South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Blaney and Truex eyeing playoff spot

- By Hank Kurz Jr.

RICHMOND, Va. — Ryan Blaney and Martin Truex Jr. are the favorites as they battle for position to make NASCAR’s playoffs, but in a season when there have already been 15 race winners, they are far from the lone contenders.

Blaney is second in points, just 19 points ahead of fourthplac­e Truex, but neither has won a race — the virtual automatic ticket to a spot in the postseason. Three races remain before the 16-driver field is set, starting with Sunday afternoon at Richmond Raceway. Two more unique winners could leave a race winner out of the field for the first time under the playoff format.

Other non-winners include 2012 series champion Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace, last weekend’s runner-up at Michigan, and 14th-place Erik Jones. After Richmond, the series moves to the road course at Watkins Glen and finishes the regular season at the superspeed­way that is Daytona.

Truex appears to have an edge on Richmond’s 0.75-mile oval, having won three of the last six races here, but Blaney led 128 laps in the spring and has two consecutiv­e top-10 finishes on the D-shaped layout.

Truex doesn’t plan to change anything in his approach. “We go race the best we know how. And, you know, hopefully you put ourselves in a position to win and do all the right things,” he said. “It’d be disappoint­ing with the season we’ve had to not make it.”

Blaney also declined to lament the fairness of the playoff format and said he hopes to continue the improvemen­ts he’s made in his last two races here.

“I was proud of the progress we made here in the spring, the progress we continue to make at this racetrack, and I think we’ve built on it even more. Hopefully it shows, you know, in the race.”

Truex and Baney both reached the second round of qualifying, but Kyle Larson won the pole with a lap at

117.177 mph. Trux will start sixth, Blaney 10th.

The race winner most in danger of being bumped is Kurt Busch, who will miss his fourth consecutiv­e race because of a concussion sustained in qualifying at Pocono on July

23. Busch has dropped from 14th to 20th while sidelined. The 15 winners include five first-timers, and Kevin Harvick said Saturday that the win-and-you’re-in idea makes it exciting for race winners, but the notion that Blaney or Truex could be knocked out of the playoffs while near the top of the point standings is problemati­c.

“I think there has to be more weight put on all 26 weeks and the things that you do from a fairness to a team standpoint,” he said,

Harvick ended a 65-race winless drought last week at Michigan.

Struggling champ

Truex (2017) and possibly Kurt Busch (2004) aren’t the only former champions who could miss the playoffs.

Keselowski has struggled since leaving Team Penske aftre last season to take an ownership role with Jack Roush and RFK Racing. He’s 28th in points with just three top-10 finishes. His standing includes a 100-point penalty he incurred in March for modifying a single-source part on the Next Gen car.

KBM future

Kyle Busch still doesn’t have a contract with Joe Gibbs Racing for next season, but the two-time series champion says while his immediate future is up in the air, he’s got a much better handle on his long-term plans.

“I would like it to not have to go through this again,” Busch said of contract negotiatio­ns. “I’ve got six, seven, maybe eight more years. If I play all this out perfectly, (son) Brexton and I will share a truck when he turns 16 years old, when he’s 16 and 17. And then it’s his when he’s 18 and I’m done, I’m out.”

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? Ryan Blaney prepares for practice and qualifying for Sunday’s race on Saturday at Richmond Racewayin Richmond, Va.
STEVE HELBER/AP Ryan Blaney prepares for practice and qualifying for Sunday’s race on Saturday at Richmond Racewayin Richmond, Va.

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