San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

LONG-SHOT WINNERS CHANGING NASCAR PLAYOFF OUTLOOK

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

NASCAR’S postseason landscape has been altered after just two Cup Series races.

With Michael Mcdowell and Christophe­r Bell winning at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, the first in the Daytona 500 and the second on the road course, two playoff spots were locked up by guys who weren’t generally considered locks.

The fallout? Other teams are feeling the pinch in late February — six months before the 16-driver playoff field is set — and with 24 races remaining.

The simplest way to look at it: If the series heavyweigh­ts perform as expected the rest of the way, there won’t be many playoff spots left for anyone else. It’s a somewhat bleak outlook for several teams already and could force them to adjust their approach beginning today at Homestead-miami Speedway.

“Some of that next batch of cars is really needing to be thinking about if they’re swinging for the fence or if they’re racing for points,” Stevens said. “Maybe one more winner that somebody didn’t expect pretty early in the season could really change the complexion.”

Every year since NASCAR’S current playoff system began in 2014, at least three postseason berths have been awarded to drivers based on points. The past three years, as Kevin Harvick, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Chase Elliott have won a bigger share of races, more drivers have made the playoffs on points.

But Bell and Mcdowell already grabbed two of the spots, something many would have considered an unlikely possibilit­y entering the year.

“The dynamic has changed dramatical­ly right now,” 2012 Cup champion Brad Keselowski said. “We’re very early in the season, and it’s now turned into a points race for those last few spots.”

Notable

Noah Gragson had close to a 9-second lead, the outside lane wide open and the white flag waiting for him ahead.

The JR Motorsport­s driver was on the verge of an elusive victory at Homestead-miami Speedway. And then the unthinkabl­e happened. A lapped car blew a tire and turned right in front of him. A fraction of a second earlier or later and Gragson would have cruised by and ended up in victory lane.

Instead, Gragson had nowhere to go and no time to stop. He slammed into David Starr and ended his day in disappoint­ing fashion.

Myatt Snider was the beneficiar­y. Snider won the Xfinity Series race Saturday, taking the checkered flag in overtime after Gragson’s untimely wreck with two laps to go in regulation.

“What are you going to do?” Gragson said. “You’ve got (idiots) in the way every single week.”

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