welcome race fans to krazyaboutracing.com we are now in our 23RD year of being the leader in motorsports coverage on the world wide web


(HOME) (LOCAL RACING)  (DRIVER BIO PAGE)  (TRACK BIO PAGE) (PREVIOUS NEWS)  (PREVIOUS RACING)   (SITE NEWS)  (MEET THE STAFF)   (HALL OF FAME)  (MONTHLY NEWSLETTER)  (THE OLD'N DAYS)  (SPECIAL EVENTS)  (MONTHLY INSTALLMENTS)  (ANNUAL AWARDS)  (CONTACT US)   (DRIVER & TEAM RELEASES) (LOCAL TRACK NEWS) (MULTIMEDIA)


 for more coverage on the series click on the series lOgo


   nascar cup series


NASCAR cup series

    

www.nascar.com

About NASCARCelebrating its 75th Anniversary in 2023, the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series™, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour™), one local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series™) and three international series (NASCAR Pinty’s Series™, NASCAR Mexico Series™, NASCAR Whelen Euro Series™). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).


Kyle Larson dominates in emotional NASCAR Cup Series victory at Bristol Motor Speedway

 

Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

April 13, 2025

 

BRISTOL, Tenn.— He did it for Jon.

 

For the second straight day at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kyle Larson dominated a NASCAR race and dedicated the victory to friend and PR representative Jon Edwards, who passed away suddenly during the week leading up to the race weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway.

 

On Sunday, Larson won the Food City 500 NASCAR Cup Series race in overwhelming fashion, leading 411 of 500 laps and sweeping both stages.

 

The victory was Larson’s second of the season, his second straight at the 0.533-mile high-banked short track and the 31st of his career, and it came one day after the driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet ran away with the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Thunder Valley.

 

“This one’s definitely for Jon,” said Larson, who finished second in Friday night’s NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, one spot short of sweeping the weekend. “He’s just a great guy. Successful weekend here. Wish he was going to be here with us to celebrate, but I know he’s celebrating with us in spirit.

 

“Just a flawless race once again here at Bristol for the 5 team. Really, really good car. That was a lot of fun.”

 

Larson, who brushed the outside wall at the apex of Turns 1 and 2 with five laps left—without consequence—finished 2.250 seconds in front of Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin, who fell one spot short of a third straight Cup victory. Hamlin’s teammate, Ty Gibbs, was 6.679 seconds back in third in a race that ran without caution for the final 235 laps.

 

“However many laps of green we ran there was a lot of fun,” Larson said. “I was pretty comfortable with things, and then Denny came on really strong there before the pit cycle and kind of kept the pressure on from there.”

 

After the final pit stops, Hamlin could close within a second of Larson in traffic but never threatened to take the lead.

 

“You have to give that team their due—just a dominant performance,” Hamlin said. “It looked like a pretty flawless day for them. It looked pretty easy. It was all I had to try to keep up there. I’m glad we were able to give him a little bit of a run with our Progressive Toyota.

 

“But this weekend, we are all thinking about Jon Edwards’ family, (racing journalist) Al Pearce, (team owner) Shige Hattori (all of whom passed away within the last eight days). We’ve lost a lot of great people in our sport over the last week, so our thoughts are with them.”

 

“Wish we could have got one more spot, but I just wanted to keep him honest there at the end. That was all I was trying to do, but he was a little too much to handle.”

 

Hamlin and Larson have finished 1-2 on seven occasions. Sunday’s race was the first of the seven times Larson has come out on top.

 

Contrary to strong indications from Saturday’s practice, Bristol’s concrete surface rubbered in, and tire wear was not the factor that most teams and drivers anticipated. Ryan Blaney, for instance, ran 175 laps on one set of tires before pitting on Lap 440.

 

Chase Briscoe came home fourth, as JGR claimed the three positions behind Larson. Blaney ran long during the final green-flag run, led 48 laps after Larson pitted on Lap 390 for tires and fuel and worked his way back to fifth at the end.

 

Pole winner Alex Bowman led the first 39 laps before Larson grabbed the top spot for the first time. Larson went to win the first stage over Hamlin and the second over Bowman, who later fell out of the race when his engine expired.

 

The Stage 2 victory was the 66th of Larson’s career, tying him with Martin Truex Jr for the most since stage racing was introduced in 2017.

 

William Byron charged forward to a sixth-place finish after starting 26th. Ross Chastain ran seventh, followed by Christopher Bell and AJ Allmendinger, the last driver on the lead lap. Austin Dillon was 10th, the first driver one lap down.

 

--30--

 

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race - Food City 500

Bristol Motor Speedway

Bristol, Tennessee

Sunday, April 13, 2025

 

          1. (3)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 500.

          2. (4)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 500.

          3. (6)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 500.

          4. (14)  Chase Briscoe, Toyota, 500.

          5. (5)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 500.

          6. (26)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 500.

          7. (35)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 500.

          8. (7)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 500.

          9. (8)  AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 500.

          10. (17)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 499.

          11. (9)  Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet, 499.

          12. (11)  Josh Berry, Ford, 499.

          13. (10)  Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 499.

          14. (15)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 499.

          15. (20)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 499.

          16. (16)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 498.

          17. (21)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 498.

          18. (27)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 498.

          19. (22)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 498.

          20. (29)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 498.

          21. (32)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 498.

          22. (2)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 498.

          23. (31)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 498.

          24. (38)  Joey Logano, Ford, 497.

          25. (24)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 497.

          26. (28)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 497.

          27. (18)  Zane Smith, Ford, 497.

          28. (25)  Riley Herbst #, Toyota, 496.

          29. (33)  Cole Custer, Ford, 495.

          30. (13)  Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 495.

          31. (19)  Jesse Love(i), Chevrolet, 495.

          32. (12)  Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 494.

          33. (23)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 494.

          34. (37)  Corey LaJoie, Ford, 494.

          35. (30)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 493.

          36. (34)  Cody Ware, Ford, 493.

          37. (1)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, Engine, 343.

          38. (36)  Shane Van Gisbergen #, Chevrolet, Suspension, 208.

          39. (39)  Josh Bilicki(i), Ford, Electrical, 193.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  100.746 mph.

Time of Race:  2 Hrs, 38 Mins, 43 Secs. Margin of Victory:  2.250 Seconds.

Caution Flags:  3 for 40 laps.

Lead Changes:  4 among 4 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   A. Bowman 1-39;K. Larson 40-389;C. Hocevar 390-391;R. Blaney 392-439;K. Larson 440-500.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  Kyle Larson 2 times for 411 laps; Ryan Blaney 1 time for 48 laps; Alex Bowman 1 time for 39 laps; Carson Hocevar 1 time for 2 laps.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 5,11,7,48,77,20,12,47,54,16

Stage #2 Top Ten: 5,48,20,77,11,7,54,12,19,45

 


 

Lightning-fast stop at Darlington nets Denny Hamlin second-consecutive victory

Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

April 6, 2025

 

DARLINGTON, S.C. – A perfectly-executed overtime restart by Denny Hamlin following a clutch final pit stop by his Joe Gibbs Racing crew provided exactly the advantage the veteran needed to claim the trophy in Sunday’s Goodyear 400 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway.

 

Hamlin took the race lead out of the pits during the final late race caution then bested the field on the ensuing restart, pulling his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota out front and ultimately to a .597-second victory over the day’s most dominant driver, Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron.

 

It’s the second-consecutive victory for Hamlin, who won last week at Martinsville, Va. and marks the first time he’s won back-to-back races since 2012 when he won at Bristol, Tenn. then Atlanta the following week.

 

All smiles as he climbed out the car, Hamlin gave all the credit to his pit crew. He was third place at the time of the final caution – the yellow coming out for Byron’s Hendrick teammate Kyle Larson’s spin. The leaders seized the chance to pit for fresh tires in anticipation of the overtime restart and Hamlin’s crew got him out of the pits first - ahead of 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick and Byron.

 

A perfect launch on the ensuing green flag gave Hamlin the victory over Byron, who led a race best 243 of the 297 laps. It is Hamlin’s 56th career win, breaking a tie with NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace for 11th place on NASCAR’s all-time wins list.

 

“There’s two people I really love right now, my pit crew and Kyle Larson,’’ the 44-year-old Virginian Hamlin said with a grin. “Had a little assist there, so thank you.

