See where your favorite driver will pit for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Kyle Larson earned the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the second race of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 8.
RELATED: Kansas weekend schedule | Cup Series standings
Larson, winner of last Sunday’s race at Texas Motor Speedway, will start on pole for the 10th time in 2021 in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
Daniel Hemric will start on pole in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series Kansas Lottery 300 (3 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the second race in the Round of 8.
As NASCAR adapted to COVID-19 protocols last season, practice and qualifying were eliminated at a majority of national-series events to limit at-track time, exposure and to cut race weekend costs. To determine starting lineups, competition officials used grouped draws, added inversions for weekend doubleheaders, and eventually adopted a performance-metrics formula. That metrics format remains in place this season, drawing on performance from both individual races and season-long results.
NASCAR’s metrics formula for 2021 weighs:
- 25 percent: Driver’s finishing position from the previous race
- 25 percent: Car owner’s finishing position from the previous race
- 35 percent: Team owner points ranking
- 15 percent: Fastest lap from the previous race
See the full lineup for Sunday’s Cup Series race below.
| Start pos. |
Driver | Car # | Team |
| 1 | Kyle Larson | 5 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 2 | Ryan Blaney | 12 | Team Penske |
| 3 | Brad Keselowski | 2 | Team Penske |
| 4 | Kyle Busch | 18 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 5 | Chase Elliott | 9 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 6 | Denny Hamlin | 11 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 7 | Martin Truex Jr. | 19 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 8 | Joey Logano | 22 | Team Penske |
| 9 | William Byron | 24 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 10 | Christopher Bell | 20 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 11 | Kevin Harvick | 4 | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 12 | Tyler Reddick | 8 | Richard Childress Racing |
| 13 | Kurt Busch | 1 | Chip Ganassi Racing |
| 14 | Austin Dillon | 3 | Richard Childress Racing |
| 15 | Matt DiBenedetto | 21 | Wood Brothers Racing |
| 16 | Daniel Suarez | 99 | Trackhouse Racing |
| 17 | Erik Jones | 43 | Richard Petty Motorsports |
| 18 | Michael McDowell | 34 | Front Row Motorsports |
| 19 | Chase Briscoe | 14 | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 20 | Aric Almirola | 10 | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 21 | Chris Buescher | 17 | Roush Fenway Racing |
| 22 | Cole Custer | 41 | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 23 | Corey LaJoie | 7 | Spire Motorsports |
| 24 | Ross Chastain | 42 | Chip Ganassi Racing |
| 25 | Alex Bowman | 48 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 26 | BJ McLeod | 78 | Live Fast Motorsports |
| 27 | Bubba Wallace | 23 | 23XI Racing |
| 28 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | 47 | JTG Daugherty Racing |
| 29 | Anthony Alfredo | 38 | Front Row Motorsports |
| 30 | Josh Bilicki | 52 | Rick Ware Racing |
| 31 | Ryan Newman | 6 | Roush Fenway Racing |
| 32 | Ryan Preece | 37 | JTG Daugherty Racing |
| 33 | Justin Haley | 77 | Spire Motorsports |
| 34 | Ryan Ellis | 15 | Rick Ware Racing |
| 35 | Quin Houff | 00 | StarCom Racing |
| 36 | Cody Ware | 51 | Petty Ware Racing |
| 37 | Chad Finchum | 66 | Motorsports Business Management |
| 38 | David Starr | 13 | Motorsports Business Management |
| 39 | Joey Gase | 53 | Rick Ware Racing |
| 40 | Parker Kilgerman | 96 | Gaunt Brothers Racing |
Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Just one race remains with Busch Pole Qualifying on the schedule — the season-ending championship race Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway.
Five NASCAR teams — three in the Cup Series and two in the Xfinity Series — were fined for lug-nut infractions after last weekend’s postseason events at Texas Motor Speedway.
RELATED: Playoffs standings | Weekend schedule: Kansas
Each team was found to have violated Section 10.9.10.4 of the NASCAR Rule Book, found with one unsecured lug nut each in a post-race check. The safety violation resulted in a $10,000 fine for each Cup Series crew chief and a $5,000 fine on the Xfinity Series side.
