NASCAR playoff standings 2019: Updated points for Cup chase after 1000Bulbs.com at Talladega

Arthur Weinstein

NASCAR playoff standings 2019: Updated points for Cup chase after 1000Bulbs.com at Talladega image

Everyone expected the "Big One" at Talladega Superspeedway to cause havoc for NASCAR's playoff drivers Monday afternoon.

Yet no one could have foreseen this much carnage … or this type of fantastic finish.

In the end, Ryan Blaney nipped Ryan Newman by mere inches at the finish line to claim his first victory of 2019 and the third win of his career.

The margin of victory, 7/1,000ths of a second, is the sixth-closest finish of all-time in NASCAR's top series.

While the victory clinches Blaney a spot in the Round of 8 in the NASCAR playoffs, other playoff drivers weren't so fortunate, as all 12 were involved in one or more multicar crashes or other mayhem in the 1000Bulbs.com 500.

William Byron won the first stage of the race Sunday before wet weather postponed the finish to Monday. 

Clint Bowyer won Stage 2 after he managed to avoid “the Big One” on lap 106 when Alex Bowman, who was running in second place, got turned around on the backstretch while trying to block a charging Joey Logano.

Playoff drivers Kurt Busch, Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson were also caught in the crash.

The yellow flag came out with 36 laps to go after Bowyer went for a solo spin off Turn 4 and needed a wrecker to help get his car unstuck from the steep banking. A few laps later, another big crash erupted when a chain-reaction pileup in the lower drafting line got Byron loose, and he turned into Logano, as the two collected several other cars. While Logano returned to the track, Byron was finished for the day.

With less than 10 laps remaining, Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski were involved in another big crash, which saw Brendan Gaughan go briefly airborne.

Blaney led the way on the restart with two laps remaining and held off the rest of the field as yet another multicar crash broke out on the final lap.

The NASCAR playoffs continue Oct. 20 at Kansas Speedway.

NASCAR playoff points standings 2019

Rank Driver Wins Points
No. 1Kyle Larson13,069
No. 2
Ryan Blaney13,056
No. 3
Denny Hamlin43,114
No. 4Martin Truex Jr.63,106
No. 5Kyle Busch43,099
No. 6Kevin Harvick33,094
No. 7Brad Keselowski33,078
No. 8Joey Logano23,076
No. 9Alex Bowman13,058
No. 10Chase Elliott33,054
No. 11Clint Bowyer03,052
No. 12William Byron03,049
No. 13Aric Almirola02,134
No. 14Ryan Newman02,120
No. 15Kurt Busch12,097
No. 16Erik Jones12,040
No. 17Jimmie Johnson0745
No. 18Daniel Suarez0744
No. 19Paul Menard0677
No. 20Chris Buescher0620
No. 21Ricky Stenhouse Jr.0598
No. 22Austin Dillon0596
No. 23Matt DiBenedetto0592
No. 24Ty Dillion0536
No. 25Daniel Hemric0441
No. 26Bubba Wallace0433
No. 27Michael McDowell0428
No. 28Ryan Preece0424
No. 29Corey LaJoie0364
No. 30Matt Tifft0340
No. 31David Ragan0338
No. 32Reed Sorenson0108
No. 33Quin Houff073
No. 34Jamie McMurray019
No. 35Austin Theriault015
No. 36Andy Seuss09
No. 37Stanton Barrett02
No. 38Casey Mears01

How the NASCAR playoffs work:

Sixteen NASCAR drivers qualified for the playoffs. Four were eliminated in the Sept. 29 race at Charlotte. Four more will be eliminated in the Oct. 20 race at Kansas, and four more will fall out at Phoenix on Nov. 10, leaving the final four drivers to compete straight up for for the NASCAR Cup title Nov. 17 at Homestead-Miami Speedway as the first of the four playoff drivers to cross the finish line is crowned the champion.

How drivers earn points:

– Win Stage 1 or Stage 2 in a race: 1 playoff point (point awarded per stage win)
– Win a race: 5 playoff points
– Win the regular-season championship: 15 playoff points

Second place in the final regular-season standings earns 10 playoff points, third place receives eight points, and the points awarded decline to one point for 10th (4th = 7 points, 5th = 6 points, etc.).

Championship-contending drivers can accumulate additional playoff points throughout the playoffs via stage and race wins and may use all the playoff points they earn, from both the regular season and the playoffs, to advance all the way up to the Championship 4.

Playoff points are added to a championship-contending driver’s reset points total at the start of every round of the playoffs until they are eliminated from championship contention.

At Homestead-Miami, playoff points are off the table and the Championship 4 drivers enter the “winner-take-all” race tied in the standings. 

Cup playoff information provided by NASCAR.

Arthur Weinstein