 

“The pit crew just did an amazing job. They won it last week [at Martinsville]. They won it this week. It’s all about them.’’

 

It was obviously a tough ending to a career day for Byron, who rallied to the runner-up finish on the final restart but had absolutely dominated the early race, leading the opening 243 laps and claiming both Stage 1 and Stage 2 victories. It was the most laps Byron has ever led in a single race.

 

“First off, just really proud of my team to bring that level of effort and preparation and have a car like that and us execute like that, it was looking like we were going to have a perfect race and we were going to lead every lap,’’ the 2025 DAYTONA 500 winner Byron said.

 

“So, I was really proud of that. Those guys could just be aggressive on the other side of the green flag cycle and we just lost control and once we lost control it was too late to get back up there.

 

“It sucks and I’m sure it will sting tonight, but there are still a lot of positives. It just stings in the moment for sure.’’

 

Hamlin’s JGR teammate Christopher Bell finished third in the No. 20 Toyota after an amazing rally forward from a 20th place starting position. Reddick finished fourth in the 23XI Racing Toyota, co-owned by Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan.

 

Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney finished fifth. It is the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion’s first top-five at the 1.366-mile historic track, but the result still stings as Blaney had just taken the race lead moments before the final caution came out with only three laps of regulation remaining.

 

“Oh no,’’ Blaney conceded of his thoughts when the yellow flag flew.

 

“I thought we had the race won. I don’t really know I’ll have to watch a replay and see how the yellow came out and watch it back. But we did a great job and great strategy call of running long.

 

“Great call and just really fast but never got to really control the race,’’ he added ... I feel like nothing really went our way. Pit road we’ve got to work on a little bit. Caution coming out during the cycle set us way back and I feel like we kept making up spots. Really proud of the 12 folks for giving me a fast car. Just wasn’t meant to be. I really would have liked to have won here. That would have been really neat. Proud of the effort and we’ll keep plugging along.’’

 

Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher finished sixth, followed by Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain, Hendrick’s Chase Elliott, JGR’s Ty Gibbs and Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch. It was a season-best effort for Gibbs.

 

Byron’s runner-up showing keeps him in the NASCAR Cup Series championship lead now by 49 points over Hamlin and 52 points over Bell. It’s a different look atop the standings, where all four Hendrick Motorsports cars were ranked among the top five.

 

Hendrick’s Chase Elliott finished eighth Sunday and is now fourth in the standings, 59 points back. Larson dropped to sixth place after finishing 37th of the 38 cars Sunday. Bowman is now ranked 10th with a 35th place showing at Darlington.

 

The NASCAR Cup Series moves to the famed Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway high banks next weekend for Sunday’s Food City 500 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Hamlin is the defending winner.

 

--30--

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race - Goodyear 400

Darlington Raceway

Darlington, South Carolina

Sunday, April 6, 2025

 

                  1. (3)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 297.

                  2. (1)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 297.

                  3. (17)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 297.

                  4. (7)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 297.

                  5. (9)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 297.

                  6. (14)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 297.

                  7. (25)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 297.

                  8. (15)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 297.

                  9. (11)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 297.

                  10. (8)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 297.

                  11. (6)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 297.

                  12. (16)  Zane Smith, Ford, 297.

                  13. (18)  Joey Logano, Ford, 297.

                  14. (12)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 297.

                  15. (30)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 297.

                  16. (29)  Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 297.

                  17. (34)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 297.

                  18. (22)  AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 297.

                  19. (26)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 297.

                  20. (36)  Shane Van Gisbergen #, Chevrolet, 297.

                  21. (5)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 297.

                  22. (31)  Cole Custer, Ford, 297.

                  23. (23)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 297.

                  24. (21)  Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 297.

                  25. (28)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 297.

                  26. (2)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 297.

                  27. (35)  Cody Ware, Ford, 297.

                  28. (4)  Chase Briscoe, Toyota, 297.

                  29. (10)  Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 297.

                  30. (27)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 297.

                  31. (37)  Austin Hill(i), Chevrolet, 296.

                  32. (13)  Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet, 296.

                  33. (20)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 295.

                  34. (32)  Riley Herbst #, Toyota, 295.

                  35. (33)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 280.

                  36. (24)  Josh Berry, Ford, Accident, 194.

                  37. (19)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, Suspension, 122.

                  38. (38)  JJ Yeley, Chevrolet, Brakes, 30.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  120.965 mph.

Time of Race:  3 Hrs, 21 Mins, 14 Secs. Margin of Victory:  .597 Seconds.

Caution Flags:  8 for 45 laps.

Lead Changes:  4 among 4 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   W. Byron 1-243;D. Hamlin 244-247;T. Reddick 248-289;R. Blaney 290-291;D. Hamlin 292-297.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  William Byron 1 time for 243 laps; Tyler Reddick 1 time for 42 laps; Denny Hamlin 2 times for 10 laps; Ryan Blaney 1 time for 2 laps.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 24,23,60,17,45,6,12,2,38,16

Stage #2 Top Ten: 24,22,11,12,21,20,54,10,45,48

 


 

Byron sets blazing pace to win the pole for Darlington

 James Gilbert/Getty Images

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

DARLINGTON, S.C. – Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron won pole position for Sunday’s Goodyear 400 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) – yet another supreme performance for his NASCAR Cup Series championship-leading No. 24 team.

 

Byron’s lap of 170.904 mph around the iconic 1.366-mile oval set fast lap early in  Busch Light Pole Qualifying Saturday afternoon and set up a front row that will also include Ryan Preece in the No. 60 Roush Fenway Keselowski Ford – Preece’s best start since winning his only career pole position at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway in Spring, 2023.

 

It's the 15th pole position of the 27-year old Byron’s eight-year career – second of the season (also Phoenix in March) and second at the notoriously tough Darlington track.

 

“I felt good about it today, felt like we had a good plan going into practice and that we are always strong here,’’ said this year’s Daytona 500 winner Byron, who won at Darlington in 2023 and said it may well be his “best track.”

 

“Tried to find a decent balance there, worked on it and got better and finished practice pretty strong so I felt like I had some confidence going into practice. Was just nervous going early. Having an earlier draw was not ideal, but it seemed like the track temp was going up so it wasn’t the worst thing. … Proud of our team, we had a really good week of prep.’’

 

Although Chevy and Ford split the front row. Toyotas filled out the rest of the top-five on the grid. Last week’s Martinsville winner Denny Hamlin – Darlington’s winningest active driver (four wins) – was third fastest in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. His teammate, Daytona 500 polesitter Chase Briscoe was fourth quickest in the No. 19 JGR Toyota followed by 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace, who will roll off fifth in the No. 23 Toyota that Hamlin co-owns.

 

Austin Cindric will start sixth in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford, followed by 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick (Toyota), Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch (Chevrolet), Penske’s Ryan Blaney (Ford) and Spire Motorsports’ Michael McDowell (Chevrolet).

 

Although the Hendrick team is ranked first, second (Kyle Larson), third (Chase Elliott) and fifth (Alex Bowman) in the championship points, his teammates did not fare as well in Saturday’s time trials. Elliott will start 19th. Larson, who won at Darlington in 2023 will start 19th and Bowman will roll off 33rd.

 

“It may be tricky strategy-wise and you can get stuck back there, so [qualifying] matters maybe just a tick more than other places," Byron said, noting of his teammates, “These cars are really finicky so hitting the balance and just hitting the lap the way you want it to be can be really difficult. So I’m not surprised because there’s a lot of parity in the Next Gen era and especially in qualifying so you can be just that little bit off.

 

“I feel like our team has really good notes from qualifying though and that will really help.’’

 

Defending race winner Brad Keselowski, co-owner and driver of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s No. 6 Ford will start 20th.

 

NOTEBOOK

 

NASCAR HOLDS COMPETITION MEETING WITH XFINITY SERIES DRIVERS

*NASCAR officials met with the entire field of Xfinity Series drivers early Friday morning before any track activity at Darlington Raceway – a meeting triggered by an especially aggressive showing for the series at the Martinsville (Va.) Speedway short track a week ago – a race so chaotic that Chase Elliott – a former Xfinity Series and NASCAR Cup Series champ - called it “embarrassing” for the sport.

