The eight drivers who have advanced to this three-race round of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs likely feel a return-to-normalcy after an unprecedented season of schedule flux and the most recent Playoff round that included a superspeedway and a relatively new road course that forced teams to compete on rain tires for the first time in the Modern Era.
NASCAR Cup Series regular season champion Kevin Harvick, who leads the series with nine victories but was winless in this most recent Playoff round, holds a 13-point edge on seven-race winner Denny Hamlin atop the standings as the series moves to Kansas Speedway for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400.
After Hamlin the points separation in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff standings is far greater. Brad Keselowski is ranked third, 32 points behind Harvick as the points reset for this penultimate group of races at Kansas, then Texas Motor Speedway, then Martinsville Speedway before the November 8 Championship 4 round at Phoenix Raceway.
Last week’s Charlotte road course race winner Chase Elliott is currently in that fourth and final transfer spot, 40 points behind Harvick. Joey Logano (-45 points), Martin Truex, Jr. (-50), Alex Bowman (-58) and Kurt Busch (-61) round out the Playoff field. Defending NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch was among those who did not advance in the Playoffs after the Charlotte race last weekend marking the earliest a reigning champ has been eliminated from title contention in the “elimination-style” format.
Six of the Playoff drivers have won races at Kansas Speedway previously, with Hamlin and Harvick part of a four-way tie (also Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson) with three Kansas wins each. Hamlin won this July edging Keselowski by a half-second marking his second straight win a the 1.5-mile speedway dating back to last year’s Playoff race.
In all, six of the current eight Playoff drivers finished among the top-10 this summer at Kansas. Harvick, who has seven top 10s in the last nine Kansas races (including a pair of wins and a runner-up finish) leads a quartet of drivers particularly good at the track.
Hamlin has top-10 finishes in six of the last eight races, including wins in the last two. Keselowski has a win and a runner-up finish in the last three Kansas races and Truex has six top-10 finishes in the last seven races at the Kansas track, including a pair of wins and a runner-up showing.
Among these drivers, only Talladega race winner Denny Hamlin owns a victory in the most recent three-race Playoff round. Harvick has set a career-high mark for single season victories in a year and earned a series-best 19 top-five and 25 top-10 finishes through the opening 32 races. He had only a single top-10 (10th at Las Vegas) in the last Playoff round, however.
“This wasn’t a great round for us, so we definitely need to do better,” said Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. “We need to display that our cars are fast and do a good job on pit road and do the things we did all year. Definitely two good race tracks coming up for us with Kansas and Texas and hopefully, we can get a win at one of those two race tracks and go on with it.”
A return to some 1.5-mile tracks will be welcomed by many of the Playoff drivers. Harvick, Hamlin, Logano and Bowman are the only drivers with victories at both Kansas and next week’s venue, Texas Motor Speedway, however, seven of the eight drivers have won at one of the tracks. Only Bowman is still looking for his first career win at Kansas, Texas and Martinsville.
“I don’t’ know if we are necessarily taking a different approach,” the driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Chase Elliott said of trying to earn his first Championship 4 opportunity.
“I think we’re just trying to build on what we’ve been working on over the past few years. I feel like every year we’ve been close we just haven’t been able to get over that hump and really assert ourselves among that top group. I feel like we’ve been right there. I feel like we’re very capable of it.
“Just those little inconsistencies and some bad race tracks have been our biggest problems. So we’re trying to be a little more consistent everywhere. I think it’s a goal. … You can’t have bad tracks at this level and the guys who win often and win all the time and run well don’t have any bad tracks. It’s certainly possible and that’s just where we have to get to. The reality is that’s the only way to contend with them and I think we’re capable of doing it.”
Xfinity Series Kicks Off Round Of 8 At Kansas
After a winless opening round of the 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs, regular season champion Austin Cindric is eager for the three race venues that comprise this all-important semifinal countdown portion of the Playoff schedule.
Cindric ties Ross Chastain with nine top-10 finishes in 10 races this season on 1.5-mile tracks such as Kansas Speedway, where the series resumes Playoff competition Saturday night in the Kansas Lottery 300.
