It’s time to leave the Sunshine State behind and head west to the “Entertainment Capital of the World” for the NASCAR Cup Series Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Pre-race TV coverage begins Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on FS1 and drifts over to FOX at 3 p.m. ET for the remainder of NASCAR RaceDay and the 267-lap race. Radio listeners can tune in to PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio beginning at 3 p.m. ET.

RELATED: Full schedule for Las Vegas | Paint Scheme Preview

WHO’S ON THE POLE THIS SUNDAY?

Kevin Harvick starts at the front of the field Sunday afternoon alongside William Byron, securing the first Busch Pole Award of the season for the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team. Kyle Larson, Martin Truex Jr., Michael McDowell and Denny Hamlin file in to fill out rows two and three. Where is your favorite driver starting? See the full NASCAR Cup Series starting lineup.

WHAT ARE THE ODDS?

Two-time Las Vegas winner Martin Truex Jr. is oddsmakers’ best bet to take home the checkered flag this weekend at 6-1, according to BetMGM. Kevin Harvick, Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano share the card at 13-2, while the reigning track winner and hometown favorite Kurt Busch provides good value at 20-1.

TICKETS AND MORE

All single-day tickets for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway have sold out. Military tickets and premium packages may still be available, and fans wishing to participate in the weekend’s events can still visit the Virtual Fan Garage. Ticket information for this and future events can be found at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway ticket site.

RULES PACKAGE

The intermediate speedway package is in place this weekend, featuring engines fitted with a tapered spacer to generate a targeted 550 horsepower and an eight-inch spoiler.

GOODYEAR TIRES

NASCAR Cup Series teams have nine sets of Goodyear Eagle Speedway radials for the 400.5-mile race this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Before last year’s September race, Goodyear officials made one major change to the right-side tread compound to increase overall grip — a change that remains in place for Sunday.

Recommended inflation is 19 psi for the left-side tires, 52 psi for the right front and 48 psi for the right rear.

FOUR CONSISTENTLY REIGN IN THE DESERT

In the last 10 races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, there have been just five different winners. Kurt Busch’s fall 2020 win during the NASCAR Playoffs ended the six-year streak of track wins by either Brad Keselowski (three wins), Martin Truex. Jr. (two), Kevin Harvick (two) or Joey Logano (two). Just how dominant have these four been over this stretch? Check out some stats below.

— Keselowski is the active leader with three wins at Las Vegas (2014, 2016, 2018) and has 10 finishes of seventh or better in the last 11 races there, including seven top-five finishes. His win total ties him with Matt Kenseth for second all time, only trailing Jimmie Johnson’s four.

— A pair of wins, five top-five finishes in the last seven races at Las Vegas and scoring stage points in each of the 14 stages (four stage wins) tell the impressive story for Truex.

— Harvick is re-writing the Las Vegas record books, solidifying himself as the all-time leader in top 10s (12) and laps led (679) and is tied with Keselowski, Kyle Busch and Jimmie Johnson with seven top fives.

— Logano made the trip to Victory Lane in each of the last two spring races at Las Vegas and led the series with nine consecutive top 10s before a 14th-place finish in September. He is the active series leader with an 8.4 average finish at the track.

Stats provided by Racing Insights. 

FANTASY LIVE

Fantasy Live is your chance to manage a race team and show off your crew-chief instincts. The competition has started and every point matters, so head over to NASCAR Fantasy Live or download the NASCAR Mobile App to get involved.

So far, the 2021 fantasy points leaders are Denny Hamlin (139), Kevin Harvick (111) and Michael McDowell (104).

ALSO ON NASCAR.COM

Get additional camera views by logging on to NASCAR Drive, where each week a select number of in-car cameras will be available – as well as a battle cam and an overhead look.

New for this season, NASCAR has partnered with LiveLike to add fan engagement in the NASCAR Mobile App. Log in to the mobile app during the race for polls, quizzes, the cheer meter and more – and see instant results from NASCAR fans like you.