 

Although aggressive moves characterized much of the second half of the race, a big wreck on the final lap started up front with then leaders – Joe Gibbs Racing’s Taylor Gray and JR Motorsports’ Sammy Smith – precipitated some angry confrontations post-race. Gray (off track) and Smith (on track) were both penalized for their actions.

 

Veteran Austin Hill was the big beneficiary of the on-track situation between the two, driving through the melee up front to claim his second win of the year – credited with only leading that last lap. Hill shared that the meeting went well and that he expects his fellow drivers to be more mindful of the way they race going forward, calling NASCAR very “firm” in its morning message.

 

“I think it’s going to calm down a lot more than you think today," Hill said of Saturday afternoon’s Sports Clips Haircuts VFW Help a Hero 200 at Darlington. “We’ll have to wait and see but I think we’re all going to still be aggressive and trying to win the race but it’s going to be a very respectful race.”

 

The series’ next trip to Martinsville in late October determines which four Playoff drivers advance to the Championship 4 with a shot to win the 2025 title.

 

“NASCAR made it very clear they don’t want to be in the ball-and-strike business, they don’t want to be making all these calls so they said for us to help them with that,’’ Hill said. “They [NASCAR] also said if they have to step in and start making calls and black-flagging people and parking people and all those things, they’ll do it. I agree with where NASCAR stands with that but I also think we in the Xfinity Series need to do a better job going forward and not putting it in NASCAR’s hands.’’

 

KESELOWSKI OPTIMISTIC DESPITE CHALLENGING EARLY SEASON

*The last Spring weekend Brad Keselowski spent in Darlington, S.C., he left South Carolina with a big trophy. It was the first victory the 2012 NASCAR Cup Series champion had earned as co-team owner at Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing. As importantly it marked a highlight in a challenging new role as owner and driver.

 

Darlington, in particular, has been a recent highlight reel for Keselowski whose average finish (6.4) in the last five races in best in the field. He has plenty of reason to be optimistic about this Spring run of races – at Darlington, Bristol, Tenn. and Talladega, Ala. – venues where he is a multi-time winner.

 

He comes to South Carolina without a single lap led and is still looking to claim his first top-10 of the eight-race season. His best showing in the No. 6 RFK Ford is 11th at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He’s finished 26th in the two races (at Homestead,Fla. and Martinsville, Va.) leading into Darlington.

 

“I feel like we’re doing all the right things and get to where we need to be, we just haven’t gotten the results,’’ said Keselowski, who qualified 20th for Sunday’s race, “We haven’t qualified as well as we liked to have.

 

“In the race we haven’t been able to put together for a number of reasons some of it in our control, a lot of it not in our control, so it’s been frustrating. But kind of have the feeling we’re getting the bad luck out of the way early in the season, that’s kind of the overwhelming sentiment and if we stay the course, it will come back to us.’’

 

VETERANS HAVE THE DARLINGTON EDGE

Darlington Raceway is known as the track “Too Tough to Tame” – and perhaps too that end, its long and distinguished list of winners includes a noticeable group of veterans. Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin leads all active drivers with four victories, another four runner-up finishes and also bests the grid in top-fives (13), top-10s (18) and overall average finish (8.2).

 

NASCAR Hall of Famers such as Jimmie Johnson (three wins), Bill Elliott (five wins) Jeff Gordon (seven wins) and the late Dale Earnhardt (nine wins) were all so good at the 1.366-mile oblong oval.

 

“This sport is so week-to-week it’s hard to say [the track favors veterans] but you can’t argue with results,’’ said Hamlin, who has led laps in the last 10 consecutive Darlington races – and has led more than 100 laps five different times in his career.

 

“It lends itself to the best drivers and the best teams. I think it’s a great combination of, you’ve got to have everything. … the driver has to just be really good at his craft and know when to push and when not to.

 

“It’s going to be mentally taxing knowing you’ve got to hit your marks just perfectly,’’ he continued. “And just the mental side of it, with 35 other guys that aren’t there to let you win. It’s really hard to navigate that. .. it just takes its toll, it has for me on my body and mind every time I race here. As far as the veteran side of it, I think certainly it seems that those that have lots of experience on this track and more than likely the guys have been successful because they know that feel they need to be fast here and continue to replicate it.”

 

AN EVERYDAY EARNHARDT THROWBACK

*There is no question that NASCAR Cup Series driver Carson Hocevar is a huge fan of the late seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt. The driver of the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet recently purchased online a Chevrolet pick-up truck with a paint scheme identical to one of Earnhardt’s iconic No. 3 Goodwrench Chevrolets. He says it’s his “daily drive” and actually drove the truck from his Charlotte-area home to Darlington for the race this weekend.

 

“Basically I wanted something old-school car wise,’’ said Hocevar, who posted a photo of the truck parked at Darlington on his social media. “I just thought it would be fun and interesting to have. So I got it.’’

 

ZILISCH TO MAKE 2ND CUP START

*On Thursday of this week, Trackhouse Racing announced that 18-year old driver Connor Zilisch will make his second NASCAR Cup Series start for the team in the sport’s longest race, the May 25 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

 

The North Carolinian Zilisch is in his first fulltime NASCAR Xfinity Series season driving the No. 88 Chevrolet as a development driver for JR Motorsports and has already won an Xfinity race this year – from the pole position – claiming the trophy at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) road course in March. He’s currently sixth in the Xfinity Series championship standings.

 

“It’s awesome to have the opportunity to race in one of NASCAR’s coolest events,” said Zilisch, who has shown great talent competing in endurance races – winning in his class in both the Rolex 24 at Daytona and 12 Hours of Sebring IMSA races last year.

 

“The Charlotte 600 is one of the most prestigious races in NASCAR. It’s going to be a physical and mental challenge because that race is so tough.”

 


New approach gives Denny Hamlin dominating NASCAR Cup victory at Martinsville

Logan Riely/Getty Images

March 30, 2025
 
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service 

 
MARTINSVILLE, Va. – It didn’t take Denny Hamlin long to find the recipe for success in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway.

 
Hamlin grabbed the lead on Lap126 of 400 in the seventh NASCAR Cup Series race of the season and never looked back.

 
With flawless work from his pit crew, the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota led 274 of the last 275 laps—with the only exception a lap credited to pole winner Christopher Bell, who raced side-by-side with Hamlin after the final restart on Lap 326.

 
Hamlin pulled away toward the end of the final 75-lap green-flag run and beat Bell, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, to the finish line by 4.617 seconds.

 
The victory was Hamlin’s sixth at the 0.526-mile short track, most among full-time active drivers, but his first at Martinsville since 2015. It was his first win of the season and the 55th of his career, tying him with Rusty Wallace for 11th on the career victory list.    

 
The win was also Hamlin’s first with crew chief Chris Gayle, who took over the pit box on the No. 11 Toyota this season. Hamlin has now won Cup races with seven different crew chiefs.

 
“You know, Chris Gayle, all the engineers, the pit crew, everybody really on that wall right there, just deciding they were going to come here with a different approach than what we've been over the last few years,” said Hamlin, who won at Martinsville for the first time with the Gen 7 race car.

 
“It was just amazing. The car was great. It did everything I needed it to do. Just so happy to win with Chris, get 55… Obviously, back here in Martinsville where I spent so many years racing late models and whatnot—gosh, I love winning here.”

 
Bell’s No. 20 Toyota was too loose over the final run to keep up with Hamlin’s No. 11 Camry.

 
“We were back and forth on balance a little bit,” Bell said. “I asked to be freer throughout the whole race. That last run, I just went a little bit too loose and lost my drive off (the corners).

 
“It was a great weekend for Joe Gibbs Racing. Showed a lot of pace. All four of the cars were really good. Really happy to kind of get back up front. The last two weeks have been rough for this 20 team… Really happy for Denny. He's the Martinsville master. Second is not that bad.”

 
Bubba Wallace finished third for the second straight race, as Toyotas claimed the top three finishing positions at the paper-clip-shaped track.

 
“That final restart, I let that second (place) get away,” said Wallace, who drives for the 23XI Racing team co-owned by Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan. 

 
“I don't know if I had anything for Denny. It would have been fun to try.

 
“But all in all, hell of a day for Toyota. Top three. That's nice. Keep the momentum going, having fun.”