In fact, eight of Cindric’s nine top-10 efforts were top-five finishes- three of them wins (twice at Kentucky and once at Texas). The driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford is putting up an impressive average finish of 4.35 on these 1.5-mile tracks and he’ll need every bit of that confidence this week as enters this Playoff round second in the standings, 10 points behind the season’s eight-race winner Chase Briscoe.
Among the eight drivers who have advanced this far – Briscoe, Cindric, Justin Allgaier, Noah Gragson, Justin Haley, Chastain and Tucker, Georgia’s Ryan Sieg – the 1.5-mile tracks have predominantly been the highlights of their season work. Seven of those drivers have earned top-10 finishes in at least six of the 10 races at 1.5-milers. In addition to Cindric and Chastain, who have nine top-10s, Briscoe has eight and Justin Allgaier and Justin Haley have seven each.
Atlanta, Georgia’s Brandon Jones, who has won the last two races at Kansas Speedway, including a dramatic final lap pass for the win in July, is the only driver in the Playoff standings with a previous trip to Kansas’ Victory Lane. His win this summer was a nail-biting .405-second better than Cindric who had led a dominating 131 of the 175 laps – the most laps led at Kansas since Erik Jones paced the field for 186 laps in 2017 and finished 15th.
Brandon Jones has finished 11th or better in four of his last five Kansas starts and has been solid in the early Playoff run with three finishes of 11th or better.
With back-to-back 1.5-mile Playoff venues – Kansas and then Texas Motor Speedway next week – this is the bread-and-butter of these drivers’ championship hopes. And the statistics indicate there should be some tightly-contested races – in particular at these venues – to decide which four drivers will ultimately advance to earn a shot at the Championship 4 in the November 7 Phoenix Raceway season finale.
With their work on the 1.5-mile tracks, Briscoe and Cindric have to be considered the heavy favorites coming into the weekend. Briscoe has already collected a Playoff win (at the Las Vegas Playoff opener) but didn’t score a top-10 in the two races afterward at Talladega and the Charlotte infield road course. His best finish in three Kansas starts is third in last year’s Playoff race.
“Our first trip there (to Kansas) was one of the worst races of the year,” Briscoe said of his 14th-place finish in the No. 98 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford at Kansas this summer. “We just missed the balance, but we’ve run well there in the past and we’ve come so far since then.
“I’m confident we we’ll be good this time going back. We know we need to win early in this round and lock ourselves into Phoenix, but we can’t make any huge mistakes to give away our points lead, so we went back and found some things to work on for this race. We’re taking the car we won with at Vegas, so I feel really good about our chances of taking our Ford Performance Racing School Mustang to Victory Lane again.”
Cindric finished sixth at both Las Vegas and on the Charlotte road course, but 34th at Talladega. His last wins were back-to-back in August at the Daytona Road Course and Road America. His best showing in three Kansas starts was that runner-up effort in July.
Although Briscoe’s win at Las Vegas and Haley’s win at Talladega earned them automatic berths to this part of the Playoff schedule, JR Motorsports driver Noah Gragson has actually put together the best three-race run among the championship contenders. Gragson shows up in Kansas ranked fourth, 35 points behind Briscoe, but he scored top-five finishes at every race in this opening round of Playoff competition.
The 22-year old was runner-up to A.J. Allmendinger at Charlotte last week and also second to Briscoe at Las Vegas. He finished third in the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet at Talladega. He has finishes of 13th and 15th in two previous Xfinity Series starts at Kansas and is still looking for his first career top 10 at Texas.
Gragson’s veteran JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier, who sits third in the championship, 27 points behind Briscoe, boasts seven top-10 finishes in 10 Kansas starts, including three career-best fifth-place finishes at the track. He has 10 top-10 finishes in 20 Texas starts with a career-best of third there in July.
Gander Truck Series Returns At Kansas
The penultimate round of the 2020 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Playoffs begins Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway with the Clean Harbors 200 and a tightly-ranked field of championship-eligible drivers ready to earn an automatic ticket into the Championship 4 round to determine who hoists that season trophy.
NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series regular season champion Austin Hill of Winston, Georgia and three-race winner Sheldon Creed are tied in the points standings heading into this weekend’s race at the 1.5-mile Kansas Speedway. Two-race winner, rookie Zane Smith and three-race winner, veteran Grant Enfinger are six and nine points behind, the leading pair respectively.
