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About NASCAR

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’).


Tyler Reddick takes checkered in wild Talladega finish for Michael Jordan’s first win while in attendance

 

James Gilbert/Getty Images

April 21, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Tyler Reddick prevailed in a typically-frantic Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway run to the checkered flag Sunday in the GEICO 500 NASCAR Cup Series race, narrowly avoiding a multi-car crash in the closing 400 yards – coming from third place out of Turn 4, to earn the win by a slight 0.208-second when race leader Michael McDowell crashed trying to block competitors approaching the finish line; McDowell’s move slowing the bottom line and allowing Reddick in the high lane to motor through to his first victory of the year and sixth of his career.

 

So pumped to claim this win, the 28-year old Californian climbed the grandstand fence, pumping his fist to the screaming, adoring crowd while one of his 23XI Racing team owners, NBA legend Michael Jordan celebrated on pit lane, taking Reddick’s young son Beau in his arms and grinning from ear-to-ear. This was the first time Jordan had been at track when his team won a race.

 

“Man, it’s incredible,’’ said Reddick, who led 13 laps on the afternoon. “Everyone on this 45 Toyota Camry worked really hard today. Didn’t really work out in that third stage for us, but we were able to fight and defend our track position.

 

“Was that crazy guys?’’ he yelled toward the cheering grandstands. “A lot of chaos. That’s Talladega for you.’’

 

“I just have to give a lot of credit to Ty Gibbs and Martin Truex, it was just us Toyotas left and they pushed me with everything they had. Without Martin and Ty and those pushes we don’t win this race.’’

 

The final few laps pitted a low line of Fords – the manufacturer trying to earn its first win of 2024 – and a high line led by the Toyotas. McDowell, the 2021 Daytona 500 winner anticipated a huge run from the cars behind, but conceded later that he was just a little late making the block.

 

The contact when he pulled down to Roush Fenway Keselowski driver Brad Keselowski sent McDowell’s car off track. Keselowski was still able to recover and finish second – his second straight runner-up finish this season. Afterward, McDowell apologized to Keselowski for essentially costing the former series champion a win with the move.

 

“We did a good job keeping those Mustang Dark Horses up front,’’ said McDowell, who led a race best 36 laps. “He [Keselowski] did everything right. He pushed me. I was able to get in front of him the first time but when I came back down I barely wasn’t clear. I’ll have to watch the replay. I hate it. I hate it we didn’t make it to the finish line. We had such a fast mustang today. … just came up short and took a lot of guys out and I apologize.’’

 

The race ending was in stark contrast to the early portion of the event. For the first time since NASCAR instituted “stage racing” in 2017 there were no caution periods through the opening two stages (other than the scheduled stage breaks).

 

McDowell won the pole position and as promised all weekend, was set to race strategically not forcing his No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford to the front all day but instead when it needed to be there. There was a lot of hope that Ford would secure its first win of the year Sunday and two of the Mustangs – driven by Austin Cindric (Stage 1) and Joey Logano (Stage 2) – swept the stage victories early in the race.

 

But as is so often the case, a late race restart - with 27 laps remaining - set the tone for the finish with McDowell leading the bottom line and Fords stacked up behind him. Reddick led the high line with Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver Martin Truex Jr. behind him. McDowell and Reddick exchanged the lead 10 times in that final 27-lap stretch to the trophy – indicative of a day when there were 23 race leaders and 73 lead changes, including New Zealander Shane Van Gisbergen's first NASCAR Cup Series laps out front on an oval (three laps).

 

It was an exhaustive and exhilarating afternoon depending on what side of the finishing order you came out on. All the drivers – including several collected in the multi-car race ending crash – confirmed they were okay.

 

“Well, [team co-owner] Denny [Hamlin] keeps saying I’m bad luck,’’ Jordan said, ”And today we proved him wrong.

 

“The whole team did a good job,’’ he continued. “I’m very happy to be here to see it. Everybody always tells me when we win we have a good celebration but this is the first time I’ve been here [for a win].

 

“As you know this is NBA playoffs right now and to me, this is like an NBA playoff game, I am so ecstatic for the fans who support the sport itself. You know we’ve been working hard trying to get ourselves to compete against all the top guys in this sport. And we’ve done a heckuva job just to be where we are and for us to win and win a big race like this it means so much to me and effort the team has put in.

 

“I’m all in. It replaces a lot of competitiveness I had in basketball, but this is even worse because I have no control. If I was playing basketball, I’d have total control, but I have no control and live vicariously through the drivers and crew chiefs. I’m very happy for 23 eleven – 110 percent.’’

 

Hamlin, who finished 37th after being collected in a crash, smiled upon hearing Jordan’s elation and Beau Reddicks’ cool celebration with the legend.

 

“Beau has no idea of the significance of that moment,” Hamlin said.

 

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Noah Gragson finished a career best third, followed by JTG Daugherty’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman.

 

Anthony Alfredo, who led four laps, finished a career best sixth place for Beard Motorsports. Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron was seventh, followed by Front Row Motorsports’ Todd Gilliland, Spire Motorsports’ Justin Haley and the Wood Brothers’ Harrison Burton.