 
Chase Elliott came home fourth, followed by Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson.

 
Ross Chastain, Ryan Preece, Joey Logano, Chase Briscoe and Todd Gilliland completed the top 10.

 
Before Hamlin took control, a debris caution on Lap 31 resulted in a dramatic change to the running order. Josh Berry led a group of six drivers who stayed on the track under caution, and maintained the top spot for 40 laps, the first circuits led by the No. 21 Wood Brothers car at Martinsville since 2005.

 
A caution for Chris Buescher’s spin on the frontstretch ended Berry’s stint at the front. A collision with Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota on pit road and subsequent alternator issues cost Berry two laps and took him out of the mix.

 
Logano stayed on the track under the Lap 71 yellow and won the first 80-lap stage over Alex Bowman in a two-lap sprint, but it was an up-and-down day for the reigning Cup champion.

 
On Lap 317, Briscoe’s Toyota bounced off the inside curbing in Turn 3 and sent Logano’s Ford spinning toward the outside wall. Logano pitted for fresh tires, restarted 25th and drove back to eighth place by lap 400, scoring his first top 10 of the season.

 
William Byron, who finished 22nd after a lengthy pit stop under the first caution, retained the series lead by 17 points over Larson.

 
NASCAR Cup Series Race - Cook Out 400
Martinsville Speedway
Martinsville, Virginia
Sunday, March 30, 2025

 
          1. (5)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 400.
          2. (1)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 400.
          3. (8)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 400.
          4. (2)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 400.
          5. (4)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 400.
          6. (17)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 400.
          7. (21)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 400.
          8. (7)  Joey Logano, Ford, 400.
          9. (11)  Chase Briscoe, Toyota, 400.
          10. (25)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 400.
          11. (32)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 400.
          12. (15)  Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 400.
          13. (13)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 400.
          14. (9)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 400.
          15. (28)  Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 400.
          16. (19)  Zane Smith, Ford, 400.
          17. (12)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 400.
          18. (18)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 400.
          19. (29)  Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet, 400.
          20. (34)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 400.
          21. (26)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 400.
          22. (10)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 400.
          23. (23)  AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 399.
          24. (31)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 399.
          25. (6)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 399.
          26. (16)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 399.
          27. (27)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 399.
          28. (3)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 399.
          29. (30)  Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 398.
          30. (24)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 397.
          31. (36)  Cody Ware, Ford, 396.
          32. (35)  Riley Herbst #, Toyota, 396.
          33. (14)  Josh Berry, Ford, 396.
          34. (22)  Cole Custer, Ford, 394.
          35. (33)  Shane Van Gisbergen #, Chevrolet, 394.
          36. (37)  Casey Mears, Ford, 389.
          37. (38)  Burt Myers, Chevrolet, 388.
          38. (20)  Austin Cindric, Ford, Electrical, 363.

 
Average Speed of Race Winner:  68.17 mph.
Time of Race:  3 Hrs, 5 Mins, 11 Secs. Margin of Victory:  4.617 Seconds.
Caution Flags:  10 for 86 laps.
Lead Changes:  9 among 6 drivers.
Lap Leaders:   C. Bell 1-23;C. Elliott 24-32;C. Bell 33;J. Berry 34-73;J. Logano 74-86;A. Bowman 87-92;C. Elliott 93-125;D. Hamlin 126-325;C. Bell 326;D. Hamlin 327-400.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  Denny Hamlin 2 times for 274 laps; Chase Elliott 2 times for 42 laps; Josh Berry 1 time for 40 laps; Christopher Bell 3 times for 25 laps; Joey Logano 1 time for 13 laps; Alex Bowman 1 time for 6 laps.
Stage #1 Top Ten: 22,48,16,6,43,42,60,9,11,41
Stage #2 Top Ten: 11,9,23,54,19,12,1,20,5,45

 
--30--

Christopher Bell secures pole position for Cook Out 400 at Martinsville

 

Logan Riely/Getty Images

MARTINSVILLE, Va.—Christopher Bell put forth an early challenge at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday with a lap that stood up against all comers in qualifying for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

The 17th driver to make a run during time trials, Bell navigated the venerable 0.526-mile track in 19.718 seconds (96.034 mph) and waited as the 21 drivers who followed took their respective shots at the standard he set.

 

No one was up to the task, and Bell had his first Busch Light pole award of the season in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, his first at Martinsville and the 14th of his career.

 

Chase Elliott came closest to matching Bell’s lap. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet covered the distance in 19.735 seconds (95.951 mph), just 0.003 seconds faster than teammate and third-place qualifier Alex Bowman (95.937 mph).

 

Despite turning the second fastest lap in Saturday afternoon’s practice, Bell wasn’t optimistic about his chances for the pole.

 

“I was kind of down in the dumps after practice (because of the position in the qualifying order),” Bell said. “But that was definitely the best qualifying session I’ve ever felt out of my car at Martinsville. It was just easy…

 

“I went out there and the car just had so much grip. I’m really proud of this 20 team. They’ve been working hard on this Martinsville package. We’ll see what happens [Sunday], but obviously, starting up front will be a big help.”

 

Kyle Larson, last Sunday’s winner at Homestead-Miami Speedway, qualified fourth at 95.854 mph. Bell’s teammate, five-time Martinsville winner Denny Hamlin, was fifth at 95.840 mph.

Chris Buescher, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick and defending race winner William Byron filled out the rest of the top 10 on the grid.

 

Casey Mears, whose No. 66 Ford failed inspection twice before qualifying, will start 37th in his first Cup Series race since 2019.

 

Ryan Blaney has maintained excellence at Martinsville through car change

For a number of NASCAR Cup Series drivers, the introduction of the Gen 7 car in 2022 changed their fortunes at Martinsville Speedway.

 

Brad Keselowski, a consistent contender and two-time winner in the Gen 6 car at Martinsville, has posted an average finish of 23.83 in the six races since the car change.

 

Martin Truex Jr. who won three of four races at the 0.526-mile short track from the fall of 2019 through the spring of 2021 never got a handle on Martinsville in the new car. Even with a third-place run in 2023, his average result in the Gen 7 era was 16.5.

 

Kyle Larson, on the other hand, found magic in the new car. From an average finish of 20.57 in the Gen 6 era, Larson has improved to an average of 2.8 in his last five Martinsville races, with a victory, two runner-up results, a third and a sixth.

 

Ryan Blaney is the exception that proves the rule. The driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford has been strong at the vaunted short track throughout his career, despite adjustments he had to make with the change to the Gen 7 car.

 

“I think everyone had to change their style up a little bit,” Blaney said. “I don’t know which one I prefer here. I feel like this place has gotten better with this (Gen 7) car with the soft tire. You’re able to move around more.

 

“I didn’t think with the old car the second lane was there as much as it is with this car. I think that’s more on Goodyear getting softer and softer and laying rubber down where you can move around, but I also think the other car was better in dirty air, where you didn’t have to have that second lane. So it’s trade-offs.

 

“I know you’re shifting a lot—you shift four times a lap here, so that’s changed the way you got into the corner and approached the center speed of it. So, yeah, I definitely had to change up, but I just got fortunate that what I came here with my mind-set worked with this car with how I changed up from the Gen 6 car.”

 

Is there a difference between spring and fall races at Martinsville?

William Byron has won two of the last three spring races at Martinsville Speedway. Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson accounted for the spring race victory in 2023, between Byron’s two triumphs.

 

Ryan Blaney has won the last two fall Playoff events at the 0.526-mile short track. Christopher Bell went to Victory Lane in the fall of 2022.

 

So, is there a difference between the two races? Is there a reason why Hendrick Motorsports seems so strong in the spring and less so in the fall?

 

“Yeah, I think typically there's been a new tire going into the fall, so I don't feel like we've had a repeat tire here at Martinsville in the Next Gen era (since 2022),” Byron said. “That's really allowed us to hone in on our setup. So, yeah, that's been, I feel like, part of the equation.

 

“And then, honestly, just the speed equation. I feel like we've been a step off in the fall. It seems like in the spring, everyone's fairly even in the top five. The Gibbs cars can be pretty strong, and Penske is kind of not as strong in the spring, it seems like. And then they obviously get a lot better in the fall. 