Sunday’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway is 267 laps around the 1.5-mile oval. That’s good for 400.5 miles in total.

Surely that’s enough time for drivers who start in the middle or back to make their way up to the front come checkered flag.

LAS VEGAS: Full schedule | Paint schemes | Starting lineup

Yes, but in six of the last eight events, the Las Vegas winner fired off 10th or better.

Screen Shot 2021 03 03 At 7.40.13 Pm

Keselowski’s run from 13th to first is still oh-so-close to qualifying for this statistical category. Even without him, the notion that six out of eight did — specifically the last two — is worth pondering for this weekend.

The starting lineup was determined by a performance-metrics formula — as NASCAR continues to limit at-track time due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, therefore eliminating qualifying at the majority of venues. Kevin Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, ended up with the pole position. He has two career wins at Las Vegas in 23 starts. Harvick took the green flag from 18th for his first win in 2015 but was on the front row in second for the 2018 win that fits the trend.

Here’s a Las Vegas-focused look at the starting top 10 for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Screen Shot 2021 03 03 At 7.40.27 Pm

RELATED: See top betting favorites to win at Las Vegas

The overall favorite to win, according to BetMGM, is Martin Truex Jr. with 6-1 odds. The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota wheelman has the second-best average finish (11.0) among Sunday’s front 10, falling short only to Kyle Larson (10.8), who is now piloting Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 5 Chevrolet rather than his old No. 42 Chevrolet for Chip Ganassi Racing. Larson has never won at Las Vegas. Truex has — a second-best two times, tied with Harvick. Brad Keselowski, in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford, holds the high mark at three victories.

Keselowski’s win total actually tops the entire 38-entry field. Truex and Harvick still follow, and then so does Joey Logano, whose No. 22 Team Penske Ford will line up 15th Sunday. Kurt Busch — a part of the top-10 starters — then has his one win, matched by his own brother, Kyle Busch, who will be one ahead of Logano in his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in 14th.

No other active contender has visited Las Vegas’ Victory Lane, including six of the 10 starters.

Circling back to the average finish comparison, Larson may have the strongest stat line out of the 10 charted, but he’s third among all options. Logano and Team Penske teammate Ryan Blaney have actually averaged the best results at Las Vegas. Logano boasts an 8.4 average, while Blaney holds a 9.7 mark. Blaney’s No. 12 Ford will have to overcome a deep 26th starting position Sunday.

So, it’s clearly split. There are strong cars starting within the top 10, and there are strong cars starting outside the top 10. Recent history does show, though, a driver who starts toward the front tends to end out front.

Bristol Motor Speedway is known as the “World’s Fastest Half Mile,” but what happens when its famous high-banked concrete racing surface is covered with dirt?

For NASCAR, we’ll find out at the end of March when the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series visit the dirt-covered half-mile bullring for the first time ever. But before that, the transformed track arrives in the virtual world.

That’s right: Dirt Bristol is coming to iRacing on March 9.

RELATED: More on iRacing

Coinciding with the sim-racing platform’s Season 2 release build, the newer, dirtier Bristol will be available to iRacing members nearly three weeks before NASCAR stars turn their first laps.

iRacing’s Dirt Bristol also marks the first stop on the schedule for the eNASCAR Pro Invitational Series’ second season, where NASCAR stars will get their first glimpse of racing on the remodeled track March 24 on FS1.

So, get those virtual dirt tires ready for next week. It’s not every day you’ll get the chance to visit a new track before NASCAR’s in town.

Scott Miller, NASCAR’s senior vice president of competition, said his department was on hand at Bristol Motor Speedway when the first shovelfuls of dirt landed this winter. Since then, the dirt has arrived by the truckloads to total roughly 20,000 cubic yards, and the trips to the Tennessee track have become more regular, up to once or twice weekly.