 

Despite a 20th place finish Sunday, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson leads the NASCAR Cup Series championship standings by 16 points over Truex, who was 11th Sunday.

 

The NASCAR Cup Series moves to Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway for next Sunday’s Wurth 400 (2 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Truex is the defending race winner.

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race - GEICO 500

Talladega Superspeedway

Talladega, Alabama

Sunday, April 21, 2024

 

                1. (18)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 188.

                2. (22)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 188.

                3. (36)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 188.

                4. (33)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 188.

                5. (12)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 188.

                6. (24)  Anthony Alfredo(i), Chevrolet, 188.

                7. (13)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 188.

                8. (3)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 188.

                9. (19)  Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 188.

                10. (16)  Harrison Burton, Ford, 188.

                11. (6)  Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 188.

                12. (26)  Chase Briscoe, Ford, 188.

                13. (32)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 188.

                14. (11)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 188.

                15. (9)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 188.

                16. (29)  Josh Berry #, Ford, 188.

                17. (35)  Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 188.

                18. (31)  Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 188.

                19. (7)  Joey Logano, Ford, 188.

                20. (21)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 188.

                21. (38)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 188.

                22. (15)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 188.

                23. (2)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 188.

                24. (34)  Cody Ware, Ford, 188.

                25. (8)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 188.

                26. (4)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 188.

                27. (25)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 188.

                28. (17)  Shane Van Gisbergen(i), Chevrolet, 188.

                29. (30)  Zane Smith #, Chevrolet, 188.

                30. (5)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 188.

                31. (1)  Michael McDowell, Ford, Accident, 187.

                32. (37)  BJ McLeod(i), Chevrolet, 187.

                33. (20)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 184.

                34. (27)  Justin Haley, Ford, 184.

                35. (28)  Erik Jones, Toyota, Accident, 154.

                36. (14)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, Accident, 154.

                37. (23)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, Accident, 154.

                38. (10)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, Accident, 132.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  155.977 mph.

Time of Race:  3 Hrs, 13 Mins, 29 Secs. Margin of Victory:  0.208 Seconds.

Caution Flags:  4 for 21 laps.

Lead Changes:  72 among 23 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   M. McDowell 1;A. Cindric 2;M. McDowell 3-4;A. Cindric 5;M. Truex Jr. 6;D. Hemric 7-9;*. McLeod(i) 10;D. Hemric 11-14;C. Briscoe 15-16;J. Haley 17-18;M. Truex Jr. 19-21;J. Haley 22-23;M. Truex Jr. 24-31;*. McLeod(i) 32-33;M. Truex Jr. 34-35;*. McLeod(i) 36;M. Truex Jr. 37-38;*. McLeod(i) 39;C. Briscoe 40;N. Gragson 41;C. Elliott 42-43;S. Van Gisbergen(i) 44;B. Keselowski 45;C. Elliott 46-47;A. Cindric 48-51;C. Elliott 52;A. Cindric 53-62;B. Keselowski 63;K. Busch 64-66;R. Blaney 67;K. Busch 68;S. Van Gisbergen(i) 69;*. Alfredo(i) 70;N. Gragson 71;J. Nemechek 72-78;N. Gragson 79;J. Nemechek 80;*. Alfredo(i) 81;J. Nemechek 82-93;D. Hamlin 94;C. Buescher 95;N. Gragson 96;C. Buescher 97;S. Van Gisbergen(i) 98;C. Buescher 99-101;J. Logano 102-105;D. Hamlin 106;J. Logano 107-108;D. Hamlin 109-110;J. Logano 111-113;C. Buescher 114;J. Logano 115-122;T. Gibbs 123;J. Logano 124-126;R. Chastain 127-128;J. Logano 129-130;R. Chastain 131;N. Gragson 132;R. Chastain 133-135;*. Alfredo(i) 136-137;J. Berry # 138-140;D. Hemric 141;M. McDowell 142-157;C. Hocevar # 158;T. Reddick 159-162;M. McDowell 163-170;T. Reddick 171;M. McDowell 172-174;T. Reddick 175;M. McDowell 176-177;T. Reddick 178;M. McDowell 179-182;T. Reddick 183-188.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  Michael McDowell 7 times for 36 laps; Joey Logano 6 times for 22 laps; John Hunter Nemechek 3 times for 20 laps; Martin Truex Jr. 5 times for 16 laps; Austin Cindric 4 times for 16 laps; Tyler Reddick 5 times for 13 laps; Daniel Hemric 3 times for 8 laps; Ross Chastain 3 times for 6 laps; Chris Buescher 4 times for 6 laps; * BJ McLeod(i) 4 times for 5 laps; Chase Elliott 3 times for 5 laps; Noah Gragson 5 times for 5 laps; Denny Hamlin 3 times for 4 laps; Justin Haley 2 times for 4 laps; Kyle Busch 2 times for 4 laps; * Anthony Alfredo(i) 3 times for 4 laps; Josh Berry # 1 time for 3 laps; Chase Briscoe 2 times for 3 laps; Shane Van Gisbergen(i) 3 times for 3 laps; Brad Keselowski 2 times for 2 laps; Carson Hocevar # 1 time for 1 lap; Ryan Blaney 1 time for 1 lap; Ty Gibbs 1 time for 1 lap.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 2,9,24,12,8,21,20,6,45,48

Stage #2 Top Ten: 22,2,5,3,1,45,17,9,41,54


 

McDowell captures pole for Sunday's race at Talladega

 Sean Gardner/Getty Images

April 20, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Ford led qualifying for Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), with Michael McDowell earning the second pole position of his career Saturday.