Teams penalized in the Cup Series after Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500:
• No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet for driver Kurt Busch (crew chief Matt McCall)
• No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet for driver Tyler Reddick (crew chief Randall Burnett)
• No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for driver Kyle Busch (crew chief Seth Chavka)
Chavka, normally a race engineer for the No. 18, was making only his second appearance as a Cup Series crew chief at Texas. Chavka filled in for full-time crew chief Ben Beshore, who served a one-race suspension for a two lug-nut violation in the previous week’s race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course.
In the Xfinity Series, the following teams were fined after Saturday’s Andy’s Frozen Custard 335:
• No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for driver Brandon Jones (crew chief Jeff Meendering)
• No. 98 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford for driver Riley Herbst (crew chief Richard Boswell)
After a one-year hiatus, Thompson Speedway will return to the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule in 2022 with a Wednesday, Aug. 17, race.
The storied Connecticut 5/8-mile track has hosted 148 Whelen Modified Tour races, starting in 1985. The track also hosted a pair of NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour races in 2011 and 2012.
RELATED: More on track history
“We are looking forward to returning to Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park,” said Jimmy Wilson, NASCAR Senior Director of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. “Thompson has been a great track and put on some of the most memorable races over the years and we look forward to putting on more of those memorable races for our loyal Connecticut area and Thompson Speedway fans.”
NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2021 inductee Mike Stefanik holds the all-time wins record in the series at Thompson with 15 victories. Ted Christopher is second with 13, while reigning and three-time series champion Justin Bonsignore has 12 victories there.
Bonsignore also holds the record for most consecutive NWMT victories at Thompson with six straight in 2018 and 2019. Richie Evans (the first four NWMT races held at Thompson in 1985), Jeff Fuller (1991-1992), Steve Park (1995-1996), Stefanik (1998) and Christopher (2010-2011) are all next with four consecutive wins.
In total, 36 drivers have recorded a NWMT race win at Thompson Speedway. The most recent winners in 2020 were Ron Silk and Craig Lutz.
MOORESVILLE, N.C. — BJ McLeod Motorsports (BJMM) announced today that full-time ARCA Menards Series driver Nick Sanchez will make his NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) debut with team owner BJ McLeod for several races in 2022.
RELATED: Nick Sanchez driver page
A member of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, Sanchez is making the leap up into the NXS after finishing his first full-time year of racing in the ARCA Menards Series where he’s earned eight top fives and 12 top-10 finishes in the 2021 season.
“We are excited to have Nick make his Xfinity Series debut with our team,” said team owner BJ McLeod. “Nick has proven himself behind the wheel in the ARCA Series and he has the drive to make the next step in the Xfinity Series.”
“The significance of this next step is very meaningful for me,” said Nick Sanchez. “It’ll obviously be my first time participating in one of the top three series of NASCAR, which is something I’ve always dreamed of ever since I started racing. Since the day I first met BJ, we’ve always been on the same page. We both share the same collective goals for next year and I feel he and his team have made significant strides in performance each year they’ve been in the series. My main goal next year is to learn and get the most out of the car’s performance, hopefully yielding some good finishes for myself and the team.”
Additional details regarding race schedule and partners for Sanchez will be announced in the near future.
Excited to announce I’ll be joining @TeamBJMcLeod for a multi-race schedule in the @NASCAR Xfinity Series next year. Really cool to get the chance to compete at this level. Looking forward to working and building with this team all throughout next year! pic.twitter.com/BABUxDHDdJ
— Nicholas Sanchez (@Nicksanchez080) October 19, 2021
NASCAR Cup Series drivers Chase Briscoe and Denny Hamlin have continued to exchange words after their run-in during Sunday’s race at Texas Motor Speedway — this time on social media.
The pair made contact in the final stage of the Round of 8 opener at the 1.5-mile track. The left-front fender of Briscoe’s No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford roughed up the right-rear quarter panel of Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. While Hamlin continued on, Briscoe didn’t come away unscathed, receiving heavy damage to the right side of his machine after making contact with the outside wall and cutting a tire.
This isn’t the first time Briscoe and Hamlin have had words this season. During an overtime finish in the inaugural Cup Series race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, Briscoe spun out Hamlin coming to the white flag. Briscoe was unaware that he was under penalty for cutting the corner in Turn 1. The two had a discussion on pit road after the race concluded.