Preparations are humming along in Thunder Valley as the inaugural NASCAR dirt-track weekend at Bristol on March 26-28 nears reality. It will mark the first of two dirt races this season for the Camping World Truck Series but also signify a return to dirt-track roots for the premier Cup Series, which has run on paved tracks exclusively for the last 50 years.

The process of temporarily transforming the .533-mile bullring from a concrete surface to dirt has been a monumental project, overseen by Steve Swift — the senior vice president of operations and development for track owner Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI) — but managed in collaboration with NASCAR’s competition department. As a live camera mounted high above Turns 3 and 4 has documented in recent weeks, the track’s conversion is taking shape and in the final stages.

PHOTOS: See Bristol’s transformation to dirt | Qualifying rules, procedures revealed

“We’ve been keeping an eye on what’s going on and putting our two cents in where it needed to be, but yeah, we’ve been involved,” Miller said. “Steve Swift and his team up there have done a great job. Big project, and I feel like they’ve done a really, really good job getting it to the point where it is right now.”

The project has also involved the drivers who will participate in the event later this month. Competition officials have drawn on the expertise of drivers such as Chase Briscoe and Kyle Larson, who both have a rich background of racing on dirt.

In some ways, Miller said, that cooperation isn’t much different than the normal procedures for each race weekend. After the preseason Busch Clash exhibition last month on Daytona International Speedway’s road course, for example, Miller said drivers were consulted about how to prevent shortcuts on the backstretch chicane, which kicked up excess dirt onto the racing surface. Those discussions resulted in new-look curbing that was installed for the points-paying race on the circuit 12 days later.

“We met with five or six of them and got their opinions and went to work on how we could fix it,” Miller said. “Working with the drivers on different aspects of the racing, the race tracks, anything, is something that we do on a weekly basis, but we’ll certainly keep the dirt-track specialists in the loop at Bristol, but that’s the same as we do every weekend.”

RELATED: Daytona Road Course tweaks bus stop chicane

As scheduling fate would have it, Bristol’s dirt will get a real-world test run in racing conditions with the Bristol Dirt Nationals scheduled March 15-20, the weekend before NASCAR’s arrival. Competition will span eight divisions, and a handful of NASCAR standouts have already filed entries to get a sneak preview of the layout and mix it up alongside the grassroots racers in the field.

Larson and Kyle Busch are entered in the Super Late Model division, while fellow Cup Series regular Joey Logano and three-time Camping World Truck Series champ Matt Crafton are set to compete in the Open Modified class. But Miller said his department will also be on site to see what can be noted about the track’s characteristics and what, if anything, may need to be adjusted before the NASCAR race weekend.

“Absolutely, we will have a representative there to witness it all and really just see if there’s anything that we need to be on our toes about over the weekend, how the track comes in, or any learnings about operationally anything that we can get,” Miller said. “I think that when they announced that they were having those race prior to our weekend, I was really excited about it because it will give them a time to understand the dirt and the track prep, and us operationally seeing if there’s any problems with equipment moving around the infield or any of those things. We will certainly be up there observing and learning during those events.”

RELATED: A history of the NASCAR Cup Series on dirt

What might have seemed like a lark when the 2021 schedule was announced last September is now becoming more and more a reality. Those initial talks with Speedway Motorsports president and CEO Marcus Smith, FOX Sports executives and NASCAR organizers have created an uncommon first-time event that’s just more than three weeks from its dirt-slinging debut.

Count Miller among those with a vested interest in seeing it all unfold.

“I think ever since we started having success at the Eldora (Speedway) truck race and the dirt thing was kind of intriguing, there had been talk about bringing Cup to a dirt-track event,” Miller said. “A lot of little whispers here and there for a few years, but really and truly, FOX and SMI and NASCAR kind of got together and decided it was time to give it a try. The broadcasters are behind it, Marcus committed obviously a ton of time, effort and money into making it happen, so the timing was right. I expect it to be a really, really good show and we’ll see. It’s not too far away now.”

