South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Playoff landscape now shifting gears

‘Unique’ winners altering the postseason after 2 Cup races

- Associated Press

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — 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.

“Probably not for the teams that we all expect to win, but for some of those fringe cars it will,” said Bell’s crew chief, Adam Stevens. “The number of unique winners is really going to change how many cars get in on points, right? It’s pretty obvious.”

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 Sunday 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. Hopefully it doesn’t matter for us.

“But if you don’t win, you’re in a lot of trouble right now because it’s not looking like you’re going to be able to get in the playoffs right now without a win.”

The Daytona 500 has a tendency to be a crapshoot, often delivering an odd top-10 and occasional­ly ending up with a long-shot winner like McDowell. He had been winless in 357 Cup starts before his breakthrou­gh.

Although Bell drives for powerhouse Joe Gibbs Racing, he was a rookie for that top team and in his second full season in the Cup series.

“Two of the tracks we’ve went to are definitely tracks that create opportunit­ies for guys that you wouldn’t necessaril­y just give them a spot or think that they’re going to point themselves in,” said Richard Childress Racing driver Austin Dillon, who has made the playoffs four times in the last five years. “But I think as the season goes on, there will be some opportunit­ies for points.

“It always comes down to one or two positions, I feel like, when it comes to points.”

No one in the field has been better at Homestead than Hamlin. The Joe Gibbs Racing star has three wins (2009, ‘13, ‘20) at the track and 11 top-10 finishes in 16 starts. He led 137 of 267 laps last June en route to his latest victory.

He’s tied with Tony Stewart and Greg Biffle for the most Cup wins at the 1 -mile venue. Those intermedia­te tracks are the ones Hamlin and Harvick mostly dominated last year.

“We are about to get into a chunk of the season where you are going to start to see some of your normal winners in the bracket,” Hamlin said.

NASCAR’s much-hyped season, one that included significan­t schedule changes, is being showcased in its first three weeks. The Cup Series opened on a superspeed­way, then raced on a road course, and now heads to an intermedia­te track.

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