Monday evening on Instagram, the two drivers sparred with a series of comments under NASCAR on NBC’s post about the Texas incident.




Max Calles grew up around racing in Mexico. The 25-year-old raced dirt bikes and go-karts as a kid and began in the lower series of NASCAR in Mexico when he was 12. He raced Formula cars and road courses and won the 24 Hours of Mexico in 2009 when he was 13.
Being around many styles of racing at a young age had a hand in helping Calles adapt quickly to the different styles of cars and tracks when he moved to the United States in 2010. But he also realized there was a lot he still had to learn about the sport in the U.S., both on and off the track.
“When I came here I struggled a lot because I was learning the language and just the different system that is run over here on the racing side,” he said. “Everything is different here.”
Since moving to the U.S., Calles has built a racing career for himself and been competing at Houston Motorsports Park, the only NASCAR-sanctioned asphalt track in Texas, over the last five years in a modified, pro-modified, late model and, most recently, pro truck.
Now that Calles has become accustomed to racing in the U.S., he’s turning his attention to helping other racers who are new, too.
Calles started a development program, called MCM Racing Development, to help other drivers from Mexico learn more about racing in the U.S. The idea came to Calles at the end of the 2020 season when was racing for a championship in the pro-modifieds division at HMP. A lot of drivers from Mexico he knew growing up started reaching out and asking about his success at the track and how they could also get involved with racing in Texas.

One of his friends, Diego Rodriguez, who runs a championship winning NASCAR Mexico team, wanted to join Calles racing at HMP and bring others with him.
“So we put something together last minute for the pro trucks so they can start racing and that’s how it really started,” Calles said. “Just to teach the guys from Mexico the way of racing over here because it’s very different.”
This season, Calles coached five drivers, ranging in age from 29-40. Most have established themselves as championship drivers in Mexico but wanted to branch out and try something new. Three of the team’s drivers are from Mexico and two are from Texas. The team includes: Rodriguez, Ruben Rovelo (a 2020 NASCAR Mexico champion), Enrique Ferrer, Memphis Villarreal, and JD Legg.
MCM has six race cars in total, among pro-trucks, modifieds and late models. The team started this year racing late models at Speed Weeks in Florida.
“They did very good for the lack of experience they had in those cars and also it was a big event,” Calles said. “There was a lot of competition so it was a very good weekend.”
After that, the team moved to racing at HMP and Mobile International Speedway in Alabama.
And the drivers have all found success this season. Ferrer finished the season fourth in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Texas standings and was the highest finishing Division I rookie in the state. Rodriguez finished fifth in the Texas state Division I standings.
“For the first complete year, it’s been good,” Calles said. “I just try to teach them stuff that they don’t see a lot in Mexico. They run stuff different so I just try to teach them as much as possible so they can just be on their own better.”
Ultimately, Calles said he wanted to help drivers make the transition from Mexico to the U.S. “the smoothest possible.”
“When you get here from Mexico you don’t know how racing works here,” he said. “There’s a lot of options, there’s a lot of classes, a lot of series, so you just have to know where to go so you can build that ladder for yourself to prepare them the most for the next level you want to do.
“A lot of guys over there want to come here and just experience the racing over here. See what’s different, what can they learn… That’s pretty much what it is. Most of the guys still race in Mexico and race here. It’s kind of like a practice for them.”
Calles still races himself, both on dirt and asphalt, but said adding coach to his title this year has been a different experience. He sometimes goes to the track just to watch, which isn’t something he’d ever done before.
Seeing drivers he coached find success, though, means just as much to him as winning himself.
“I feel like if they’re racing good I did good, too, because I taught them all the things they needed to know,” Calles said. “When they succeed and they capitalize on it, I feel good and I feel like we’re on the right direction.
“I really feel happy they’re doing good… They’re completely different drivers. I really like that and feel that our work is worth it.”
Calles is hopeful he can have more young drivers take advantage of his program in the future. He’s thankful to Advance Auto Parts and the crew at HMP for helping him grow his team and give him a place to not only grow as a driver himself but help others grow as competitors as well.
“I always loved racing in general,” he said. “I love the competition. I love to just prove to yourself that you are good and highlight the environment. The people that are around, I have a lot of good times at the race track with all kinds of people.