 

McDowell’s No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford made a dramatic final run in the final round of qualifying with a speed of 182.022 mph (52.609 seconds) around the 2.66-mile high-banks, just edging fellow Mustang driver Austin Cindric, whose top speed in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford was 181.739 mph (52.691 seconds). It was a dramatic birthday nod for the Ford Mustang that is celebrating its 60th anniversary this week.

 

Superspeedway racing has been a strong suit for 39-year old Phoenix native McDowell. He started on the outside of the front row for the season-opening Daytona 500 and won his only other pole at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March. Sunday will mark his fifth top-10 starting spot of 2024.

 

“I think we all felt that pressure knowing how strong we were at Daytona and Atlanta to come here to Talladega and repeat and have a really good starting spot,’’ said McDowell, the 2021 Daytona 500 winner and last year’s Indianapolis Grand Prix winner.

 

“The guys put a lot of energy and effort into all the little extra details it takes to get that speed. So excited for tomorrow and feel good about what we’ve been able to do this year with our superspeedway program.

 

“This is a good week for us to get a win,’’ McDowell added with a smile, noting the Ford Mustang anniversary.

 

Ford, which has yet to secure a trophy in the season’s nine races, certainly stacked Talladega qualifying. McDowell’s teammate Todd Gilliland – who has led the most superspeedway laps this year - was third fastest in the No. 38 Ford, followed by Richard Childress Racing teammates Kyle Busch in the No. 8 Chevy and Austin Dillon in the No. 3 Chevrolet. Busch is the defending race winner.

 

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. was the top Toyota in qualifying and his No. 19 Camry will roll off sixth. Team Penske’s Joey Logano will start seventh in the No. 22 Ford Mustang, followed by Ford teammate Roush Fenway Keselowski’s Chris Buescher, last week’s race winner Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and Christopher Bell in the No. 20 JGR Toyota.

 

Of note, NASCAR Cup Series championship leader Kyle Larson will be starting last in the 38-car field.

 

His No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet wasn’t allowed to qualify Saturday because team members were seen tampering with the roof rails while pushing the car to pit road. NASCAR deemed it an unapproved adjustment and immediately disallowed a qualifying attempt.

 

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ryan Preece will start 11th in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford – his best qualifying run, by far, this season. Also of note, Hendrick Motorsports William Byron, a series-best three-race winner this season, will roll off 13th, alongside 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace, who earned his first career victory here in 2021.

 

Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Penske Racing’s Ryan Blaney – who has three Talladega victories including last Fall in the Playoffs, will start 21st.  Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin, a two-time winner at the track, will start 23rd.

 

NOTES

*Hendrick Motorsports’ Elliott is a two-time Talladega race winner and has always been strong on the big tracks – like 'Dega and Daytona International Speedway. But, he conceded, he never knows what to “expect” at these venues in terms of the final run to the finish.

 

Five of the last eight Talladega races have included an overtime finish – neither of Elliott’s wins (2019 and 2022), however, came with extra laps.

 

“It’ a 64 dollar question, I don’t know,’’ Elliott said of the situation and being able to plan ahead on the strategy of extra laps or not.

 

“For me personally, I look at it like it’s going to go to the finish and you try to position yourself where you want to be when you get back to the start-finish line. it’s just really hard thing to guess when a wreck is going to happen, if it’s going to happen. I just don’t know. Ask [Ryan] Blaney. I feel like he’s won the last 15 races.’’

 

*Blaney, who won at Talladega last Fall, was asked about Elliott’s remarks on why he is so good at the big track – in regulation or in overtime. A victory this weekend would mark his fourth at Talladega.

 

“You never can predict it, I’ve always had that in my head,’’ Blaney said. “You can sit around and predict favorites for these races here for and Daytona and it’s like trying to guess the lottery. You just never know what’s going to happen. My mindset is always just try to stay in the game and just be in position to try and capitalize at the end. We’ve been fortunate here the last handful of times to have a shot to at least run up front and have a shot to win the race.’’

 

*Even before McDowell won pole position for Sunday’s race, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Buescher acknowledged this weekend’s Talladega 500-miler represented a really great opportunity for Ford to get in the winner’s column for the first time this season.

 

Blaney won the Fall Talladega race in his Ford, and Buescher’s teammate and team co-owner Brad Keselowski is the winningest driver in Sunday’s field with six victories at the big track.

