NASCAR lineup at Texas: Starting order, pole for Sunday's playoff race without qualifying

Tom Gatto

NASCAR lineup at Texas: Starting order, pole for Sunday's playoff race without qualifying image

The starting lineup for Sunday's NASCAR Cup Series playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway was set by applying the statistical formula NASCAR is using for the majority of Cup races in 2021.

Drivers' starting positions for the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500, the first race in the Round of 8 and the seventh race of the 2021 Cup Series playoffs (2 p.m. ET; NBC, TSN, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), were based on four factors:

  • Driver's finishing position from the previous race (25 percent)
  • Car owner's finishing position from the previous race (25 percent)
  • Team owner points ranking (35 percent)
  • Fastest lap from the previous race (15 percent)

NASCAR is conducting qualifying for just eight of the 36 Cup Series points-paying races in the 2021 season. Seven of those races have already been run; the one remaining race with qualifying is the season-ending Championship 4 race at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 7. NASCAR cut back on qualifying to limit time spent at the track and reduce costs amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Below is the starting lineup, which was set without qualifying, for Sunday's NASCAR Cup Series playoff race on Texas Motor Speedway's 1.5-mile oval.

MORE: Watch Sunday's NASCAR race live with fuboTV (free 7-day trial)

Who won the pole for the NASCAR race at Texas?

Kyle Larson was awarded the pole for Sunday's playoff race based on NASCAR's formula. The Hendrick Motorsports driver is coming off a win in the Round of 12 elimination race on Charlotte Motor Speedway's Roval on Oct. 10. The victory was his seventh of the season and his second of the playoffs.

'MERRY OFFSEASON': Harvick wrecks Elliott, then crashes out of playoffs

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin will join Larson on the front row. Hamlin and Larson have battled for the series points lead most of the season. Larson enters the Round of 8 with a 35-point advantage over second-place driver Hamlin.   

NASCAR Cup playoff standings

The Round of 8 field was set last weekend with the Bank of America ROVAL 400 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Kyle Larson exited that race with the win and a 42-point lead over Kyle Busch, the first driver below the cut line for the season-ending Championship 4 race.

The field is bunched tightly after Larson; the second- through sixth-place drivers are separated by just eight points. That closeness makes winning one of the next three races vitally important. A playoff driver who wins a race in the Round of 8 automatically qualifies for the Championship 4 race on Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway.

"You've got to be really good. You've got to do a good job every lap of every race. You've got to get your stage points," Larson said of the challenge of being the front-runner. "You can't let your guard down and lose ground on guys that are gaining points on you. Yes, it's nice to have the (65) bonus points that we have but I'm hoping we don't have to lean on them like we did at Talladega, or going into (Charlotte)."

Larson finished 37th at Talladega after wrecking. That result cost him more than half his lead over the first driver below the cut line, which was Kevin Harvick for the Charlotte race.

Five past Cup Series champions are in this year's final eight: Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Chase Elliott, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski.

Pos. Driver Points
1Kyle Larson4065
2Denny Hamlin4030
3Martin Truex Jr.4029
4Ryan Blaney4024
5Kyle Busch4023
6Chase Elliott4022
7Joey Logano4013
8Brad Keselowski4008

NASCAR starting lineup at Texas

NASCAR used a mathematical formula to set the starting lineup for Sunday's playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway, the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500. Thirty-nine cars were entered for the race, which is one short of a full field. Playoff drivers are denoted by a "P" next to their names. 

Per NASCAR's playoff rules, the top eight spots in the field went to the eight remaining playoff drivers, but the starting order was based on the mathematical formula NASCAR has used for the majority of its races this season.

Start pos.DriverCar No.Team
1P-Kyle Larson5Hendrick Motorsports
2P-Denny Hamlin11Joe Gibbs Racing
3P-Kyle Busch18Joe Gibbs Racing
4P-Ryan Blaney12Team Penske
5P-Joey Logano22Team Penske
6P-Chase Elliott9Hendrick Motorsports
7P-Brad Keselowski2Team Penske
8P-Martin Truex Jr.19Joe Gibbs Racing
9Tyler Reddick8Richard Childress Racing
10Chris Buescher17Roush Fenway Racing
11Christopher Bell20Joe Gibbs Racing
12William Byron24Hendrick Motorsports
13Matt DiBenedetto21Wood Brothers Racing
14Alex Bowman48Hendrick Motorsports
15Austin Dillon3Richard Childress Racing
16Michael McDowell34Front Row Motorsports
17Kurt Busch1Chip Ganassi Racing
18Bubba Wallace2323XI Racing
19Daniel Suarez99TrackHouse Racing
20Cole Custer41Stewart-Haas Racing
21Erik Jones43Richard Petty Motorsports
22Aric Almirola10Stewart-Haas Racing
23Ryan Preece37JTG Daugherty Racing
24Kevin Harvick4Stewart-Haas Racing
25Ross Chastain42Chip Ganassi Racing
26Chase Briscoe14Stewart-Haas Racing
27Ricky Stenhouse Jr.47JTG Daugherty Racing
28Anthony Alfredo38Front Row Motorsports
29Corey LaJoie7Spire Motorsports
30Quin Houff00StarCom Racing
31Ryan Newman6Roush Fenway Racing
32Justin Haley77Spire Motorsports
33Josh Bilicki52Rick Ware Racing
34Cody Ware51Petty Ware Racing
35BJ McLeod78Live Fast Motorsports
36Garrett Smithley15Rick Ware Racing
37Joey Gase53Rick Ware Racing
38David Starr66Motorsports Business Management
39Timmy Hill13Motorsports Business Management

Tom Gatto

Tom Gatto joined The Sporting News as a senior editor in 2000 after 12 years at The Herald-News in Passaic, N.J., where he served in a variety of roles including sports editor, and a brief spell at APBNews.com in New York, where he worked as a syndication editor. He is a 1986 graduate of the University of South Carolina.