesday, May 17
1 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
4 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, May 18
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Heart of America 200 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
7 p.m. One Hot Night: The 1992 NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
9 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2

Thursday, May 19
Midnight, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Heart of America 200 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Friday, May 20
4 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
5:30 p.m. NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition — Texas, FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NCWTS at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
11 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1

On MRN:
8 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway

Saturday, May 21
9 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
12:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — All-Star, FS1
5 a.m., One Hot Night: The 1992 NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
6 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NXS at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Texas 250 at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1

On PRN:
1 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Texas 250 at Texas Motor Speedway

On MRN:
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway

Sunday, May 22
1 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Texas 250 at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
3 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
6 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Texas 250 at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NCS All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: All-Star Open, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NCS All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
8 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1

On MRN:
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway

As we’ve seen in multiple practice sessions this season, the Next Gen car continues to be hard to drive. In preparation for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway, there were several incidents, though many of them can be attributed to low air pressure in the left rear tire. Even so, several of the projected frontrunners for the 400-miler came to play, with Christopher Bell earning his third pole of the season.

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:
Starter 1: Kyle Larson
Starter 2: Tyler Reddick
Starter 3: Martin Truex Jr.
Starter 4: Christopher Bell
Starter 5: William Byron
Garage pick: Chase Elliott

MORE: Set your lineup | Starting lineup | Fantasy Fastlane

NEXT IN LINE: Kyle Busch, Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch, Denny Hamlin.

RISING: Christopher Bell will start from the pole in a Cup Series race for the third time in his career, as he was the quickest driver in Saturday’s qualifying session. Before winning the pole, the No. 20 Toyota was fifth on the single-lap speed chart, while turning the quickest five- and 10-lap average. It wouldn’t be shocking to see Bell battling for the win.

Earlier this week, I said to stay away from Kurt Busch this weekend, as the No. 45 team has had a tough stretch of races dating back to COTA, with five finishes of 28th or worse. But Saturday’s practice and qualifying session was Busch’s best since joining 23XI Racing, and he will take the green flag from fifth. That came after being quickest in practice.

FALLING: Joey Logano is coming off a boost of momentum after winning the pole, leading the most laps and winning the race at Darlington Raceway last weekend. That was short lived. Unfortunately for the No. 22 team, Logano was one of six drivers to blow a left rear tire in practice at Kansas on Saturday, and one of two to go to a backup car (Chris Buescher). Though he has three wins at Kansas, Logano will start from behind on Sunday.

Since joining Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014, Kevin Harvick has upped his performance at most race tracks, including Kansas. In 16 starts at the track driving the No. 4 car, the 2014 champion has nine podium finishes, which includes wins in 2016 and 2018. However, he will start a surprising 23rd on Sunday and was 30th in practice. Save Harvick for later this season.

FEATURED MATCHUPS:

Joey Logano vs. William Byron: What a coincidence that these two drivers are matched up against each other this weekend. While Logano wrecked in practice, Byron didn’t set the world on fire, turning the 13th best lap in qualifying. Still, Hendrick Motorsports has shown superior speed on tracks similar to Kansas this season. Byron is the choice here, and no bad blood will transfer over from Darlington to Kansas.

Kyle Larson vs. Denny Hamlin: In a game of “What’s going to happen to Denny Hamlin this week?,” he also blew a tire in Saturday’s practice session. Maybe his tough luck for the weekend is out of the way for the weekend. Even if it is, Larson led over 49% of the laps at Kansas last year between two races, so the No. 5 team will be tough to beat.

Aric Almirola vs. Erik Jones: While it’s Almirola that has the better starting position (seventh to Jones’ 22nd), Jones has shown much more speed all season, particularly on old, worn-out surfaces, such as Auto Club Speedway and Darlington. The edge goes to the No. 43 Chevrolet this weekend.

Kevin Harvick. vs. Tyler Reddick: With the speed Reddick showed on Saturday, it’s very possible he gets his first career victory on Sunday. In fact, he’s my pick to win. As noted above, Harvick’s team is starting from behind with a disappointing 23rd-place starting position.

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

On Sunday afternoon, the NASCAR Cup Series will race at Kansas Speedway for the 2022 AdventHealth 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1).

Kansas is a 1.5-mile circuit that is quite similar to Las Vegas Motor Speedway, so the combination of performance from the race earlier this year in Sin City, plus Saturday’s practice and qualifying results should help us find value ahead of today’s event.