 

Even without having a win, Buescher is ranked 13th with five top-10s in the opening nine races. Keselowski is ranked 17th with three top-five showings.

 

“It’s circled high on the list, because it’s “the next one,’’ Buescher said of Talladega, noting that for his RFK team the opening eight races of this season have been far more successful than they were a year ago.

 

“We were fast in Daytona,’’ he said, adding, “We’re never sitting still, this sport doesn’t do that.’’

 

Former Ford driver and current FOX television NASCAR analyst Kevin Harvick said this week, Ford needs to win and win soon. Keselowski agreed.

 

“It’s definitely a better opportunity for us,’’ Keselowski said of Ford winning at Talladega. “We have more speed as a manufacturer at these types pf tracks and we need to capitalize on that. I think it’s a great opportunity not just for Ford to win but for our team to win at RFK and we need to come out of here with great finishes.’’

 
 

 

Chase Elliott wins in double overtime, snaps 42-race winless streak at Texas

 

Chris Graythen/Getty Images

Chris Graythen/Getty Images

April 14, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Chase Elliott held off the field in a thrilling, wildly-popular double overtime victory in the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway Sunday afternoon to earn his first victory in 42 starts – dating back to the 2022 season.

 

By no means was it an easy win for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series champion and the sport’s perennial Most Popular Driver, but that’s part of what made it so special to 28-year old Georgia-native. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet prevailed in three late race restarts – including two in overtime – to claim his first NASCAR Cup Series win on the 1.5-mile Texas high banks and first trophy since a Playoff victory at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in October 2022.

 

“Oh man, it couldn’t feel any better,” said a smiling Elliott, who did a “reverse” victory lap around the track in homage to the late series champion Alan Kulwicki, whose car was also sponsored by the Hooters restaurant chain that Elliott’s car carried on Sunday.

 

“Couldn’t be any more grateful for this journey and the fact, it hasn’t always been fun but certainly I have enjoyed working with our guys,” he continued. “We’ve been working really hard and really well together and that’s always been fun. We’ve enjoyed the fight together.”

 

RFK Racing owner/driver Brad Keselowski finished a season-best runner-up in a race that lasted more than three and a half hours and had a track record 16 caution periods.

 

On a restart with two laps of regulation to go, Elliott and Denny Hamlin were vying for the lead side-by-side when Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota got loose and into the wall, putting the race into a two-lap overtime shootout. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain started alongside Elliott but couldn’t pass him before another caution came out a lap into overtime, forcing another restart.

 

On that restart, Elliott got ahead of Chastain again and took the white flag signaling one lap to go, when Chastain was tagged from behind by Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron – officially ending the race. Chastain, who led 33 laps on the day was credited with a 32nd-place finish. Hamlin, who led 37 laps, ended up 30th.

 

Elliott conceded the afternoon was a full-on day of drama and high competition. There were 23 lead changes among 13 drivers – seven of whom led double digit laps.

 

“It was crazy,” he said, “And I couldn’t be more proud of our team.”

 

Bryon, a three-race winner this season, was third, followed by  23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick and Chastain’s Trackhouse Racing teammate Daniel Suarez.

 

“We didn’t have a ton of speed, I was more frustrated than anything because I feel like we have a great team and we don’t have the speed to go with it and we’re doing all we can do to overcome that,” Keselowski said, adding. “So proud of the team for the pit stops, the strategy and the execution [today].”

 

Differing pit strategies and plenty of pit road issues played into the late race push to the checkered flag.

 

With 60 laps remaining Reddick pulled away to the biggest lead of the race – more than six seconds on the field, but a slow pit stop – trouble with the left rear tire – forced him into a game of catch-up. His top five was impressive considering the setback.

 

Similarly, Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr., who has led the championship standings this year, was running up front when he had trouble on pit road – forced to make two stops on the final pit stop cycle to correct a loose wheel. He finished 14th despite the woes.

 

And the day’s most dominant driver, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson also had to rally from a setback. He started his No. 5 Hendrick Chevrolet from the pole position for the third consecutive week and led a race best 77 of the 276 laps early – winning the opening stage, only to have a right rear tire fall of his car during an early caution period.

 

He was penalized two laps for the tire situation – per the rulebook – and spent much of the remainder of the race trying to make up ground. He got back on the lead lap and was moving forward when he was caught in an accident with only eight laps remaining.

 

Larson ultimately finished 21st, but holds a 17-point edge over Truex atop the NASCAR Cup Series championship.

 

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe finished sixth. Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon earned his best finish of the season with a seventh-place run. 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace, RCR’s Kyle Busch and Spire Motorsports rookie Carson Hocevar rounded out the top-10.

 

The NASCAR Cup Series moves East for next Sunday’s GEICO 500 at the famed Talladega Superspeedway (3 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Kyle Busch is the defending race winner.

