Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, June 20, 2026

NASCAR Kansas Speedway results: Martin Truex Jr. wins 2017 Go Bowling 400

Martin Truex Jr. passed Ryan Blaney on a restart with 19 laps remaining to win Saturday night.

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Go Bowling 400
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Go Bowling 400
Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images

Ryan Blaney appeared set to score his first career win, but Martin Truex Jr. was better over a sequence of late restarts to pick up the Go Bowling 400 victory Saturday night at Kansas Speedway, a race marred by a multi-car accident that sent Aric Almirola to the hospital.

The win was redemption for Truex, who dominated this race a year ago before a fluky parts failure during a late pit stop cost him the potential victory. He led a race-high 104 of a possible 267 laps Saturday night to take his second win of the 2017 Monster Energy Cup Series season.

“This team rocks, man, they’re so good,” Truex said. “We just stuck with it all night. We had an awesome race car. There’s times there we looked like we weren’t going to have a shot at it. We just kept fighting and made it happen.”

Brad Keselowski rallied from a loose wheel earlier in the race that dropped him two laps behind to finish second, followed by Blaney, Kevin Harvick, and Kyle Busch, the defending race winner.

Beginning in the second stage, Blaney, who started on the pole, took control of the race leading 83 laps in total. His Wood Brothers Racing Ford was particularly strong on short runs, an advantage on a night that featured 15 cautions, which tied the track record.

It was short run, however, where Truex made his winning pass. On a restart with 19 laps remaining, he executed a nifty three-wide maneuver to grab a lead he wouldn’t relinquish despite two additional cautions that gave Blaney opportunities to get back around.

“You do 10 restarts, eight of them you get right, two of them you screw up,” Truex said. “You just hope the ones you screw up aren’t for the win. Today, we were able to get those ones right when it mattered.”

Along with Danica Patrick and Joey Logano, Almirola was involved in a fiery crash that saw all three drivers sustain significant impacts. Both Patrick and Logano were evaluated by NASCAR’s medical team on-site and released from the infield care center, while Almirola was airlifted alert and awake to the University of Kansas Medical Center.

The crash began when a mechanical failure believed to be a broken right-front brake rotor caused Logano’s car to veer into Patrick’s No. 10 Ford, sending her head-on into the outside Turn 2 wall. Almirola was trailing the accident and appeared to lose control as he came upon the crash site, skidding into the cars of Patrick and Logano. That contact caused a fireball to engulf Patrick’s car, which quickly extinguished.

“Something broke on my car,” Logano said. “I noticed it as I was trying to go in. I tried to back it off but you’re going 215 [mph] and it’s hard to check up. The car just took a bit step sideways into the corner and I hooked Danica.”

Immediately Almirola dropped the window net signifying that he was conscious, but track workers needed to cut the roof off the No. 43 car to extract the 33-year-old Richard Petty Motorsports driver. He was then removed from the car on a backboard and taken to an awaiting helicopter.

“I hope Aric is alright,” Logano said. “That’s the last thing you want to see, a big hit like that for anyone. It’s unfortunate for everyone. Let’s hope that Aric is alright.”

See More:

More in NASCAR

NASCAR
Kyle Busch, NASCAR legend, dies at 41 after sudden illnessKyle Busch, NASCAR legend, dies at 41 after sudden illness
NASCAR

RIP Kyle Busch, 1985-2026.

By Mark Schofield
NBA
Michael Jordan’s NASCAR joy in Victory Lane is the most delightful sight in sportsMichael Jordan’s NASCAR joy in Victory Lane is the most delightful sight in sports
NBA

Michael Jordan’s NASCAR 3-peat is another milestone for the GOAT

By Ricky O'Donnell
NASCAR
LSU star provides a NASCAR crossover with women’s college basketball at DaytonaLSU star provides a NASCAR crossover with women’s college basketball at Daytona
NASCAR

Flau’Jae Johnson will wave the green flag at the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona.

By Mitchell Northam
NASCAR
This NASCAR mom can make history at Daytona’s Xfinity raceThis NASCAR mom can make history at Daytona’s Xfinity race
NASCAR

Natalie Decker returns to NASCAR at Daytona just six months after giving birth to her son.

By Mitchell Northam
NASCAR
How Dale Earnhardt’s iconic ‘Taz’ Looney Tunes paint scheme returned to the trackHow Dale Earnhardt’s iconic ‘Taz’ Looney Tunes paint scheme returned to the track
NASCAR

In the zMAX CARS Tour, the Taz car made its return to the track 25 years after its NASCAR debut in the Daytona 500.

By Mitchell Northam
NASCAR
After top 20 finish in Chicago, this woman will race in 3 more NASCAR Cup Series events in 2025After top 20 finish in Chicago, this woman will race in 3 more NASCAR Cup Series events in 2025
NASCAR

Legge, who has raced in the Indy 500 four times, will drive the No. 78 Chevrolet in two races at the Brickyard later this month.

By Mitchell Northam