“And I really like the actual racing in general. Not only me as a driver, just being able to be there without driving. That’s something new to me for this year because I’ve always been to a race track to race. Sometimes I go now with my guys just to be the coach or something. I happen to enjoy that a lot. I just love to be at the race track and have good memories and also the people that are around. There are great people here in the U.S. that race. Everybody helps each other. It’s a very good environment for me. A family environment.”
Daniel Suarez banked his fourth top-10 finish of the NASCAR Cup Series season Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway, but that stat came with a tinge of remorse over late-race contact with playoff contender Martin Truex Jr.
RELATED: Playoff standings | Late-race mishaps grip Texas
Truex finished 25th, retiring 14 laps from the end of the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500, while Suarez went on to place 10th after a tap from his No. 99 Chevrolet sent Truex’s No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota hard into the Turn 4 wall.
The Trackhouse Racing driver said he regretted the contact, but he also defended his racing tactics. Suarez said Truex had cut off his advances, a pace made quicker by fresher tires.
“I feel so bad for him. I feel like I ruined the race for him, but he just can’t be doing that,” said Suarez, who missed the playoffs in his first year with the start-up Trackhouse group. “I’m racing as well here. I have a lot of respect for the guys in the playoffs. But one thing is respect, another is taking advantage of the situation. He wasn’t even close to being clear and I don’t know why he did that. We’re in the last 10 to 12 laps of the race; I’ve got tires and he doesn’t have tires. I don’t know, I think he’s just got to be a little smarter.”
The Texas race marked Suarez’s best result since a seventh-place finish in June at Nashville Superspeedway. A Lap 166 caution period for debris allowed him to get back on the lead lap, where he stayed until the end. But Suarez felt like more positions were in the offing with the benefit of fresher tires for the series of late-race restarts.
“It was a good day — up and down,” Suarez said. “I feel like we probably missed it a little bit on the adjustments in the middle of the race. And then right there at the end, during one of the stops when everyone came for tires and I was the first car without tires, I feel like we should have come for tires. We deserve maybe a little bit better, but we’ll have to keep working.”
A relatively smooth sail for NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs hopefuls unraveled into late-race bedlam Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway.
The postseason picture made some significant shuffles after Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500, won in dominant fashion by Kyle Larson — who had the most trouble-free day among the eight remaining title contenders. One by one, other challengers found trouble in the final 40 laps.
RELATED: Official results | Playoff standings
Joey Logano was the first among the flummoxed, his No. 22 Team Penske Ford erupting in a plume of smoke that sidelined him after 298 of the 334 laps. Denny Hamlin was next, with a prolonged spin and nudge of the backstretch wall; another wreck hurt the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota more, but he placed 11th. And Martin Truex Jr.’s hard Turn 4 hit rounded out the heartache, his No. 19 JGR Toyota ending the day 14 laps shy of the finish.
Logano wound up 30th, taking some solace that engine failure hasn’t sidelined him often; indeed, Sunday marked his first engine-related DNF since June 2014 at Pocono Raceway. He entered the day seventh in the standings, just 11 points back of the provisional elimination line. He left the Round of 8 opener last in the playoff rankings, 43 points behind the cut.
“I thought it was starting to maybe give up a little bit of power in that run,” Logano said after his early exit. “We were just getting passed. Not really, though. It just kind of let go. It is one of those days when nothing went right. The strategy didn’t go the way we wanted it to early in the race. Cautions didn’t fall the way we hoped they would and every time we started fighting our way back something happened, and we ended up like this. Now we know what we have to do these next two weeks. We better go find a way to win.”

That caution period for clean-up touched off a series of late-race restarts. Larson held the lead at each reset, but some of his fellow playoff contenders were less fortunate.
Truex’s tumble was precipitous after a bump from Daniel Suarez’s No. 99 Chevrolet sent him on a trajectory to the outside retaining wall in Turn 4. He finished 25th, dropping from third in the standings (plus-6 on the provisional elimination line) to seventh (minus-22).
“I got loose and when I gathered it up …,” Truex said, just before seeing the replay that revealed the slight contact from Suarez. “Yeah, we touched for sure. It’s really fast right there and yeah, hit the splitter and went straight to the fence. Tough spot to have contact like that. I don’t know. It is what it is.”