So let’s not waste any time and dive right into my two favorite NASCAR bets for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas.

NASCAR Picks for Kansas

*Odds as of Sunday morning

Christopher Bell (+900) to Win

Sometimes you just have to take the fastest car, especially when that car isn’t priced as the favorite.

Bell has been the fastest driver in town since unloading in Kansas, posting the fastest five-lap and 10-lap averages in practice before backing up that speed and rocketing to the pole in qualifying.

Interestingly enough, there is some variance across the market regarding Bell’s odds, so it’s more important than ever to shop for the best line.

For example, Bell is +750 to win at FanDuel, +850 at PointsBet and +900 at Caesars.

Don’t settle for +750 when there’s 9-1 available for a driver in top-tier equipment who has been blazing fast so far this weekend at Kansas.

Ross Chastain (+1100) to Win

Chastain has been very much a surprise so far this season.

Nobody questioned his talent or doubted that he could perform if given good enough equipment, but there also aren’t many out there who expected Chastain to already have secured two wins while also ranking fourth in laps led and third in fast laps run at this point in the season.

In March at Las Vegas, the most similar track to Kansas and one that used the same tire combination that teams will use today, Chastain started back in 18th. However, he quickly took control of the race by leading the most laps, running the second-most fast laps and posting the best driver rating en route to a third-place finish.

While never making a long run in practice on Saturday, Chastain finished with the fourth-best lap and backed that up with an 11th-place run in qualifying.

Now, referring to an 11th-place starting spot as a positive may seem odd to some, but for Ross, it’s good.

Chastain’s average starting position this season of 17.7 ranks just 19th among full-time NASCAR Cup Series drivers, but like I mentioned above, he’s had no problem getting to the front of the field once the green flag drops.

So rolling off 11th today is actually a better-than-average result for Chastain for this afternoon’s race at Kansas.

At 11-1 odds (PointsBet), I’m pairing Chastain with Bell at the top of my NASCAR at Kansas betting card.

RIVERHEAD, New York — One week ago, Doug Coby had no idea that he would be racing in Saturday’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Miller Lite 200 at Riverhead Raceway.

Tommy Baldwin Jr.’s decision to put the six-time Tour champion in the famed No. 7NY as a substitute for Jimmy Blewett paid off for both parties, as Coby took control of the race early to claim his 32nd career victory.

Being able to win in a car as famous as the No. 7NY was a tremendous honor for Coby, but he dedicated Saturday’s victory at Riverhead to Blewett’s family as they take care of his sick daughter, Kayla.

“More important than anything, Kayla Blewett is home with her family,” Coby said. “I guess I was kind of the pseudo-Riverhead guy tonight driving the No. 7NY. Tommy gave me a great car and I want to thank him and all his guys for the hard work. It was an unfortunate circumstance, but you’ve got to make the most of it.”

RELATED: Complete results from Riverhead

Saturday’s victory marked the first time Coby had taken part in a NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event this season.

A longtime staple of the division, Coby elected to scale back his own operation for 2022 to focus on obligations away from the track. His plan was to compete in four races with the Tour as part of a limited schedule.

Coby immediately jumped at the opportunity to drive for Baldwin when he got the phone call on Tuesday and promptly reminded the rest of the Tour field why he was so efficient in the series for a decade.

After passing polesitter Timmy Solomito, Coby was nearly uncontested for the rest of the evening at Riverhead as he perfectly executed multiple restarts and methodically carved his way through the ever-prevalent lapped traffic around the quarter-mile bullring.

The closest challenge Coby received came during a green-white-checkered attempt, where he was tasked with holding off the hard-charging Patrick Emerling, who had climbed his way up from the 15th starting position.

Emerling believed he was faster than Coby’s during the second half of the race, but admitted that the tires on his car were too exhausted to mount a challenge on the restart, forcing him to settle for second.

“My tires were just marbled up and I could not quite get it going,” Emerling said. “[Coby] started early and he did get me a little bit. When I got on it, the car was standing still, but I’m proud of what the team did today. We were able to drive ourselves up to the front and we had an awesome car tonight.”

For Coby, his three wins in the last four Riverhead races are the only times that he has visited Victory Lane at Riverhead during his career, which he attests to how taxing it can be to navigate the quarter-mile bullring’s tight turns.