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race – Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400

Texas Motor Speedway

Fort Worth, Texas

Sunday, April 14, 2024

 

  1. (24)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 276.
  2. (22)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 276.
  3. (6)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 276.
  4. (4)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 276.
  5. (17)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 276.
  6. (5)  Chase Briscoe, Ford, 276.
  7. (10)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 276.
  8. (15)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 276.
  9. (35)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 276.
  10. (16)  Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 276.
  11. (20)  Joey Logano, Ford, 276.
  12. (26)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 276.
  13. (2)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 276.
  14. (9)  Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 276.
  15. (19)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 276.
  16. (36)  Ty Dillon(i), Chevrolet, 276.
  17. (3)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 276.
  18. (21)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 276.
  19. (27)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 276.
  20. (38)  Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 276.
  21. (1)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 276.
  22. (23)  Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 276.
  23. (31)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 276.
  24. (32)  Justin Haley, Ford, 276.
  25. (8)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 276.
  26. (18)  Zane Smith #, Chevrolet, 276.
  27. (33)  Kaz Grala #, Ford, 276.
  28. (29)  Harrison Burton, Ford, 276.
  29. (37)  Jimmie Johnson, Toyota, 276.
  30. (11)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 276.
  31. (28)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 276.
  32. (12)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, Accident, 275.
  33. (7)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 268.
  34. (30)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, Accident, 226.
  35. (13)  Michael McDowell, Ford, Accident, 143.
  36. (25)  Josh Berry #, Ford, Accident, 136.
  37. (14)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, Accident, 100.
  38. (34)  Austin Hill(i), Chevrolet, Steering, 98.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  116.492 mph.

Time of Race:  3 Hrs, 33 Mins, 14 Secs. Margin of Victory:  Under Caution Seconds.

Caution Flags:  16 for 72 laps.

Lead Changes:  23 among 13 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   K. Larson 1-35;T. Gibbs 36-40;C. Elliott 41-52;K. Larson 53-54;C. Bell 55;K. Larson 56-84;R. Blaney 85-87;*. Hill(i) 88;R. Blaney 89-99;K. Larson 100;R. Blaney 101-103;T. Gilliland 104-106;K. Larson 107-116;D. Hamlin 117-138;R. Chastain 139-167;B. Wallace 168-172;H. Burton 173-179;T. Reddick 180-213;R. Chastain 214-217;J. Logano 218-231;T. Reddick 232-234;C. Elliott 235-244;D. Hamlin 245-259;C. Elliott 260-276.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  Kyle Larson 5 times for 77 laps; Chase Elliott 3 times for 39 laps; Denny Hamlin 2 times for 37 laps; Tyler Reddick 2 times for 37 laps; Ross Chastain 2 times for 33 laps; Ryan Blaney 3 times for 17 laps; Joey Logano 1 time for 14 laps; Harrison Burton 1 time for 7 laps; Bubba Wallace 1 time for 5 laps; Ty Gibbs 1 time for 5 laps; Todd Gilliland 1 time for 3 laps; * Austin Hill(i) 1 time for 1 lap; Christopher Bell 1 time for 1 lap.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 5,20,11,45,14,12,9,34,24,23

Stage #2 Top Ten: 1,23,12,43,14,6,21,47,54,9


 

 

Kyle Larson wins third consecutive pole at Texas Motor Speedway

 

 

sean Gardner/Getty Images

April 13, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

For the third consecutive NASCAR Cup Series race, Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson will lead the field to green – capturing the pole position Saturday afternoon for Sunday’s AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Texas Motor Speedway. 

 

Larson, the last of the 10 Round 2 qualifiers to make a lap, turned in a pole effort of 190.369 mph in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, .003-second faster than Joe Gibbs Racing’s Ty Gibbs. It’s the 250th pole win for the venerable Hendrick team and marks the 13th different NASCAR Cup Series track where Larson has bested a qualifying session. It’s his 25th career pole overall.

 

“Great car for one, and cool to get three poles in a row and like I said on the radio, that’s about the most intense thing you can do or experience, it’s so on edge,’’ Larson said of qualifying on the always-challenging 1.5-mile Texas high banks.  “You know how much throttle time you have to have to run fast. It’s just so sketchy.

 

“Yeah, that was cool. … just a great day and I’m really, really happy to get pole. Honestly since we’ve gone to the NextGen car this has been a place I’ve really struggled in qualifying, like committing into Turn one and I told myself I was going to commit today, and it paid off.’’ 

 

The qualifying outcome was not truly a surprise considering Larson and Gibbs had also been fastest in practice. Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion and current points leader, last won at Texas in his championship season. Gibbs, in his second-year of competition, is racing for his first victory in NASCAR’s elite level.

 

Gibb’s JGR teammate Christopher Bell was third fastest in the No. 20 JGR Toyota, followed by Tyler Reddick in the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe – his No. 14 Ford the fastest of three Fords that advanced to final qualifying. 

 

The season’s three-race winner and the defending Texas winner, Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron will roll off sixth followed by Team Penske’s Ford drivers Ryan Blaney – the reigning series champion – and his teammate Austin Cindric. JGR’s Martin Truex Jr. and last year’s pole-winner, 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace round out the top qualifiers.

 

Qualifying has always been important at Texas with 76 percent of the races won from a top 10 starting position.