 

“So I don't know. Based on how things are going lately, I feel like Penske's going to be really good this weekend, and it'll probably be a battle between all the top organizations. No tire change, so I think you'll probably see the normal players that you saw in the fall.”

 

There’s another difference between the races. In 2022, the spring event was shortened to 400 laps, and the fall race remained at 500 laps.

 

To Josh Berry of Wood Brothers Racing, that won’t make a difference.

 

“I don’t think it changes too much,” said Berry, who claimed the first of his five NASCAR Xfinity Series victories at the track. “Honestly, 400 or 500 laps is still a lot of laps here. Definitely, the fall race is a little bit more of a grind…

 

“But I think it’s a good balance, and I love running laps around this place, so however many they have, I’ll hope to be out there.” 

 

Jesse Love is excited and grateful for first NASCAR Cup Series opportunity

NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Jesse Love is getting the opportunity he has longed for since childhood.

 

Richard Childress Racing announced on Friday that Love, currently third in the Xfinity standings, will make his NASCAR Cup Series debut on April 13 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

 

Love will drive the No, 33 Ultimate Energy Chevrolet in the Food City 500.

 

“Obviously, it’s really special,” said Love. “I’ve known for a couple of weeks now—maybe a couple of months. Overall, I feel really excited and blessed and humbled by the opportunity to compete at the level that I’ve wanted to since I was a kid. It does not feel real yet, right? I can tell that kind of by my emotions.

 

“But at the same time, I’m trying not to fall into the trap of, when you do get your Cup start, of taking a deep breath and (saying), ‘Ah, I’ve made it,’ and maybe getting a little bit content. I don’t want to fall into that trap. I want to stay with the same mind-set that I’ve had my whole life to get me to this point. But I am really grateful.”  

 

--30--

 

 


NASCAR Weekend Preview: Rockingham Speedway

 

April 17, 2025

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Rockingham Speedway is little-known territory for NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers

 

The NASCAR Xfinity and CRAFTSMAN Truck Series are ready to roll at “The Rock.”

 

In the final event of an Easter tripleheader weekend that also includes the ARCA Menards Series East, Xfinity Series drivers will compete at Rockingham Speedway for the first time since 2004 with the running of Saturday’s North Carolina Education Lottery 250 (4 p.m. ET on CW, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

The Rock is not the same track on which driver-turned-television analyst Jamie McMurray won the last four Xfinity Series events held at the Richmond County speedway. Repaved in late 2022 and remeasured at 0.94 miles, the iconic track is unfamiliar territory to all but one driver in Saturday’s field, as far as actual racing is concerned.

 

Only Kasey Kahne has competitive Xfinity Series experience at the track, with his last series appearance coming in the final race there in 2004. On Saturday, Kahne will make his first Xfinity start at any track since 2017 in the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

 

Kahne, a sprint car driver and team owner, quickly acclimated to the stock car in his return to pavement during an organizational test in January.

 

“It had been six and a half years,” said Kahne, who won a Truck Series race at Rockingham in 2012. “It was really nice to be back in a car. I didn’t know exactly how it would feel and if I would have to refigure out how to drive in a way.

 

“But truthfully, once I got to Turn 3 coming to the start of practice and the car loaded into the corner, I instantly felt right at home and felt like I had been doing it for a while. From there on, it was a solid practice for the next four or five hours.”

 

Despite the lack of competitive reps, other drivers aren’t coming to Rockingham with empty notebooks. Sheldon Creed, Brandon Jones and series leader Justin Allgaier participated in a Goodyear tire test last November.

 

And the organizational test in January gave a broad range of drivers in both the Xfinity and Truck Series a sense of what they will face on Easter weekend.

 

In Allgaier’s case, there’s more on the line than the race trophy. The driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet is competing for a record eighth $100,000 bonus in the final Xfinity Dash 4 Cash race of the season.

 

To win the bonus, Allgaier will have to finish ahead of three other eligible drivers—teammates Carson Kvapil and Sammy Smith and Joe Gibbs Racing’s Brandon Jones.

 

“It’s really cool to be heading back to Rockingham with our BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet,” said Allgaier, who won two of the first three Dash 4 Cash bonuses this season, at Homestead-Miami Speedway and Bristol Motor Speedway.

 

“No one really knows what to expect this weekend, but I feel like the test we had here back in January gave (crew chief) Jim (Pohlman) and all the guys on this team a good playbook to start with.

 

“We’ve had a lot of momentum on our side here lately, and hopefully that will carry over and we’ll have another great run on Saturday.”

 

Notes: Katherine Legge, who made her NASCAR Cup Series debut at Phoenix earlier this season, will make her first start in the Xfinity Series since 2023 at Road America... Sammy Smith and Jones are doing double duty this weekend in the Xfinity and Truck Series.

 

Chandler Smith takes strong momentum into Rockingham Truck race

 

Fresh from a convincing victory at Bristol Motor Speedway—a win that denied runner-up Kyle Larson a sweep of NASCAR’s three national series—Chandler Smith comes to Rockingham Speedway second in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series standings, with his sights set on the top spot.

 

Smith is the only driver to have finished in the top 10 in all six CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races this season, and he’ll try to extend that streak in Friday’s Black’s Tire 200 (5 p.m. ET on FS1, NRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

"I can't wait for Rockingham," said Smith, who drives for Front Row Motorsports. "This 38 team is on a tear right now, and we have a lot of good momentum heading into Rockingham.

 

“There's a lot less pressure heading into the weekend knowing we are locked into the Playoffs, but we want more. I think we have a good shot at the Regular Season Championship.”

 

Smith trails series leader Corey Heim by 18 points. Neither driver has ever raced at the 0.94-mile track, which last hosted a Truck Series race in 2013.

 

Saturday’s race is the final Triple Truck Challenge event of the season. Both Smith and Martinsville winner Daniel Hemric are eligible for a $150,000 bonus, should they win a second Triple Truck Challenge race this season.

 

A $50,000 prize is available to any other highest-finishing series regular.

 

Four drivers in Friday’s field raced at The Rock in the Truck Series during its two-year presence in 2012 and 2013. Matt Crafton and Norm Benning, with two starts each, and Grant Enfinger and Parker Kligerman with a single start each.

 

 


 

Kyle Larson’s admirable drive at Bristol deserves applause, not criticism

 

April 14, 2025

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

In auto racing, a blowout is an easy target for derision and dissatisfaction. It’s human nature to prefer suspense and excitement that last until the final seconds.

 

After Kyle Larson won his second straight race at Bristol Motor Speedway in overwhelming fashion on Sunday, however, it’s time to stop bashing the lopsided nature of his victories and start lauding the talent that enabled him to achieve them.

 

No, the Food City 500 wasn’t a nail-biting affair. Larson led 411 of the 500 laps—after leading 462 circuits in winning the Bristol Night Race last September.

 

As runner-up Denny Hamlin put it after the race, “The best car and the best driver won tonight.”

 

The emphasis should be on “driver.” After the NASCAR Cup Series competitors ran conservatively for 35 laps until it became apparent that anticipated tire wear was not going to occur, Larson seized the lead from Hendrick Motorsports teammate and pole winner Alex Bowman.

 

Adroitly working traffic during long green-flag runs, Larson held the top spot through the first two stages and beyond, surrendering it only during a cycle of pit stops in the final 235-lap green-flag run.

 

Throughout the final stage of the race, Hamlin gave chase but could never get close enough to challenge for the lead.

 

Yes, it was a blowout at the front of the field, but that was more a testament to Larson’s skill at Bristol than it was to a disparity in equipment.

 

Remember, Larson ascended to NASCAR’s top division from a dirt-track background. His ability to drive high-powered sprint cars is unparalleled, and in those ranks, split-second decisions in traffic on quarter and half-mile tracks are necessary to success.

 

“I think really what helps is that when you’re racing sprint cars, you get used to having to make super-quick decisions,” Larson said. “That’s really the way it is here in traffic at Bristol.

 

“It’s much tougher to get through traffic in the Cup Series than it is in Xfinity, just because the cars are more similar in speed. Regardless, I was able to lap a lot during the first stage, I felt like, before the track really opened up. That was nice, to get some guys two laps down early, and they didn’t fight me quite as hard later on.

 

“It was still a challenge. Denny was doing a good job chasing me through traffic. I just felt like I could move around a little bit better.”