NASCAR officials unveiled the remaining details and procedures Wednesday for its inaugural dirt-track race weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway later this month, revealing that the starting lineups will be determined by the finishing order of qualifying heats and by the amount of positions gained in those preliminaries.

The Food City Dirt Race (Monday, March 29, 4 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will mark the Cup Series’ first dirt-track event since 1970. The Camping World Truck Series introduced dirt-track racing to its schedule in 2013, starting a seven-year run at Eldora Speedway in Ohio, but the Pinty’s Truck Race on Dirt (Monday, March 29, Noon ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will mark a series debut on Bristol’s half-mile layout with dirt overlayed on the usual concrete surface.

RELATED: NASCAR schedule | Effort behind transforming Bristol | Bristol stats 

Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competition, had previously announced that heats would be used during Bristol’s dirt weekend — a carryover from Eldora’s qualifying format. The addition of a system of “passing points” as a qualifying heat incentive is a new wrinkle for NASCAR’s national series.

The decision to drop customary pole qualifying with time trials in favor of rewarding passing and strong finishes in heats, Miller said, was at least in part a nod to dirt-track tradition.

“Well, I think it’s special rules for obviously quite a different event than we’ve ever done in the Cup Series, but we really wanted to just kind of take a page out of the dirt-track racing playbook,” Miller said. “They do and use these type of procedures to set the field for their main events, so we thought it would be something different for us and interesting to implement for this one.”

PHOTOS: See Bristol Motor Speedway’s transformation to dirt

Here’s how that structure looks, plus other facets of the Bristol dirt inaugural that were announced Wednesday:

Starting lineup format

  • Each series will have four qualifying heats of 15 laps each. Heat field size will depend upon the size of the overall entry list. So, if there are 44 cars, there will be 11 cars in each heat race. Only green-flag laps will count. No overtime rule will be in effect, but free-pass and wave-around procedures will remain.
  • Qualifying heat assignments and starting positions will be determined by a random draw, conducted in order of current team owner points standings.
  • The starting lineup will be determined by a formula that weighs finishing position plus positions gained during each heat. Drivers finishing first in their heats earn 10 points, second place earns nine, third place earns eight and so forth. Additionally, drivers earn one passing point for each position gained in their heat; there are no points deductions or “negative points” for drivers who lose positions in their heats. Also, these points are merely used to calculate the starting lineup and do not count toward the championship standings.
  • Ties in these combined points totals will be broken by current team owner points.

Bristol Dirt Main

Pit-stop procedures

  • Teams will not be permitted to change tires, add fuel or work on their vehicles except during the breaks between stages. Exceptions will be made for vehicles involved in incidents.
  • Teams are not required to pit during stage breaks. Those that elect to stay on the track during stage intermissions will line up ahead of the cars/trucks that pit on the ensuing restart. There will be no race onto or off pit road, using a controlled pit-stop procedure similar to the previous format in Eldora events.

Explains Miller: “If we had green-flag stops or changed tires under yellow, that would get us to a competitive pit road. With dirt tires, dirt on concrete, who knows what the traction’s going to be like, having pit crews running around out there under those circumstances, running around in a not-clean pit box, we just felt was not something that we were going to do, and it would potentially create an unsafe environment, so we had to take the actual competitive element out of the pit stops for predominantly safety reasons.”

RELATED: A history of the NASCAR Cup Series on dirt

Stages and schedule

  • Stages for Monday’s Cup Series main will end at Lap 100, Lap 200, with 250 laps the scheduled full distance. Stage endings for Monday’s Truck Series feature are set for Lap 40, Lap 90 and Lap 150. None of the stage lengths are scheduled longer than a full fuel run for either series. There will also be competition cautions on Laps 50 and 150 in the Cup race.
  • Each series will hold two 50-minute practice sessions on Friday, March 26. Qualifying heats for both series are scheduled Saturday, March 27.