 

Briscoe, Blaney and Cindric’s effort in time trials may be especially critical this week as Ford is still looking for its first victory of the 2024 season.

 

JGR’s Denny Hamlin will start 11th – giving all four of the team’s cars good starting position for Sunday’s race. He’ll line up next to Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain, who is racing for his first victory of the season as well.

 

Two cars suffered damage in Group B practice – the track’s all-time winningest driver Kyle Busch, fresh off a NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series victory Friday night, spun his No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevy exiting Turn 2 and bringing out a brief red flag. 

 

Shortly after practice resumed, the NASCAR Cup Series race’s all-time winningest driver, Jimmie Johnson also had trouble negotiating Turn 2, his No. 84 Legacy Motor Club Chevy making heavy contact with the wall. The team pulled out a back-up for Sunday’s race – the NASCAR Hall of Famer Johnson’s second start of the season – but no decision had been made by the start of qualifying session if he would need to swap cars. 

 

Neither Johnson nor Busch made a qualifying run and will start 37th and 34th, respectively. Johnson has won a series best seven NASCAR Cup Series races at the track and on Friday night, Busch’s win in the NASCAR CFAFTSMAN Truck Series gave him a combined 20 victories at Texas in NASCAR’s three premier series. He’s a four-time winner in the NASCAR Cup Series race in Fort Worth. 

 

“It is a bit different – there is no doubt,’’ the seven-time series champion Johnson conceded of the NextGen race car used in competition now. “I felt like we did a nice job trying to get me ready in the simulator. Unfortunately, I just got a little loose in turn one – I caught it – but it is such a narrow lane, that once I caught the car I was in the wall, and I was kind of along for the ride then.’’

 

NOTES

*The season’s winningest driver, Byron was asked about the difference in winning a NASCAR Cup Series championship now versus when the 48-year-old Johnson was competing fulltime from 2002-2020 and racked up seven season titles.  The championship formats changed multiple times during Johnson’s tenure while the 26-year old Byron has only known the elimination-style path used today.

 

“I think the playoff points are a good thing, but I don’t know any different,’’ said Byron, a three-race winner this season. “I think it’s just the format and the nature of it is very intense. .. very stressful.

 

“But I think that’s what you want in sports, really. .. to have something really challenges everyone. So, I feel like the way it is brings out those dramatic moments. If I were a fan, that’s what I would like to see. As a competitor, you do have to take it with a grain of salt, knowing that really, it’s about Phoenix. So you’ve just got to prepare that way, know that’s the case and try to bring your best stuff then.’’

 

 


 

William Byron leads Hendrick Motorsports’ podium sweep at Martinsville

 

 Getty Images

April 7, 2024

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service 

 

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – William Byron has a penchant for milestones, and in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway, he got another.

 

Last year Byron picked up the 300th NASCAR Cup Series victory for Hendrick Motorsports at Texas Motor Speedway.

 

On Sunday, in a race that went to overtime, Byron led an unprecedented 1-2-3 finish for owner Rick Hendrick at the 0.526-mile short track, as the organization celebrated its 40th anniversary in NASCAR’s premier division.

 

In front of a throng of employees and supporters gathered in tents overlooking Turn 2, Hendrick became the only organization to sweep the podium positions in a Cup race at Martinsville. Byron’s victory was the 29th for Hendrick Motorsports at the track, most for an organization at a single NASCAR venue.

 

“Just so proud of everyone at Hendrick Motorsports,” Byron said. “Grew up a big Hendrick fan. To be here for the 40th anniversary, all that goes into just this organization, all the people, it's all about the people. Just want to thank Mr. Hendrick and (wife) Linda and everyone involved.

 

“It's pretty awesome. Bad-ass to win at Martinsville. We've been struggling at the short tracks. Just kept inching up on it. I’ve got a great team. They just kept my head in it. It stunk to do a restart there at the end like that, but that's the way it goes.”

 

An early green-flag pit stop proved the difference for the driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet, who earned his third victory of the season, his second at Martinsville and the 13th of his career.

 

With Denny Hamlin in the lead, crew chief Rudy Fugle called Byron to pit road on Lap 297 as the first of the lead-lap drivers to get fuel and fresh tires. Hendrick teammates Kyle Larson, the pole winner, and Chase Elliott followed a lap later.

 

The early stops allowed the Hendrick drivers to leap-frog Hamlin, who pitted on Lap 299 and could not advance past the fourth position before caution for John Hunter Nemechek’s accident in Turn 4 on Lap 398 of 400 sent the event to overtime.

 

On Lap 310, Byron passed Elliott for the ninth position, and as the drivers ahead of him made pit stops, he worked his way forward, passing Daniel Suarez for the lead on Lap 327 before Suarez came to pit road.

 

Byron led the next 86 laps, and after Elliott was credited with leading Lap 413 at the overtime restart, Byron surged ahead for the final two circuits and crossed the finish line 0.550 seconds ahead of Larson.

 

“Congrats to William,” said Larson, who won the first 80-lap stage wire-to-wire. “He did a really good job. Kind of schooled us all there after that green flag stop. Did a really good job passing all of us. He was able to set a good pace, still get through traffic good.

