Elliott Ready To Get Back On Track At Kansas

Story By: NASCAR – KANSAS CITY, KS – Most drivers would be happy to be fourth in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series point standings.

Chase Elliott, a 21-year-old rising star, is not one of those drivers.

After sitting second in the standings for five consecutive weeks, Chase Elliott has dropped to fourth in the rankings after poor finishes at Richmond (24th) and Talladega (30th).

“I feel like over the past few weeks we really haven’t performed up to our potential,” Elliott said. “As a group, I think anybody in our group would feel the same way. We’ve had some fast cars at times. But, we definitely need to execute races; even on the days that your car is not driving like you want it to.”

The No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports driver hopes that execution happens Saturday in the Go Bowling 400 at Kansas Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FS1) – the 11th race of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.

In two starts at Kansas – both in his 2016 rookie season – Elliott owns finishes of ninth and 31st. He’s performed well in the three previous races at intermediate tracks this season, placing fifth at Kansas, third at Las Vegas and ninth at Texas.

Elliott, the 2014 NASCAR XFINITY Series champion, is still searching for his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win. On the season he has three top-five and six top-10 finishes as well as an average showing of 11.7.

“That execution and doing everything correctly on pit road, restarts, giving the right information, can turn a bad day into a pretty good day,” Elliott said. “So, that’s what we need to do. And we’ll try to make that happen.”

Christopher Bell hopes to continue early-season success at Kansas

Early-season outcomes show Christopher Bell has made the sophomore jump in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

After finishing third in the championship standings as a rookie last year, Bell has started the 2017 campaign with an eighth-place showing (Daytona), a win (Atlanta) and a third-place finish (Martinsville) in the first three races. He paces the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series with 201 laps led – 87 more than next-best driver Johnny Sauter.

Bell, second in the standings, trails Sauter by four points, but leads the series with seven playoff points via his two stage wins and one race victory.

He’ll attempt to continue his hot start in Friday’s Toyota Tundra 250 at Kansas Speedway (8:30 p.m. ET on FS1) – a 1.5-mile track where he finished fourth last year.

“Looking back at last year, Kansas was one of my favorite races, so I’m excited to go back there and compete for a win,” Bell said. “After being so fast earlier this year at Atlanta, I can’t wait to get to Kansas and race another mile-and-a-half track.”