 

Indeed. Larson, who prefers a loose setup, was able to make passes in the bottom lane (which was sprayed with PJ1 traction compound), the top (which took more rubber than expected) and occasionally by running the middle lane and splitting lapped cars.

 

And if Larson maintained iron-fisted control of the lead, there was plenty of action in the field behind him. Brad Keselowski, who finished 16th, made a race-high 106 green-flag passes. Chris Buescher, Kyle Busch, Austin Dillon and Ross Chastain all accounted for 90 or more.

 

Chastain drove methodically from his 35th starting position to a seventh-place finish. William Byron started 26th after a bobble in qualifying and charged to sixth at the checkered flag.

 

The PJ1, applied this year in place of the resin used last spring, kept the bottom lane workable and prevented the track from becoming totally top-dominant as the race progressed.

 

The victory was Larson’s second this year, and it served to emphasize the early-season superiority of two of the sports flagship organizations, Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing, which collectively have won eight of the nine events this season.

 

Behind Larson, JGR drivers finished 2-3-4 on Sunday. Two weeks earlier at Martinsville, Hamlin and teammate Christoper Bell (a three-time winner this year) ran 1-2, with Hendrick’s Chase Elliott and Larson taking the fourth and fifth positions.

 

That should be a wake-up call to rest of the garage, which has considerable catching up to do—and not just at Bristol.

 


 

NASCAR Weekend Preview: Bristol Motor Speedway

 

April 10, 2025

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson seek different “triples” at Bristol this weekend

 

How unusual would it be for two different Joe Gibbs Racing drivers to fashion three-race winning streaks in the first nine events of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season?

 

It could happen.

 

Denny Hamlin, fresh from consecutive victories at Martinsville Speedway and Darlington Raceway, goes for a third straight win in Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

With a victory, Hamlin would match the feat achieved by teammate Christopher Bell in the second, third and fourth races of the season, at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Circuit of The Americas and Phoenix Raceway.

 

Last season, the spring race at the 0.533-mile short track returned to the concrete surface after three years on dirt. Hamlin won for the third time in the last eight races at Bristol and fourth time overall, second only to Kyle Busch (eight wins) among full-time active drivers.

 

The rate of tire fall-off in last year’s event took all the competitors by surprise and played into the hands of Hamlin, an acknowledged master of tire management.

 

However, the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota believes Sunday’s race is more likely to mirror last fall’s Bristol Night Race, won by Kyle Larson.

 

“I think that was just kind of an anomaly,” Hamlin said of last year’s Food City 500. “We thought it was temperature, we thought it was all kinds of different things, but truthfully, there's something that was different.

 

“Don't know really what it was, but I would expect that we would have the normal Bristol (this year), where your tires don't wear that much, if it's the same tire. Temperatures look to be up, so I would say that we would have kind of the normal Bristol that we've had most of the time.”

 

Hamlin will have a formidable challenger in Larson, who is going for a triple of his own. Larson is competing in Friday’s NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series event and Sunday’s Cup race, hoping to sweep the weekend, a feat achieved by Busch twice at Bristol, in 2010 and 2017.

 

No other driver has ever won all three national series races at the same track on the same weekend, though Larson came close three weeks ago at Homestead-Miami Speedway, winning the Truck and Cup races but losing the Xfinity race on a late restart.

 

No doubt Busch will be paying close attention to Larson’s effort, as he was at Homestead.

 

“He just tried it at Homestead an came awfully close,” Busch said. “Barring a restart late in the going, he had it. That’s what happens with the triples, man. There are so many variables that can come down to whether you get it or not.

 

“If somebody can beat Larson off of pit road on the final run of the Cup race and he can’t pass them, that’s what happens in that one. But I’m sure he’ll go and do well, and so be it.”

 

The bottom lane of the track will be sprayed with PJ1 Trackbite for all three races this weekend, a departure from the resin used last spring.

 

“I think that’s been the most consistent thing that we’ve done,” said Chris Buescher, who won the Night Race in 2022. “The majority of time it’s been three or four feet of PJ1 on the bottom.”

 

Interestingly, Buescher is the only Bristol winner in the last eight races to win from a starting position outside the top five. The Roush Fenway Keselowski driver won from 20th on the grid.

 

“We’ve been really good at Bristol,” Buescher said. “We’ve had good pace. Our team, (crew chief) Scott Graves and our whole group have made great strategy calls to find some track position and be able to make some big gains in that sense.

 

“We’ve had race cars that have run the bottom really well when (other cars) have gotten strung out on the top, and we’ve been able to pass a lot of cars that way.”

 

Buescher is the exception that proves the rule, but if qualifying position remains a decisive factor, that argues for Hamlin, too. He leads all active drivers with four pole positions at Thunder Valley.

 

Busch has two poles to his credit. No other full-time active driver has more than one.

 

Justin Allgaier brings enviable record to NASCAR Xfinity race at Bristol

 

Anyone who prizes numbers and statistics has to be impressed with Justin Allgaier’s collective NASCAR Xfinity Series performances at Bristol Motor Speedway, a record he’ll try to enhance in Saturday’s SciAps 300 (5 p.m. ET on CW, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

With two victories at the high-banked 0.533-mile short track, Allgaier is the only driver in Saturday’s field who has won more than once at Thunder Valley. Kyle Larson, trying for a weekend triple, is the only other former Bristol winner on the entry list.

 

Allgaier has led 60 laps or more in the last eight Bristol races. He has led the most laps in five of the last six and has won eight of the last 16 stages at the track.

 

The driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet already has two victories to his credit this season and tops the NASCAR Xfinity Series standings by a whopping 71 points over Sam Mayer of the Haas Factory Team.

 

It’s no wonder that Allgaier approaches Saturday’s race with supreme confidence.

 

“Bristol has always been one of my favorite tracks on the schedule,” said Allgaier, the only driver to finish on the lead lap in every race so far this season. “There’s just something about this place that has suited my driving style.

 

“It’s definitely a special feeling whenever we get to race here, and I can’t wait to get to the track this weekend and see what we can do with our Jarrett Chevrolet. We’ve had extremely strong cars here in the past, and I know that will be the case again come Saturday.”

 

The SciAps 300 is the third Xfinity Dash 4 Cash race of the season. Four eligible drivers—Allgaier, Austin Hill, Sheldon Creed and Brennan Poole—will compete for the $100,000 bonus that goes to the driver who finishes highest among the four.

 

Historically, Allgaier leads the series with a record six Dash 4 Cash victories.

 

Jesse Love, currently fifth in the series standings, will have a lot to think about this weekend. On Sunday, he’ll be making his NASCAR Cup Series debut in the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

 

Kyle Larson begins his quest for weekend sweep in Friday’s NASCAR Truck race

 

There’s no doubt who the headliner will be in Friday’s Weather Guard Truck Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, NRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series event is the first of a tripleheader weekend and the first in Kyle Larson’s quest to sweep all three national-series races at the 0.533-mile short track—a feat accomplished only by Kyle Busch in 2010 and 2017.

 

Larson will make his second Truck Series start of the season and the 17th of his career. On March 21, he drove the No. 07 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet to victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where a late restart in the Xfinity Series race cost him a chance at a weekend triple at that track.

 

“I am excited for the weekend,” Larson said. “I love Bristol. Hopefully, the track widens out for the truck race like it did last fall. If it is locked on the bottom, qualifying good is going to be huge.

 

“If we can get it done on Friday, I like our chances Saturday and Sunday (in the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup races).”

 

While Larson pursues the triple, series regulars will compete for the $50,000 Triple Truck Challenge bonus, which is not available to NASCAR Xfinity or Cup Series regulars.

 

On March 28 at Martinsville Speedway, Daniel Hemric won the first Truck Series race of his career and the first Triple Truck Challenge bonus of the season.

 

Bristol is a track where Truck Series drivers have shared the wealth. The last 12 races at the track have produced 12 different winners, and the last six trophies have gone to six different racing organizations.

 

Layne Riggs of Front Row Motorsports is the most recent winner at the track.

 


 

From Drought to Dominance: Hamlin Flexes Championship Form

 

April 7, 2025

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

DARLINGTON, S.C. – If Denny Hamlin’s win a week ago at Martinsville, Va. was a competitive relief, his victory Sunday at Darlington, S.C. was championship swagger.