NASCAR officials announced before the season that a tentative number of eight Cup Series events would he conducted with practice and qualifying in 2021 as COVID-19 protocols continued to limit at-track exposure. Miller indicated that including Bristol’s dirt-track debut on that short list was nearly imperative.

“We really felt like it was,” Miller said. “Some of the drivers, obviously we have a few drivers with a lot of dirt experience. This is obviously going to be a different type of vehicle than your typical dirt-track race car, so that will be different. Some of the guys have been out running different stuff to get some experience on dirt that were brought up on asphalt, but it’s one of those things where there was no way that we could not have practice. I’m not sure how many yellow flags we’re going to have as it is, but if we wouldn’t have had practice, we probably would have had double the amount.”

Choose rule

The choose rule procedure of allowing teams/drivers to pick either the inside or outside line for restarts will not be in effect for Bristol dirt-track events. The rule is also not used at superspeedways (Daytona and Talladega) or at road-course events. The race leader — or “control car” in scoring tower parlance — will still select the inside or outside lane on the front row for restarts, as is the case for all NASCAR national-series events.

The specialized nature of dirt-track racing played a part in that determination, Miller said. But was the decision also partly due to the difficulty of painting and maintaining an orange “V” and box as the choose location on a high-traffic dirt surface?

“You know, that factored heavily into the equation,” Miller said with half a chuckle. “The start-finish line and the choose V were something we were going to have to work around, and we didn’t want to commit to something we were going to have trouble executing. We don’t like to do that, so we just kind of took the safe route and went back to no choose rule for this event.”

Future applications

One more dirt-track weekend remains on the 2021 NASCAR national-series calendar as the Camping World Trucks visit historic Knoxville (Iowa) Speedway for the first time on July 9. Miller said that barring a necessary post-Bristol tweak, he expects the same qualifying and race procedures to be in effect for that inaugural 200-lapper.

“I would think that unless we see something that we don’t like, we will probably continue on with that there,” Miller says. “The feedback that we’ve gotten from everybody that I’ve kind of worked with and socialized with on the team side about some of these items, everybody’s pretty excited about it. So we really feel confident that it’s going to work well.”

Richard Childress Racing unveiled its BetMGM wrapped paint schemes for this month.

Austin Dillon’s No. 3 BetMGM Chevrolet will take to the track this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Odds for Sunday’s race at Las Vegas | See where Austin Dillon, Tyler Reddick will line up

Tyler Reddick’s No. 8 BetMGM Chevrolet will be getting down and dirty for the Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway on March 28 (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

BetMGM is an authorized gaming partner of NASCAR and the official sports betting operator for RCR.

We’ll be using this space, about twice each week, to provide you with sports betting content as it relates to NASCAR. We’ll educate you on the concepts, terminology and nuances of sports betting with the intention of helping create a more informed, responsible and enjoyable gambling experience for race fans.

With the circuit in Las Vegas this week, what better time to drop the green flag …

RELATED: Starting lineup for Sunday | Las Vegas betting odds from BetMGM

Before 2018, the year the Supreme Court struck down the law forbidding sports betting in all but four states, NASCAR races in Las Vegas were special. For races in their hometown, in addition to the Daytona 500, Vegas bookmakers would expand their wagering menus, posting multiple proposition bets (props) for race fans to gamble on. For most races, bettors could wager only on the race winner or on one driver to finish ahead of another in a matchup set by the bookmakers. But even before legalization, props such as number of cautions, the finishing positions of specific drivers, and the winning manufacturer were available for fans’ wagering pleasure when the NASCAR season opened in Daytona or the circuit stopped in Vegas.

Fast forward to today, when there’s legal sports betting in 20 states plus Washington, D.C., and there is no longer much unique, from a betting perspective at least, about NASCAR races in Las Vegas.

And this is wonderful for those of us who enjoy getting a few dollars down on a race. 

