Alex Bowman earned headlines last weekend for his determined work behind the wheel of his No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, rallying to a dramatic runner-up finish at the Charlotte ROVAL to earn a spot in the second round of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoffs.

Oct 4, 2019; Dover, DE, USA; NASCAR Cup Series driver Alex Bowman walks through the garage during practice for the Drydene 400 at Dover International Speedway. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O'Haren-USA TODAY Sports

The next phase of the NASCAR postseason begins Sunday with the Drydene 400 at Dover International Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Bowman is also getting plenty of attention for an incident on pit road after the race, and he showed up at Dover fully expecting questions about it.

On Sunday, an exhausted Bowman climbed out of his car at the Charlotte ROVAL and sat on the ground leaning against the car having been ill much of the week. While a medical worker and members of his team kneeled down by him to see how he was feeling, Cup driver Bubba Wallace approached. The two drivers exchanged words, and Wallace splashed his drink at Bowman as he walked away.

Wallace was angry with the way Bowman raced him. And vice versa.

“I’m just focused on running well this weekend,” Bowman said Friday. “I’m focused on my race car, trying to give the best feedback I can throughout practice and being strong today and Sunday.”

When asked if he expected any on-track retaliation from Wallace, Bowman deferred.

“I think that’s more of a question for those guys than it is for me,” he said. “All I can do is go out there and do my job. I don’t know, you’ll have to ask them.”

Bowman said he and Wallace have not spoken since their heated discussion on pit road at Charlotte.

“I feel like he said what he had to say after the race,” Bowman said. “I’ve just been kind of moving forward since then. I don’t think we need to talk before Sunday. I think it is what it is.”

Certainly for Bowman, it has been a positive start to the Dover weekend. He was fifth fastest in the opening practice.

REDDICK READY TO RISE IN SERIES RANKS

After announcing big career news this week that he would be moving up into the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series ranks beginning in 2020, Xfinity Series championship contender Tyler Reddick addressed the media and offered his thoughts on the significant move in his career.

Reddick is the defending Xfinity Series champion, earning the title last year with JR Motorsports before moving to Richard Childress Racing this year. And Reddick has not slowed down. He won the regular-season championship and is ranked third in the playoffs coming to Saturday’s Use Your Melon Drive Sober 200 (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) -- the final race of Round 1 of the playoffs.

“Richard (Childress) has been pretty open with everyone when asked if he wanted to put me in a Cup car,” Reddick said Friday. “I think he realized if I wasn’t going to be able to race for him in the Cup Series I was probably going to be picked up by someone else. They really wanted me to stay.”

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Reddick will be replacing Daniel Hemric in the No. 8 RCR Chevrolet next season. Hemric is a longtime RCR driver who started with the team driving in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series before moving into the Xfinity Series for two years and finally up to the Cup ranks. Hemric actually leads the Cup Sunoco Rookie of the Year standings but has only a pair of top-10 finishes in his first full Cup season.

Reddick has five Xfinity victories this year and a series-best 21 top-5 and 24 top-10 finishes. He won at Las Vegas three weeks ago and was runner-up at the Charlotte ROVAL playoff race last week.

ELLIOTT ENTERS ROUND 2 OF PLAYOFFS WITH STRONG STATISTICAL OUTLOOK

On paper, Chase Elliott comes to Dover International Speedway with all the momentum a driver could want. He won last week at the Charlotte ROVAL, is the defending winner of the Drydene 400, won at next week’s venue, Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in May and is the defending race winner at the following track, Kansas Speedway.

Yet, the humble, always even demeanor Elliott insists he is not necessarily an overwhelming favorite in this playoff round despite his quite literal track record.

“Past success doesn’t guarantee a good run here Sunday,” Elliott said, allowing a small smile. “If it did, we wouldn’t put any effort in or wouldn’t try, it would just be guaranteed so we wouldn’t come.”

The second-generation star and the sport’s newest “Most Popular Driver” has long adopted the mantra of taking it a “race at a time.” But when you’ve been as good as his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team has been, optimism seems a given.

“It’s just part of racing,” he said, adding, “I think we just have to keep pushing and this round definitely isn’t going to be an easy round. I think it’s going to be tough. I think the caliber of cars left, there are some really strong teams in that 12, so I don’t expect this to be easy, and we are certainly going to treat it that way.”

Elliott, however, has been one of the best at Dover in recent years. He has six top-5 finishes in seven starts there, including the playoff win last year and back-to-back top-3 finishes in the two Dover races his rookie year. He won the pole position and started fifth at the track this May.

GOOD NEWS AND A GOOD PLAN

Fan favorite Corey LaJoie shared some good news Friday: He and his wife, Kelly, are expecting their first child due next spring. The couple married New Year’s Eve 2018.

And the good vibes may well continue on-track as well. The driver of the No. 32 Go Fas Racing Ford is hopeful the small team can have a good run in Sunday’s race. He won a NASCAR K&N Series race at Dover in 2012. More so, LaJoie, son of former Xfinity Series champion Randy LaJoie, is excited about next week’s stop at Talladega, Ala., where he feels his team has a better shot at a good outing.

“We have a pretty solid average finish over the three speedway races this year, and our game plan is to not get up there and race until right there at the end because normally we have just enough speed to get right into the middle of a crash,” LaJoie said.

“We will let everybody crash first because it isn’t a matter of if, it is a matter of when. We will stay within arm’s distance, not make mistakes on and off pit road and be there at the end. If there are 15 cars left and we are in a decent spot, then you get up there and race.”

MONSTER ENERGY SERIES PRACTICE RECAP

Team Penske driver Joey Logano and Chip Ganassi Racing’s Kyle Larson led the first and final practice sessions, respectively, on Friday at Dover, Del.

Logano topped opening practice for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, posting a fast lap of 163.222 mph around the high-banked Dover one-miler. His No. 22 Ford was a full 1 mph faster than the field in that session. Hendrick Motorsports driver -- and first-year playoff driver -- William Byron was second best with a lap of 162.133 mph in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Hendrick Motorsports’ Jimmie Johnson, an 11-time Dover winner, was third quickest. He turned in his fast lap only hours after his car sponsor, Ally, announced it was extending its deal with Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 48 Chevrolet team through 2023.

Larson’s No. 42 CGR Chevrolet was quickest in final practice with a best lap of 162.705 mph -- significantly faster than Martin Truex Jr. (161.377 mph) who won the Cup race at Dover this May. Kevin Harvick, Brad Keselowski and defending race winner Chase Elliott rounded out the top five in Friday’s final practice session.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver Harvick, a two-time Dover winner, turned in the quickest 10-lap average between both sessions.

XFINITY SERIES OPENING PRACTICE RECAP

Playoff driver Chase Briscoe led opening practice at Dover with a speed of 152.394 mph in the No. 98 Stewart-Haas Racing with Biagi-DenBeste Ford.

Eight drivers among the playoff mix turned in top-10 practice runs in the first session. Joining Briscoe were Christopher Bell -- a two-time defending Dover race winner -- and regular-season champion Tyler Reddick, six-race winner Cole Custer and veteran Justin Allgaier, who rounded out the top five. Series rookie Noah Gragson was seventh fastest.

The top eight of the current 12 playoff drivers will remain championship-eligible following Saturday’s race. Brandon Jones and John Hunter Nemechek, who are tied in ninth place in the standings, were ninth and 10th, respectively, in the first session. Eighth-place Michael Annett, who is on the playoff bubble, was 14th.

--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.