 

“My car felt really good. I think we were all kind of the same speed, honestly. Just lost a little bit of track position there in the second stage. Was never able to overcome it.”

 

Byron held a lead of more than two seconds before the fifth and final caution of the race. On the overtime restart, he survived a bump from Elliott, who slipped to third behind Larson at the finish.

 

Bubba Wallace ran fourth, followed by reigning series champion Ryan Blaney. Joey Logano, Tyler Reddick, Alex Bowman, Ryan Preece and Chase Briscoe completed the top 10. Hamlin pitted for fresh tires before the overtime, restarted 10th and came home 11th.

 

“We were just trying to do anything we could to steal one with our Sport Clips Toyota,” Hamlin said. “The tires didn’t wear enough to matter. We saw that when Joey (Logano) stayed out on those 80-lap lefts and led most of the stage (Stage 2).

 

“Tires didn’t wear, and we just struggled to pass all day. Once I came out of that cycle, third or fourth, that’s kind of just where I stayed.” 

 

Larson, who led 86 laps, took over the series lead by 14 points over Martin Truex Jr., who finished 18th on Sunday, and by 17 over Hamlin.

 

The only negative aspect of the Hendrick party was the absence of the team owner, who underwent knee replacement surgery and couldn’t attend. But NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon was there to serve as grand marshal and represent the organization.

 

“These guys, these three guys, as well as Bowman, they drove their butts off,” Gordon said. “How about that William Byron, the 24 car? Every time we have a milestone day or opportunity or moment, he steps up.

 

“He got number 300. This is going to be a huge win for him and the whole organization.”

 

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race - Cook Out 400

 

Martinsville Speedway

 

Martinsville, Virginia

 

Sunday, April 7, 2024

 

 

 

          1. (18)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 415.

 

          2. (1)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 415.

 

          3. (3)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 415.

 

          4. (2)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 415.

 

          5. (9)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 415.

 

          6. (6)  Joey Logano, Ford, 415.

 

          7. (19)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 415.

 

          8. (10)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 415.

 

          9. (22)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 415.

 

          10. (5)  Chase Briscoe, Ford, 415.

 

          11. (8)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 415.

 

          12. (17)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 415.

 

          13. (16)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 415.

 

          14. (12)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 415.

 

          15. (30)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 414.

 

          16. (11)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 414.

 

          17. (25)  Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 414.

 

          18. (4)  Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 414.

 

          19. (15)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 414.

 

          20. (26)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 414.

 

          21. (35)  Michael McDowell, Ford, 414.

 

          22. (21)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 414.

 

          23. (14)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 414.

 

          24. (13)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 414.

 

          25. (7)  Josh Berry #, Ford, 413.

 

          26. (31)  Kaz Grala #, Ford, 413.

 

          27. (33)  Josh Williams(i), Chevrolet, 413.

 

          28. (36)  Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 413.

 

          29. (23)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 413.

 

          30. (27)  Justin Haley, Ford, 413.

 

          31. (24)  Zane Smith #, Chevrolet, 412.

 

          32. (32)  Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 412.

 

          33. (34)  Harrison Burton, Ford, 412.

 

          34. (28)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 412.

 

          35. (20)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 411.

 

          36. (29)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, Accident, 396.

 

          37. (37)  David Starr(i), Ford, Steering, 311.

 

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  76.096 mph.

 

Time of Race:  2 Hrs, 52 Mins, 7 Secs. Margin of Victory:  0.550 Seconds.

 

Caution Flags:  5 for 51 laps.

 

Lead Changes:  13 among 8 drivers.

 

Lap Leaders:   K. Larson 1-86;J. Logano 87-169;D. Hamlin 170-193;C. Elliott 194-252;D. Hamlin 253;C. Elliott 254-257;D. Hamlin 258-298;J. Logano 299;C. Briscoe 300-307;A. Cindric 308-313;D. Suarez 314-326;W. Byron 327-412;C. Elliott 413;W. Byron 414-415.

 

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  William Byron 2 times for 88 laps; Kyle Larson 1 time for 86 laps; Joey Logano 2 times for 84 laps; Denny Hamlin 3 times for 66 laps; Chase Elliott 3 times for 64 laps; Daniel Suarez 1 time for 13 laps; Chase Briscoe 1 time for 8 laps; Austin Cindric 1 time for 6 laps.

 

Stage #1 Top Ten: 5,23,9,14,19,22,11,24,4,8

 

Stage #2 Top Ten: 11,23,5,9,22,48,14,24,1,4

 


 

 

Kyle Larson edges nemesis Bubba Wallace for Martinsville pole

 

April 6, 2024

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

MARTINSVILLE, Va.—Kyle Larson and Bubba Wallace renewed their rivalry on Saturday at Martinsville Speedway—without contact between their cars.