Brett Moffitt, the 2018 series champion, is ranked fifth only 12 points back from the series lead, followed by Ben Rhodes (-14 points), reigning series champ Matt Crafton (-19) and rookie Tyler Ankrum (-25 points). Moffitt and Ankrum are the only two drivers among the eight who have not won a race in 2020.
Of the Playoff drivers, Crafton has multiple wins at all three tracks in this Playoff round (Kansas Speedway, Texas Motor Speedway and Martinsville Speedway). He is the only driver among those eight championship eligible competitors with victories at all three stops.
Crafton has an all-time series best mark of three victories at Kansas – the last coming in July. Hill won the opening half of the July doubleheader weekend and is the only other racer among the Playoff eight who has a previous win at one of the upcoming tracks in this round.
Both Hill, driver of the No. 16 Hattori Racing Enterprises Toyota, and Creed, driver of the No. 2 GMS Racing Chevrolet, would like to raise their Playoff game. Hill – who leads the series in top 10s (15) and top fives (nine) – won at Las Vegas to guarantee his spot in this round. But it was the only top-10 finish he earned in the three races. He crashed out of the last Playoff race at Talladega two weeks ago and finished 19th. Kansas Speedway has been good to him, however. He is the most recent winner and has accumulated three top-10 finishes at in four starts there, leading 85 laps.
Creed, who boasts the most stage wins (seven) in the series this season, has struggled in the last month with only a single top 10 in the last five races (runner-up to Hill at Las Vegas). His best finish in three previous Kansas starts was eighth-place in the race Hill won this summer.
If Crafton is looking to make a bold statement in his quest to tie NASCAR Hall of Famer Ron Hornaday, Jr. as the series’ only four-time champions, this may well be the round of Playoffs he does that.
Not only does the driver of the No. 88 ThorSport Racing Ford easily boast the best track record among the Playoff drivers for these upcoming three tracks, he shows up in Kansas this weekend riding a four-race streak of top-10 finishes, including a runner-up at Richmond Raceway. He’s finished top-10 at Kansas in eight of the last nine races there, posting three victories and another two runner-up finishes in that span.
Among the eight with a championship on the line, Enfinger is enjoying a stellar season – his three wins in 2020, a career high. He’s earned top-10 finishes in the last six races in the No. 98 ThorSport Ford and has four top-10 finishes in five Kansas Speedway races. His best work – third place – came at both races this July.
WDUN will carry live MRN Radio coverage of the NASCAR race weekend at Kansas Speedway. It opens with Saturday's NASCAR Xfinity Series Kansas Lottery 300 at 6:30 pm on WDUN 102.9 FM, AM 550 and streaming live on AccessWDUN. Coverage continues on Sunday with the NASCAR Cup Series Hollywood Casino 400 at 1:30 pm on 102.9 FM and streaming live on AccessWDUN.
NASCAR Weekend Preview
NASCAR Cup Series
Next Race: Hollywood Casino 400
The Place: Kansas Speedway – Kansas City, KS
The Date: Sunday, October 18
The Time: 2:30 p.m. ET
TV: NBC, 2 p.m. ET
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Distance: 400.5 miles (267 laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 80), Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 160), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 267)
What To Watch For: The 2020 season marks the first time Kansas Speedway has hosted the seventh race of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs and the first race of the Round of 8. … Since the inception of the Playoffs in 2004, Kansas Speedway has occupied five different positions on the Playoff schedule – from 2004, 2005, 2011, 2013 and 2014 Kansas hosted the fourth race in the Playoffs, from 2006-2010 Kansas hosted the third race in the Playoffs, from 2015 to 2016 Kansas hosted the fifth race of the postseason and from 2012, 2017, 2018 and 2019 Kansas hosted the sixth race of the Playoffs. … Kansas Speedway is the fourth different track to host the seventh race in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs; joining Atlanta Motor Speedway (2004-2008), Talladega Superspeedway (2009-2010) and Martinsville Speedway (2011-2019). … A total of 11 different drivers have won the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff races at Kansas Speedway. Jimmie Johnson (2008, 2011), Kevin Harvick (2013, 2016), Joey Logano (2014, 2015), Greg Biffle (2007, 2010) and Tony Stewart (2006, 2009) lead the series in Playoff wins at Kansas Speedway with two each. … Twice the winner of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff race at Kansas Speedway has gone on to win the title that same season: 2008 (Jimmie Johnson) and 2017 (Martin Truex, Jr.). … The worst finish in a Playoff race at Kansas Speedway by a driver that went on to win the title later that same season was 15th by Tony Stewart in 2011. Last season’s champion, Kyle Busch, finished third in the Kansas Playoff race. … In total Kansas Speedway has hosted 29 NASCAR Cup Series races dating back to inaugural event on September 30, 2001. The race was won by NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon driving a Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports. … The 29 Cup Series races at Kansas have produced 16 different pole winners and 15 different race winners. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick leads the series poles at Kansas with five (Playoff race 2013, 2014 sweep, spring 2018 and spring 2019). … Four drivers are tied for the series-most wins at Kansas Speedway with three wins each – Jeff Gordon (2001, 2002, 2014), Kevin Harvick (2013, 2016, 2018), Jimmie Johnson (2008, 2011, 2015) and Denny Hamlin (2012, 2019, 2020).