 

A week ago he ended a 31-race winless streak to take a convincing win at the Martinsville half-miler. And on Sunday, the veteran came through in the closing laps of the Goodyear 400 at Darlington, a track he was already the winningest active driver (five) and marked the first time since 2012 that Hamlin had won back-to-back races.

 

The early-season multiple wins give Hamlin and his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team a different sort of competitive energy. And this week heads to Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway as the defending winner of the Food City 500 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (Sunday at 3 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Following his victory Sunday night, Hamlin acknowledged the team is vibing – winning when it’s running well (Martinsville) and winning when it’s not necessarily the best car (Darlington).

 

Hamlin’s 56th NASCAR Cup Series trophy Sunday came after he led only 10 laps compared to Hendrick Motorsports’ driver William Byron who led a career high 243 of the 297 laps, won both Stage 1 and 2 and started from pole position.

 

Reminded of this, Hamlin smiled and recalled races where he also led hundreds of laps but did not celebrate in Victory Lane.

 

“[Today’s win] shows up the same in the stats column," he offered. “No one will ever remember years from now. They're just going to know we won Darlington, and they'll forget why, which is unfortunate for them [Byron]," Hamlin allowed.

 

“Last week, I talked about how this is one you pound the chest, we kicked everyone's ass, I kicked everyone's ass,” Hamlin said comparing Sunday’s win to his victory at Martinsville where he led 274 of the 400 laps.

 

“Do I feel that way today? I don't (smiling). It still feels good. It just doesn't have the feel when you go out and you are dominate.”

 

There is still plenty of time for that, however.

 

Not only has Hamlin long proven himself perpetually championship caliber – his 56-wins – including three Daytona 500 trophies – are second most on the grid. But he has a couple of other huge benefits that few in the sport can claim. His team owner is three-time Super Bowl winning NFL Hall of Fame Coach and NASCAR Hall of Fame owner Joe Gibbs. And Hamlin co-owns the 23XI Racing team with NBA legend Michael Jordan.

 

Being around that rarefied air of sporting success is a stroke of fortune that pays off in massive ways - both subtle and obvious. Excellence is expected and it’s a good bet that surrounding yourself with champions creates a sort of competitive osmosis.

 

The expectations are higher and that is where Hamlin’s own leadership comes in. His pit crew proved itself top-shelf, crucially getting him out first on the final pit stop and position him for a chance to claim the overtime win.

 

Momentum has certainly shifted and the 44-year-old Hamlin is there to ride it. He is a legitimate pick to win any race, any week, any venue. And his two wins in only eight races this season have had a significant effect on the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series championship outlook with Hamlin moving up four positions into second place – 49 points behind Sunday’s runner-up Byron. It’s the biggest move forward this week of any driver in the series.

 

“It's great the team got me one here," Hamlin said. “If we can win races where we have a seventh to 10th place car, I feel good about going out there and executing when we've got the best car.

 

“Obviously, our pit crew is well and capable of keeping us up front. I can still do it. I can still do it at a high level. I like our outlook to win a lot of races this year.”

 


 

Throwback Weekend at Darlington is a highlight of the NASCAR schedule

 

The Goodyear 400 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (Sunday at 3 p.m. ET on FS1, FOX Deportes, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) has become one of the most popular races on the NASCAR schedule for teams, competitors and fans with its “Throwback Weekend” theme at the venerable 1.366-mile one-of-a-kind track where cars and stars celebrate the sport’s previous eras.

 

A handful of drivers could certainly get into the spirit by reviving their current championship situation. And past Darlington race winners such as Brad Keselowski, Chase Briscoe, Joey Logano and Erik Jones would love to hoist their first trophy of the 2025 season – that’s the kind of throwback they want.

 

Keselowski is a two-time and the defending Spring race winner at Darlington – earning his first (and only) victory so far as a team owner, driving the No. 6 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford last April. Briscoe’s win last Fall was also significant – perhaps the most clutch performance of his NASCAR Cup Series career when he took the win in the regular season finale to earn a Playoff position.

 

Coming into the weekend, the 2012 series champion Keselowski is ranked an uncharacteristic 30th in the championship standings without a single top-10 nor lap led. However, he holds the highest average finish (6.4) in the last five Darlington races. And it is the first of three straight venues (also Bristol, Tenn. and Talladega, Ala.) where he is a multiple race winner.

 

Briscoe claimed the DAYTONA 500 pole position in his first outing driving the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. He is ranked 12th in the driver standings with three top-10s, but looking to land his first trip to Victory Lane with the new organization. A win this weekend would mark the first time a driver has won consecutive Darlington races since the track’s Honorary Pace Car Driver Greg Biffle did it in 2005-06. 

 

Coming into the weekend, all four Hendrick Motorsports drivers are ranked among the top-five in the championship – led by DAYTONA 500 winner William Byron, who holds a 16-point lead on Homestead-Miami race winner Kyle Larson. Chase Elliott, the 2020 series champion, is third, 32 points behind Byron and Alex Bowman is ranked fifth, only 35 off Byron’s pace.

 

Byron and Larson swept the 2023 races at Darlington and Larson holds the highest driver rating (108.1) at the track. The 2021 series champ Larson has seven top-five and nine top-10 finishes and will be driving a throwback No. 5 paint scheme this week honoring another former Hendrick champion, NASCAR Hall of Famer Terry Labonte.

 

Last week’s Martinsville (Va.) Speedway winner, JGR’s Denny Hamlin is also expected to be a major player at Darlington, where his wins (four), runner-up finishes (four), top-fives (13), top-10s (18) and average finish (8.2) are all top-marks in the series among active drivers.

 

A victory for Hamlin’s JGR teammate, Christopher Bell – who’s earned three trophies already this season - would make him the first driver since NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon in 1997 to win four of the first eight races. And Bell is coming off his career best work at Darlington – third in last Fall’s race.

 

Add to the mix, reigning series champion, Joey Logano. He has led 260 laps (second this season only to Hamlin’s 298) but still hasn’t recorded a top-five finish. The driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford won at Darlington in 2022.

 

The last nine Darlington races have been won by nine different drivers and the record for that mark is 11 (2006-16). Interestingly, the driver who led the most laps has finished 25th or worse in four of the last five races.

 

“I think over-aggression is kind of over-blown at Darlington, especially with this car, you can be pretty aggressive," Byron said. “You’ve got to be aggressive at Darlington now to get clean air and stay up towards the front. You’ve got to be good on the long run, so however you manage that, whether set-up or driver input. You can’t afford to just kind of ride around in this car at Darlington anymore. It’s going to be a lot like Homestead where you’ve got to be able to ride the fence and be good in all the lanes.

 

Practice is set for 12:45 p.m. ET Saturday, followed by Busch Light Pole Qualifying at 1:40 p.m. ET with Amazon Prime airing both sessions. Toyota has won the pole position for the last four Darlington races. 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick is the defending polesitter.

 

Xfinity Series competitors prepare for The Track Too Tough To Tame

 

If there’s ever a venue poised to bring its A-game action following last week’s Martinsville (Va.) Speedway thriller, the NASCAR Xfinity Series should be in good shape with Saturday’s Sports Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 (3 p.m. ET on The CW Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Darlington Raceway.

 

The venerable 1.366-mile track has a fantastic history of high-drama and important races.

 

Reigning NASCAR Xfinity Series champion, driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, Justin Allgaier shows up at Darlington with the championship lead by 41 points over Haas Factory Team driver Sam Mayer in second and 47 points over Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill in third, who collected his second win of the season last Saturday and joins Allgaier as the only multiple winners this season.

 

Sixth in the championship is 18-year-old Connor Zilisch, driver of the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, who announced Thursday he will make his second NASCAR Cup Series start for Trackhouse Racing at Charlotte’s Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day weekend.

 

The last five Darlington Xfinity Series races have been won by five different drivers. Allgaier is the defending spring race winner and his three trophies at The Track to Tough Tame is most among full-timers. He is on an eight-race streak of top-10 finishes at Darlington – one away from matching NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin’s record.

 

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Brandon Jones (2020) is the only other fulltime series driver with a Darlington victory. Last year, Allgaier beat Hill to the checkered by a full 3.4-seconds. And Mayer was fourth. RCR has never won an Xfinity Series race at Darlington, but has five runner-up finishes – two from Hill.