Thanks to legalization and the competition among sportsbooks it has inspired, now every race has a long list of betting options. Want to bet on Chase Elliott to finish in the top 3? You can do that. How about Kyle Busch to be the top Toyota car? Sure. Or whether the number on the winning car will be odd or even? Yes, you can bet on that, too.

“Vegas was our big race,” Johnny Avello, the longtime sportsbook director at The Wynn in Sin City before taking over bookmaking operations at DraftKings in 2018, said this week. “That race took the most handle and had the most action and all the other offerings and proposition bets we put up. Not the case with DraftKings (whose sportsbook is now live in 13 states). With DraftKings, the Las Vegas race doesn’t have to be the most popular because there are so many other races around the country, and we’re putting up a lot of content on each and every race because we have a lot of customers in a lot of states. It’s not about one race for us.”

This phenomenon is not unique to NASCAR. Open a betting app any day of the week and find plenty of ways to get involved on a regular-season NBA basketball game, a Champions League soccer match, or a PGA Tour golf tournament.

Indeed, props are not just for the Super Bowl anymore.

The NFL’s marquee game, of course, is where prop betting all started and has grown exponentially. Along with legalization, though, prop betting has expanded, and there’s no shortage of ways to wager, regardless of the sport or the size of the event.

“The Super Bowl was the big event, and that’s the event we would do multiple propositions bet on,” Avello said. “We would have a minimum of 400 or 500 different ways to bet the game, and that one game kind of took precedent over everything else in football. But now you can pull up a regular-season NFL game on Sunday morning, any game, and you’re going to find first touchdown scorer, first team to score, last team to score, all those Super Bowl offerings but on a regular-season basis. 

“We’ve expanded the menu on not only that but for every NASCAR race as well.”

Here’s just a sampling of offerings for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube from various sportsbooks around the country as of Wednesday morning:

Outright winner (BetMGM):
Martin Truex Jr. +600 (these odds mean a winning $100 bet would result in a $600 profit; +600 may also be expressed as 6/1)
Kevin Harvick +650
Brad Keselowski +650
Joey Logano +650
Denny Hamlin +900
Check out a full list of BetMGM’s odds to win here

To finish in Top 3 (Barstool Sportsbook):
Chase Elliott +235 (bet $100 to win $235)
Kyle Busch +375
William Byron +450

To finish in Top 10 (Barstool Sportsbook):
Kurt Busch -134 (bet $134 to win $100)
Bubba Wallace +285
Michael McDowell +375

Manufacturer of winning car (Barstool Sportsbook):
Ford +135
Chevrolet +170
Toyota +230

Car number of race winner (Barstool Sportsbook):
Even -139
Odd +105
Check out Barstool’s complete list of wagering opportunities for Sunday here.

Any driver to win both Stage 1 and 2 and win race (DraftKings):
Yes +650
No -1430 (not a fun one for most bettors, as a $1430 risk is required to cash $100)

Matchups, pick one driver to beat the other (SuperBook USA):
Harvick (-130) vs. Hamlin (+110)
Christopher Bell (-110) vs. Austin Dillon (-110)
Kyle Larson (-120) vs. Ryan Blaney (even-money or bet $100 to win $100).

Group matchup, pick one driver to finish first among a group of four (SuperBook USA):
Harvick +240
Hamlin +280
Elliott +280
Truex  Jr. +285

Over/under finishing positions (SuperBook USA):
Harvick 5.5
Larson 7.5
Bubba Wallace 17.5

Total cautions (SuperBook USA):
Over -120
Under +100 (or even-money)

Marcus DiNitto is a writer and editor living in Charlotte. He’s been covering sports betting for more than 10 years. His first NASCAR betting experience was in 1995 at North Wilkesboro Speedway, where he went 0-for-3 in his matchup picks. Read his articles; do not bet his picks.

Kevin Harvick has won the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Harvick will start his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford from the pole position with William Byron in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet sharing the front row in the field.