Coby knows that no win on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour is easy to come by and considers himself grateful for the diligent work Baldwin and his crew put into the No. 7NY to make it so efficient Saturday evening.

“A lot of people like to think that I need to drive certain cars with certain setups to do well,” Coby said. “This is a team that I’ve never really talked with that much, but they put great cars together. There are so many Whelen Modified Tour teams that have great equipment and I’m happy to showcase that for Tommy and his team.”

Ron Silk maintained track position up front all evening to secure a third-place finish. Riverhead regular Dylan Slepian finished fourth while Solomito completed the top-five.

A replay of Saturday’s Miller Lite 200 at Riverhead Raceway will be broadcast on USA Network on Friday, May 20 at 1 p.m. ET.

The Whelen Modified Tour returns to action next Saturday, May 21 at Lee USA Speedway for the Granite State Derby, which will be broadcast live on FloRacing.

Ty Majeski was optimistic heading into Kansas Speedway this weekend.

He proved why on Saturday night, posting a career-best second-place finish at the 1.5-mile oval in Kansas City in the No. 66 Toyota for ThorSport Racing.

After qualifying third, Majeski led one lap and scored points in each of the race’s opening stages — second in Stage 1 and fourth in Stage 2.

RELATED: Official results | Photos from the race

Majeski, the Midwestern late model ace, took advantage of John Hunter Nemechek’s poor restart with nine laps to go. Majeski lined up behind Smith on the inside lane and pounced to second place after Nemechek spun his tires on the front row, settling in for his career-best NASCAR finish.

“We kept easing on the balance all night. I was a little bit free,” Majeski said. “We kept making good adjustments, just didn’t make a big enough swing on that last run. The sun went down and I think it freed up a little bit. Just a little bit too free to be able to attack the way I needed to to get by the 38 (Zane Smith).

“He was class of the field all night. I really struggled on restarts, but once we got going, I could pick up the spots. Really good truck. Hats off to Joe Shear Jr., my crew chief.”

Majeski is posting impressive numbers in his first full-time Truck Series season. Two years ago, Majeski was slated to run the full schedule with Niece Motorsports, but the deal collapsed after 15 races as the team went a different direction.

Majeski joined ThorSport as an engineer at the shop in 2021 and piloted the No. 66 truck in four races with a best finish of seventh at Charlotte. The Wisconsin native has already posted a career-high three top fives and five top 10s this season, including Saturday night’s stellar result.

“It’s been a fun season so far,” Majeski said. “Just a huge relief to run good consistently. I had a really fast American Racing Toyota Tundra TRD Pro. I think our day is coming.”

Miller Lite 200

Riverhead Raceway

Miller Lite 200

  • Race results
Pos. Car No. Driver Team Laps Difference
1 7 Doug Coby John Blewett, Inc. 213  —
2 07 Patrick Emerling Captain Pip Marina 213 0.593
3 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 213 0.866
4 10 Dylan Slepian* Eastport Foods 213 1.281
5 66 Timmy  Solomito Natural Designs/Highmark 213 1.343
6 87 John Baker Staria Automotive/Elite Towing 213 1.636
7 15 Kyle Soper Eastport Foods 213 1.896
8 5 John Beatty, Jr. Elite Sound Studios 213 2.311
9 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 213 2.469
10 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/nn’s Auto 213 5.594
11 49 Chris Young* J&H Homestead 212 1 Lap
12 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 212 1 Lap
13 64 Austin Beers* Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical 212 1 Lap
14 50 Ronnie Williams, Jr. Empower Financial Advisory & RB Enterprise 212 1 Lap
15 34 John Fortin Red Camel Racing/Johns Fuel/John Tree Removal 211 2 Laps
16 81 Chris Turbush* Cromers Market 211 2 Laps
17 79 Jon McKennedy Middlesex Interiors 208 5 Laps
18 36 Dave Sapienza SAP Enterprises 207 6 Laps
19 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood Market & Restaurant 206 7 Laps
20 03 Tom Rogers, Jr. Licensed to Chill/Stakey’s Pumpkin Farm 206 7 Laps
21 78 Walter Sutcliffe, Jr. Last Minute Racing 206 7 Laps
22 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Landscape/TRC Electrict 202 11 Laps
23 2 J.R. Bertuccio, Jr. Gershow Recycling 144 69 Laps
24 3 Jake Johnson* Propane Plus/LIN’s Propane Trucks 143 70 Laps
25 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication Inc. 143 70 Laps
26 82 Craig Lutz Danny’s Cesspool Service/Riverhead Building Supply 124 89 Laps
27 96 Matthew Brode* Peter Clark Motorsports 123 90 Laps
28 88 Roger Turbush Rheem 87 126 Laps
29 02 Joey Coulter IV SRI Performance/Air Shok/Race-Fan 83 130 Laps
30 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 9 204 Laps
  • Race statistics

