Kansas Speedway Set to Follow Bristol as NASCAR Shifts to High-Speed Midwest Battleground

After a chaotic short-track showdown at Bristol Motor Speedway, NASCAR now heads west to the wide, fast 1.5-mile oval of Kansas Speedway for a pivotal stop on the 2026 Cup Series calendar.

The weekend features all three national series and serves as a key momentum point early in the spring stretch, with playoff implications still months away but performance trends already forming.

NASCAR Cup Series: AdventHealth 400 (Sunday, April 19)

The headline event is the AdventHealth 400, scheduled for Sunday at 2 p.m. ET (1 p.m. local time).

TV: FOX

Radio: MRN

Race distance: 267 miles (Stage format: 80 / 165 / 267 laps)

Kansas typically delivers high tire falloff, multiple groove racing and long-run strategy battles — a stark contrast from Bristol’s tight concrete chaos. Track position still matters, but Kansas often rewards cars that can manage tires and sustain speed over extended green-flag runs.

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Kansas Lottery 300 (Saturday, April 18)

Saturday features the companion national series race:

Kansas Lottery 300

Start time: 6 p.m. CT

Part of a doubleheader weekend that also includes ARCA action earlier in the day

The combination of ARCA and O’Reilly Series racing gives fans a full Saturday slate before Cup teams take center stage on Sunday.

ARCA Menards Series: Tide 150 (Saturday, April 18)

The weekend begins with the ARCA Menards Series in the Tide 150:

Start time: 11:30 a.m. CT

It opens race weekend with developing talent on a track that often produces clean but fast early racing before the heavier Cup machinery takes over later in the weekend.

Full Cup Weekend Flow

Saturday: ARCA + O’Reilly Auto Parts Series doubleheader

Sunday: Cup Series race at 2 p.m. ET on FOX

Track activity: Full fan access, pre-race experiences and camping operations all active throughout the weekend

Kansas Speedway promotes a full “race weekend experience,” with camping, pit-road access packages and premium hospitality options available throughout the event.

Why Kansas matters after Bristol

The contrast couldn’t be sharper.

Bristol demanded survival in tight quarters. Kansas demands speed, balance and tire management at 190 mph.

It’s also one of the most important intermediate tracks on the schedule — a frequent playoff venue and a key indicator of which teams truly have championship-level 1.5-mile programs.

Teams that struggled to pass at Bristol now get a reset. Teams with raw speed but messy execution get a second chance.