Additionally, Myatt Snider won the pole for Saturday’s Alsco Uniforms 300 (4:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) for the NASCAR Xfinity Series, and Ben Rhodes is on the pole for Friday’s Bucked Up 200 (9 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

RELATED: Las Vegas weekend schedule | 2021 Cup Series standings

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 Kevin Harvick 4 Stewart-Haas Racing
2 William Byron 24 Hendrick Motorsports
3 Kyle Larson 5 Hendrick Motorsports
4 Martin Truex Jr. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing
5 Michael McDowell 34 Front Row Motorsports
6 Denny Hamlin 11 Joe Gibbs Racing
7 Kurt Busch 1 Chip Ganassi Racing
8 Chase Elliott 9 Hendrick Motorsports
9 Alex Bowman 48 Hendrick Motorsports
10 Brad Keselowski 2 Team Penske
11 Tyler Reddick 8 Richard Childress Racing
12 Austin Dillon 3 Richard Childress Racing
13 Ryan Newman 6 Roush Fenway Racing
14 Kyle Busch 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
15 Joey Logano 22 Team Penske
16 Christopher Bell 20 Joe Gibbs Racing
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing
18 Chris Buescher 17 Roush Fenway Racing
19 Ryan Preece 37 JTG Daugherty Racing
20 Cole Custer 41 Stewart-Haas Racing
21 Ross Chastain 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
22 Daniel Suarez 99 Trackhouse Racing Team
23 Bubba Wallace 23 23XI Racing
24 Chase Briscoe 14 Stewart-Haas Racing
25 Justin Haley 77 Spire Motorsports
26 Ryan Blaney 12 Team Penske
27 Anthony Alfredo 38 Front Row Motorsports
28 Aric Almirola 10 Stewart-Haas Racing
29 Erik Jones 43 Richard Petty Motorsports
30 Matt DiBenedetto 21 Wood Brothers Racing
31 Garrett Smithley 53 Rick Ware Racing
32 Cody Ware 51 Petty Ware Racing
33 Corey LaJoie 7 Spire Motorsports
34 BJ McLeod 78 Live Fast Motorsports
35 Josh Bilicki 52 Rick Ware Racing
36 Quin Houff 00 StarCom Racing
37 Joey Gase 15 Rick Ware Racing
38 Timmy Hill 66 Motorsports Business Management

Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Busch Pole Qualifying was held for the season-opening Daytona 500; the next race with time trials scheduled is the March 28 event at Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt track.

NASCAR officials penalized six Cup Series teams and four Xfinity Series teams for lug-nut infractions during last weekend’s events at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

STANDINGS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series

Crew chiefs for each Cup Series team were fined $10,000 and Xfinity crew chiefs were docked $5,000 for violations of Section 10.9.10.4 in the NASCAR Rule Book, with each team found with one unsecured lug nut in a post-race check.

On the Cup Series side, officials penalized:

  • No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet (crew chief Randall Burnett; driver Tyler Reddick)
  • No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet (crew chief Alan Gustafson; driver Chase Elliott)
  • No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (crew chief Ben Beshore; driver Kyle Busch)
  • No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (crew chief James Small; driver Martin Truex Jr.)
  • No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford (crew chief Mike Shiplett; driver Cole Custer)
  • No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet (crew chief Phil Surgen; driver Ross Chastain)

In the Xfinity Series, penalized were:

  • No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet (crew chief Taylor Moyer; driver Josh Berry)
  • No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet (crew chief Jason Trinchere; driver AJ Allmendinger)
  • No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (crew chief Jeff Meendering; driver Brandon Jones)
  • No. 51 Jeremy Clements Racing Chevrolet (crew chief Mark Setzer; driver Jeremy Clements)

A disqualification was assessed Saturday in the Xfinity Series after post-race inspection at the 1.5-mile track. The No. 23 Chevrolet driven by Tyler Reddick to an apparent second-place finish failed the rear height requirement and was dropped to last in the 40-car field.