Time of race: 56 minutes, 2 seconds

Average speed: 57.020 mph

Margin of victory: 0.593 seconds

Caution flags: Laps 59-66 (Car #51 turn 3 no contact, FP #88); 69-72 (Car #78 turn 4 no contact, FP #96); 76-79 (Car #5 turn 4 no contact, FP #64); 125-130 (Car #82 and #96 turn 1 contact, FP #64); 199-210 (Car #03 spun no contact, FP #22). 5 for 34 laps.

Lap Leaders: Timmy Solomito 1-10, Doug Coby 11-66, Timmy Solomito 67-73, Doug Coby 74-213.

Total Laps Led: Doug Coby 196, Timmy Solomito 17. 3 changes involving 2 drivers.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Leading 108 of 134 laps, Zane Smith dominated Saturday night’s Heart of America 200 and staved off a late charge from Ty Majeski at Kansas Speedway to record his NASCAR Camping World Series-leading third victory of the season.

After a restart with eight laps left, Smith pulled away from Majeski and crossed the finish line with a comfortable 1.653 seconds to spare. The runner-up finish was a career-best for Majeski.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

“It was really just an unbelievable truck,” said Smith, who won for the first time at Kansas and the sixth time in his career. “So dang cool. That was one of my easier ones I’ve ever had to win, but that late-race restart scared me a little bit.

“It’s a good thing I didn’t have another one there, because I’m stuck in fourth (gear), so sorry for no burnout.”

Smith’s No. 38 Ford appeared headed for an even easier victory before Dean Thompson spun on the backstretch to cause the fourth caution of the evening on Lap 121.

That gave Majeski a shot at his first series victory, but Smith’s F-150 was simply too strong.

“We were really close,” Majeski said. “We kept easing on the adjustments all night, getting the balance better on every run. The track was freeing up, and we were just a little too free, so we kept making small changes.

“The sun went down, and I think we over-adjusted a little on that last stop — couldn’t attack it, just a little bit too free.”

RELATED: Ty Majeski’s full post-race interview

Grant Enfinger ran third after charging from seventh in the final eight laps. Chandler Smith finished fourth after running out of fuel at the end of Stage 1 and losing a lap. Christian Eckes came home fifth, followed by pole winner John Hunter Nemechek, Matt DiBenedetto, Derek Kraus, Matt Crafton and Ben Rhodes.

Corey Heim led 18 laps and won Stage 1, but his No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota scraped the outside wall on Lap 100, eventually leading to a cut right-front tire and a 33rd-place result.

Stewart Friesen started from the rear in the No. 52 Chevrolet after Bubba Wallace practiced and qualified his truck. Scheduled to arrive in Kansas City on Friday, Friesen instead spent the night in New York’s LaGuardia Airport after his flight was canceled.

Another delay with his connection in Chicago prevented him from arriving at the track in time to qualify the truck. Friesen ran as high as fourth before finishing 14th.

Hailie Deegan came home 17th, matching her best result of the season.

The Truck Series’ next race is May 20 at Texas Motor Speedway at 8:30 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM).

Note: Inspection in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series garage is complete with no issues, confirming the No. 38 truck of Zane Smith as the winner.

The Nos. 22 and 31 cars of Joey Logano and Justin Haley, respectively, failed pre-qualifying inspection multiple times Saturday at Kansas Speedway.

Both teams will lose a crew member and pit selection following qualifying, but will retain their qualifying positions after each car passed on the third time through the inspection station. No. 22 Team Penske car chief Jerry Kelley and No. 31 Kaulig Racing car chief Jaron Antley were chosen by the teams for ejection from the 1.5-mile speedway.

RELATED: No. 3 crew chief out at Kansas | Kansas schedule

UPDATE: The No. 17 of Chris Buescher and No. 22 of Logano will start from the rear for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, Sirius XM) because of going to a backup car. The No. 11 of Denny Hamlin, No. 38 of Todd Gilliland and No. 47 of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will start from the rear because of unapproved adjustments.