Kyle Busch beat Ryan Blaney in a new “drag race” style competition for the pole position in Sunday‘s much-anticipated NASCAR All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway.

For their work, Busch and Blaney will start from the front row of Sunday‘s $1 million-to-win NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

A traditional qualifying session decided which eight drivers advanced to the final round and then the cars were paired in an elimination bracket format. Each “race” included a four-tire pit stop and then a sprint off pit road for a single lap at speed — the idea to showcase the pit crews as well as the drivers.

Busch defeated defending All-Star winner Kyle Larson in his semi-final and Blaney beat William Byron — who posted the fastest qualifying time — in his semifinal to decide the final meeting.

“Any time you‘re able to showcase the pit crew‘s ability and their athleticism in this competition and qualifying format, I enjoy that,” said Busch, driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Camry.

“I think my most favorite part of the year is coming to the All-Star race, whether it‘s been Charlotte and coming down pit road and sliding into the box. Having those guys go over the wall certainly means a lot, especially the No. 18 bunch I‘ve had a lot of success with over the years.

“We‘ve always been a threat to be reckoned with when it comes to getting on the pole for the All-Star race.”

This is Busch‘s fourth pole position in a NASCAR All-Star race. He won the race in 2017. And with four NASCAR Cup Series wins — plus 10 Xfinity Series race wins and four Camping World Truck Series wins — at the Texas 1.5-miler, this is a place he feels confident.

Defending All-Star race winner Kyle Larson stalled in his semi-final duel against Busch — essentially guaranteeing Busch‘s advance to the final round. Larson managed a smile and shook his head acknowledging his mistake in qualifying.

“I feel good [about my chances in the race], I felt like my car was decent, there was room to improve it, but I feel we‘re in the ballpark to compete for the win,” Larson said, adding with a smile, “Gotta do a better job executing than I did just then [All-Star qualifying] and hopefully we‘ll have a good shot.

“I just stalled it,” he said of the miscue, adding. “I didn‘t want to spin my tires too bad and obviously got a little too greedy and just stalled it. Embarrassing.

“It‘s embarrassing, I‘m the only guy that stalled so pretty embarrassing.”

The race format has a new variation for 2022 – a four-stage race with lengths of 25-laps for Stage 1, Stage 2 and Stage 3, followed by a 50-lap Stage 4 finale to decide who gets the $1 million.

The Stage 1 winner will start first in the Stage 4 final run. The winner of Stage 2 will start second and the winner of Stage 3 will roll off third in the final stage. The best car in a newly-styled “pit stop competition” – held during the stage break between Stage 2 and Stage 3 — will start fourth in the final run to the big check.

Also new this year, if a caution does not “naturally” occur between laps 15-25 of the final stage then NASCAR will call an “All-Star competition caution” during that time.

Twenty drivers have already earned a position in the All-Star Race, including Kyle Busch, Blaney, Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Kevin Harvick, defending winner Larson, Brad Keselowski, Chase Elliott, Aric Almirola, Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe, A.J. Allmendinger, Martin Truex Jr., Christopher Bell, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Michael McDowell, Kurt Busch and Alex Bowman.

REDDICK WILL LEAD THE FIELD TO START THE NASCAR ALL-STAR OPEN

Tyler Reddick won the pole position for Sunday‘s All-Star Open race — completing a big day at Texas Motor Speedway that started with a victory in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race.

The Richard Childress Racing driver outran Trackhouse Racing‘s Daniel Suarez by a mere .012-second to set the front row. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Erik Jones and Chris Buescher rounded out the top five in qualifying among the 16-car field.

The race is set for 5:30 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) with the winner of each stage — 20-laps, 20-laps and 10-laps — advancing to the All-Star Race along with the winner of the Fan Vote, which will be announced following the Open race.

KANSAS WIN A MOMENTUM BUILDER FOR BUSCH

Last week‘s Kansas Speedway race winner Kurt Busch said that victory for the second year 23XI Racing Toyota team was absolutely crucial for the organization‘s  competitive morale. The veteran scored the first ever win in the team‘s first-year second car, the No. 45 Toyota, and was still smiling about it this weekend at Texas.

“A rush,” he said of the team‘s atmosphere, “The hauler right now with all their crew members being here and the pit crew guys, I mean it was straight-up, like a football locker room or a college football locker room of just the morale, the track talk, the fun and the excitement — a different swagger.

“You have to have that after a win. And then you have to compartmentalize it into what can we do on track today with the cool procedures for the All-Star race and then we go for the million bucks.”

Busch will be looking to add another NASCAR All-Star Race trophy to his case to join the one he brought home in 2010 (Charlotte).

CHASTAIN BEATING THE TEXAS HEAT

Ross Chastain confirmed that he received medical treatment after Friday night‘s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race — feeling dehydrated, he got two bags of IV fluids after the checkered flag. And, he says it was a lesson well-learned.

“Odd deal,” Chastain said. “I just didn‘t hydrate enough.”

Chastain finished 12th in the Camping World Truck Series race driving the No. 41 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet and joked about a potential way to avoid the dehydration problem in the future.

“Probably eat more watermelon, probably just eat more watermelon in general,” said Chastain, whose family are multi-generational Florida watermelon farmers.

“I know we joke about the watermelon, but had I eaten a little more of it, I probably wouldn‘t have had the problems I had in the truck.”

Interestingly, although the temperatures were in the 90s on Friday, a cold front moved through on Saturday, markedly chilling the air. It is only supposed to be in the low 70s when the NASCAR All-Star race begins Sunday night.

— NASCAR NewsWire —

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