 

Of note, the Stage 1 winner has gone on to win four of the last five races at the track.

 

The series is coming off an emotionally-charged short track event at Martinsville, where Hill led only the last lap to claim the win – surging forward after aggressive contact between race leaders Joe Gibbs Racing’s Taylor Gray and JR Motorsports’ Sammy Smith derailed their days.

 

Both Gray and Smith were subsequently penalized this week for actions at Martinsville - after the race (Gray) and for contact during the race (Smith).

 

A handful of NASCAR Cup Series drivers will be on the Xfinity Series grid this week, including Chase Elliott, Ross Chastain and Christopher Bell, who won the Fall Darlington NASCAR Xfinity Series race from the pole position.

 

Practice is at 10:05 a.m. ET on Saturday morning followed immediately by qualifying at 11:10 a.m. ET. The CW App will air both sessions. Cole Custer won the pole position in last year’s race.


What’s next for Denny Hamlin? A return to the Championship 4?

 

March 31, 2025

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Welcome back, Denny Hamlin.

 

On Sunday afternoon, in decisive fashion, the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota returned to Victory Lane after a 31-race dry spell—not to mention a 10-year drought at Martinsville Speedway.

 

In one sense, Hamlin underscored a return to his roots. The 44-year-old from Chesterfield, Va., who rose to NASCAR’s top division though the late-model ranks, claimed victory on NASCAR’s shortest and most venerable venue.

 

Four of Hamlin’s five most recent NASCAR Cup Series wins have come on traditional short tracks—two at Bristol, one at Richmond and Sunday at 0.526-mile, paper-clip-shaped Martinsville.

 

Interestingly, before that five-win stretch, Hamlin won only once on a track shorter than one mile in his 15 previous races. That victory came in 2022, the first year of the Next Gen race car, at Richmond, Hamlin’s home track.

 

If there’s one significant takeaway from Hamlin’s win at Martinsville, it’s that there is still room for innovation and creativity in the Gen 7 car. In the five starts at Martinsville immediately before Sunday’s victory, Hamlin had posted top-five finishes in four of the races, but victory had eluded him.

 

As a consequence, Hamlin’s new crew chief, Chris Gayle, made radical changes to the setup of the No. 11 Camry. These were not just tweaks; they represented a new approach to Hamlin’s short-track program.

 

“I’ve just been so close over the years here,” Hamlin said after the race. “I haven’t had a dominant car like this in about 10 years—truthfully… The pit crew kept me up front—no issues. We had some long runs there. That’s really where I typically excel.

 

“And, man, they just did an amazing job with the car this week. We worked really hard with coming up with a new setup. What we had in the past just wasn’t good enough. It was good enough to run third to fifth, but we’ve got to come here and win in the fall, and so we feel like this is a great step in the right direction.”

 

Hamlin wasn’t the only driver who enjoyed a breakout day at Martinsville. Christopher Bell, who surprised himself by winning the pole position in Saturday’s time trials, finished second. Bubba Wallace, who drives the No. 23 Camry for the 23XI Racing team co-owned by Hamlin and Michael Jordan, ran third.

 

That result marked a profound difference from last year’s spring race, when William Byron led Hendrick Motorsports to a 1-2-3 finish.

 

It also marked a profound reversal of fortune among the Joe Gibbs Racing drivers. After June 23, when Bell demonstrated his expertise on wet tires in a victory at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, JGR did not win another race last season and was shut out of the Championship 4 for the first time since NASCAR adopted the current elimination format in 2014.

 

Hamlin’s victory further validated the shift of his former crew chief, Chris Gabehart, to competition director for the entire organization. That move brought about the pairing of Hamlin with Chris Gayle, whose career previously had been characterized by work with young drivers in both the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup Series, most recently with Ty Gibbs.

 

“Chris (Gayle) has had a tough go at it,” Hamlin said. “When we didn't have a great weekend, social media people were just out to get him. They think he's been the problem for all of these years. It's just not the case.

 

“I'm really happy for him, because I think he's had the tough task of having such young drivers his whole career. That’s really hard to do. It's hard to put in what you know is the fastest thing, then expecting a rookie to go out there, someone that's really young, to get the most out of that. Then having the race craft to manage it through the whole race. It's really, really hard to do.

 

“I think him having someone probably as laid back as I am for the first time in his career is probably making his job a lot easier.”

 

It was also incumbent on Hamlin to learn to trust his new crew chief. The success of the new setup at Martinsville is an indication that’s already happened. 

“That's what you have to do when you have a new crew chief coming in there, is you've got to believe in him and let him be the leader that he is,” said Hamlin, who has now won Cup races with seven different crew chiefs.

 

With Bell’s three-race winning streak earlier this season and Hamlin’s triumph on Sunday, JGR has now won four of the first seven races this year.

 

Hamlin’s win at Martinsville was the 55th of his career, tying him with NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace for 11th all-time. His next target is 10th-place Kevin Harvick, who won 60 times before retiring after the 2023 season.

 

The more immediate objective, however, is a return to the Championship 4 with the chance for Hamlin to win a Cup championship for the first time. He hasn’t competed for a title since 2021, when he finished third among the four eligible drivers.

 

With a new approach to the short-track car, with its possible extension to the one-mile flat track at Phoenix Raceway, a long-awaited championship for the veteran driver isn’t beyond the realm of possibility.

 

--30--

nascar reviews & NOTEBOOKS

www.nascar.com

Celebrating its 75th Anniversary in 2023, the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series™, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour™), one local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series™) and three international series (NASCAR Pinty’s Series™, NASCAR Mexico Series™, NASCAR Whelen Euro Series™). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

  


 

 


   nascar cup series

2025 NASCAR CUP SERIES SCHEDULE

Date

Race / Track

Sunday, February 2

Clash (Bowman Gray)

Sunday, February 16

DAYTONA 500

Sunday, February 23

Atlanta

Sunday, March 2

COTA

Sunday, March 9

Phoenix

Sunday, March 16

Las Vegas

Sunday, March 23

Homestead-Miami

Sunday, March 30

Martinsville

Sunday, April 6

Darlington

Sunday, April 13

Bristol

Sunday, April 27

Talladega

Sunday, May 4

Texas

Sunday, May 11

Kansas

Sunday, May 18

North Wilkesboro (All-Star Race)

Sunday, May 25

Charlotte

Sunday, June 1

Nashville Superspeedway

Sunday, June 8

Michigan

Sunday, June 15

Mexico City

Sunday, June 22

Pocono

Saturday, June 28

Atlanta

Sunday, July 6

Chicago Street Race

Sunday, July 13

Sonoma

Sunday, July 20

Dover

Sunday, July 27

Indianapolis

Sunday, August 3

Iowa

Sunday, August 10

Watkins Glen

Saturday, August 16

Richmond

Saturday, August 23

Daytona

Sunday, August 31

Darlington

Sunday, September 7

World Wide Technology Raceway

Saturday, September 13

Bristol

Sunday, September 21

New Hampshire

Sunday, September 28

Kansas

Sunday, October 5

Charlotte Roval

Sunday, October 12

Las Vegas

Sunday, October 19

Talladega

Sunday, October 26

Martinsville

Sunday, November 2

Phoenix (Championship)

 

 
       

 

©2002-2025 MOTOR SPORTS GARAGE PRODUCTIONS,  All Rights Reserved

ALL LOGOS ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF THE RACING SERIES AND ARE USED FOR EDITORIAL PURPOSES ONLY

ALL PICTURES ARE PROPERTY OF THE RACING SERIES AND ARE USED FOR EDITORIAL PURPOSES ONLY

NO PART OF THE SITE CAN BE COPIED OR REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION OF MOTORSPORTSGARAGE PRODUCTIONS

This site is dedicated to my dad " Hoot" who introduced me to the great sport of auto racing............. rest in peace  DAD

larry criss....................A true race fan LIKE AN UNCLE TO ME

   gary lee.................auto racing broadcast legend and personnel friend

charlie patterson ............my old friend that supported me when mo one else did

 Carroll Horton .......................................life long friend and indy car owner

Judy Morris.................... a true race fan

todd shafer..............."a rock n roller" with a love for racing!

FOLLOW US on