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Next Race: Kansas Lottery 300
The Place: Kansas Speedway – Kansas City, KS
The Date: Saturday, October 17
The Time: 7 p.m. ET
TV: NBCSN, 6:30 p.m. ET
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Distance: 300 miles (200 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 45), Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 90), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 200)
What To Watch For: Since the inception of the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs in 2016, Kansas Speedway has hosted the fourth race in the postseason, the first race of the Round of 8. The previous four NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff races at Kansas have produced four different winners – three of the four were non-Playoff drivers: Kyle Busch in 2016 (Cup contender), Christopher Bell in 2017 (Truck contender), John H. Nemechek was ranked 16th in Xfinity points on a part-time schedule in 2018. Last season’s winner was a Playoff driver, but Brandon Jones was ranked 10th in the points at the time of the win after being eliminated in Round of 12. Jones is the only active driver this weekend at Kansas with a previous win at the 1.5-mile facility. … Jones is not only looking to win this weekend to get the automatic bid to the Championship 4 round, but also because he would like to join his fellow JGR teammate Kyle Busch (2014, 2015, 2016) as just the second driver in series history to win three consecutive races at Kansas Speedway. … In total Kansas Speedway has hosted 20 NASCAR Xfinity Series races producing 15 different pole winners and 15 different race winners. … Kyle Busch leads the series in wins (four), top fives (eight), top 10s (10) and laps led (544). … Matt Kenseth leads the series poles at Kansas with three.
NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series
Next Race: Clean Harbors 200
The Place: Kansas Speedway – Kansas City, KS
The Date: Saturday, October 17
The Time: 4 p.m. ET
TV: FOX, 3:30 p.m. ET
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Distance: 201 miles (134 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 30), Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 60), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 134)
What To Watch For: The 2020 season marks the first time Kansas Speedway has hosted the fourth race in the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Playoffs. Kansas is the third different track to host the fourth race in the Gander Trucks Playoffs joining Martinsville Speedway (2016-2018) and Talladega Superspeedway (2019). … The fourth race in the Playoffs has produced three different winners led by ThorSport Racing’s Johnny Sauter, who was a Playoff driver at the time of the two victories (Martinsville 2016, 2018). The other two Playoffs races were won by non-Playoff drivers – Noah Gragson won the 2017 Martinsville Speedway Playoff race and he was 17th in points at the time, and Spencer Boyd won the Talladega Superspeedway Playoff race in 2019 and he was 17th in points at the time of the win. … In total Kansas Speedway has hosted 21 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series races dating back to the inaugural event on July 7, 2001 – the race was won by Ricky Hendrick, son of NASCAR Hall of Famer Rick Hendrick. … The 21 Gander Truck races at Kansas have produced 15 different pole winners and 18 different race winners. … NASCAR Hall of Famer Ron Hornaday, Jr. leads the series in poles at Kansas with three. … 2020 Playoff contender and ThorSport Racing veteran Matt Crafton leads the series in wins (three), top fives (seven) and top 10s (12). … Johnny Sauter (2010), Austin Hill (2020) and Matt Crafton (2013, 2015, 2020) are the only former winners entered this weekend at Kansas Speedway.