MORE: At-track photos: Texas
Chase Elliott remained below the elimination line, his car dogged by a recurring vibration issue. He had rallied into the hunt after dropping to the rear of the field at the start after his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet failed pre-race inspection twice. He came back to finish seventh and sits eight points back of the provisional elimination line.
Hamlin had breezed to victory in the other round-opening races during this year’s playoffs, but Sunday was a Texas-sized struggle. A scrape with fellow playoff driver Ryan Blaney with 23 laps left caused a tire rub on the No. 11 Toyota. That turned into a lengthy slide and nose-in contact with the inside wall two laps later.
Two cautions later, Hamlin endured heavier front damage in an incident with Chase Briscoe and Chris Buescher, but somehow limped home to a lead-lap result. Despite the late-race turbulence, Hamlin’s playoff fate was actually aided by attrition from an earlier 12-car melee and the pitfalls that snared the rest of the playoff field.
Hamlin left Sunday’s 500-miler aiming for a less bumpy ride in the NASCAR Cup Series’ next race, scheduled next Sunday (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) at Kansas Speedway.
“It’s insane. I think we ended up gaining a point over the cut, somehow,” Hamlin said. “I don’t know. It’s just a crazy day. The way these cars race where we are packed up for a couple laps, you just never know. It’s going to be the same way at Kansas. Hopefully we bring a fast piece there and we can go there and compete for a win.”
Following the first race in the Round of 8 in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, here’s a brief look at the playoff picture. There are two races remaining in the Round of 8, including next Sunday’s race at Kansas Speedway and the final elimination race on Oct. 31 at Martinsville Speedway.
Winner
Kyle Larson. Larson put another stomping on the field for his eighth victory of the 2021 season, locking himself into the Championship 4 on Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway. The No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports driver led 255 of the 334 laps for his first career victory at the 1.5-mile Fort Worth track.
RELATED: Race results | At-track photos
Who’s hot
Ryan Blaney. It was a quiet day at Texas for the No. 12 Team Penske driver, but a sixth-place finish now puts him 17 points above the elimination line and second in the playoff standings behind Larson.
Brad Keselowski. Like his teammate Blaney, Keselowski also flew under the radar in the 500-miler for a fourth-place finish. Although he’s still 15 points below the elimination line, it showed Keselowski has better speed under the No. 2 Ford on 1.5-mile tracks, which bodes well for him next Sunday at Kansas.
Who’s not
Martin Truex Jr. The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver was on his way to a solid top-10 day when disaster struck. Truex was hit in the left-rear quarter panel by Daniel Suarez in Turn 4 with 15 laps remaining, sending him hard into the outside wall and ending his day prematurely. A 25th-place finish now puts Truex 22 points behind the elimination line with two races left to dig himself out of the hole.
Joey Logano. It was going to be a decent run for Logano until the engine expired in his No. 22 Team Penske Ford on Lap 299. His 30th-place result was the worst out of the eight playoff drivers. He’s now 43 points back and in a potential must-win situation.
BUBBLE WATCH
| Rank | Driver | Points to cutoff |
| 1. | Kyle Larson | WIN |
| 2. | Ryan Blaney | +17 |
| 3. | Denny Hamlin | +9 |
| 4. | Kyle Busch | +8 |
| ——– | ELIMINATION LINE | ——— |
| 5. | Chase Elliott | -8 |
| 6. | Brad Keselowski | -15 |
| 7. | Martin Truex Jr. | -22 |
| 8. | Joey Logano | -43 |
Next race
The NASCAR Cup Series travels to the Kansas Speedway for the Hollywood Casino 400 next Sunday (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Who it favors
Denny Hamlin. The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver was involved in two separate incidents in Sunday’s race at Texas, but he was still able to salvage an 11th-place finish and stayed nine points above the elimination line. Kansas has treated Hamlin well recently, earning back-to-back victories in the 2019 fall race and 2020 spring race and three wins there overall.
Who it hurts
Ryan Blaney. It’ll be interesting to see how Blaney runs at Kansas. He has four finishes of 20th or worse in the past five races there, finishing seventh in 2020 fall race. But, the No. 12 machine has shown top-tier speed on intermediate tracks this year, so he could easily compete for victory and a potential Championship 4 berth.