 

Six days after Wallace turned Larson with fewer than two laps left to cause the final caution at Richmond and take a likely win from Martin Truex Jr., Larson edged Wallace for the pole position for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

With Hendrick Motorsports celebrating its 40th anniversary this weekend with special paint schemes, Larson—the last driver to make a qualifying run in the final round—scorched the 0.526-mile short track with a lap at 96.034 mph (19.718 seconds) to edge Wallace (96.029 mph) for the top starting spot by 0.001 seconds.

 

“Of all people, it would be Larson—by a thousandth,” Wallace said after Larson’s lap flashed onto the scoreboard.

 

Though Larson was part and parcel of the final caution at Richmond, he rallied to finish third in overtime, while a slow final pit stop relegated Wallace to 13th.

 

“Last week was pretty sweet revenge, us finishing third and him having a rough pit stop,” Larson said with a smile.

 

The pole on Saturday, however, was a something of a surprise.

 

“Honestly, a bit unexpected,” said Larson, who earned his second straight Busch Light Pole Award this season, his second at Martinsville and the 18th of his career. "I knew we’d be good, but that second lap (in the final round) didn’t feel that good. It was just enough, though. Really cool to get this 40th anniversary Hendrick Camaro on the pole.

 

“It seems like all four Hendrick cars are really good, too, so hopefully it’s a good day for the organization.”

 

Larson’s teammate, Chase Elliott, qualified third at 95.869 mph, with Alex Bowman taking the 10th starting spot. William Byron failed to make the final round and will take the green flag in 18th.

 

Truex (95.864 mph) claimed the fourth spot on the grid, followed by Ford drivers Chase Briscoe, Joey Logano and Josh Berry. Last week’s Richmond winner, Denny Hamlin, reigning series champion Ryan Blaney and Bowman will start eighth through 10th, respectively.

 

Note: Team owner Rick Hendrick had planned to drive the pace car on Sunday as part of the 40th anniversary celebration, but knee replacement surgery intervened, preventing Hendrick from attending the race.


 

hamlin holds off Truex in overtime to win at Richmond Raceway

 Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

March 31, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team gave him a clutch pit stop to emerge with the lead out of the pits and then he was able to hold the advantage on a two-lap overtime shootout to claim the Toyota Owners 400 victory Saturday night at his home track, Richmond (Va.) Raceway.

 

It was Hamlin’s 53rd career NASCAR Cup Series win, second of the season and his fifth victory at the three-quarter mile Richmond oval – a .269-second margin of victory over Team Penske’s Joey Logano. And it came at the expense of his JGR teammate Martin Truex Jr. who finished fourth despite leading a dominant 228 of the race’s 407 laps.

 

“This was a team win for sure,” said Hamlin, who led 17 laps on the night. “Each one of these pit crew members just did an amazing job, they’ve been killing it all year.

 

“Such a great feeling when you can come in and have a pit crew like that.”

 

It was a certainly a frustrating ending for Truex, who had been out front 54 consecutive laps in his No. 19 JGR Toyota when a caution flag flew with only two laps of regulation remaining. On the ensuing pit stop, Hamlin beat him off pit road and Truex was unable to take the lead back in that final two lap run, ultimately getting passed by Logano for second and polesitter Kyle Larson for third.

 

“It’s unfortunate, but it’s happened a few times over the years,” Truex said. “We were in a great spot and had a great Auto Owners Camry all night long and the guys did a really good job. Just got beat out of the pits and then he [Hamlin] jumped the start and just used me up in Turn 1.

 

“Definitely sucks. Another car capable of winning, we’ll just have to come back next week and try to get one.”

 

The silver lining for Truex, is that he still holds the championship lead by 14 points over Larson, who had a busy ending to the race. Contact between Hendrick Motorsports’ Larson and 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace brought out the final yellow flag to force the first overtime period for a NASCAR Cup Series race this season.

 

Larson was still able to come out fourth place on the pit stop and challenge for the win, although he and Truex banged doors in the closing laps fighting for position.

 

“My pit crew did a really good job to get us off pit road and get us those spots to restart fourth and gain one more,” Larson said. “I’ll take third after what could have been a lot worse there on the front stretch. Proud of the HendrickCars.com team.

 

“It was a good weekend for us, winning the pole, winning a stage and getting back to third. Happy about that.”

 

As for the late race contact between him and a frustrated Truex, Larson said. “I think he was just mad. He was mad the 11 [Hamlin] used him up on the restart and that’s probably where it really started from.

 

“I think he was more mad at Denny but I was the closest one for him to take his anger out on,” Larson added with a smile.

 

Larson’s Hendrick teammate – and fellow front-row starter – Chase Elliott finished fifth.

 

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell, Hendrick’s William Byron, RFK Racing teammates Brad Keselowski and Chris Buescher and 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick rounded out the top-10. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Josh Berry finished 11th, having run in the top-10 most of the night and Wallace, who also ran top-10 most of the race finished 13th after that late race contact with Larson.

 

Of note, with the track still damp from afternoon showers, the field started the race on wet weather tires. NASCAR threw a competition caution at Lap 30, bringing the cars down pit road for a mandatory change to racing slicks. And cars returned to the track in the order they were running at the time of caution. The move to use the wet weather tires allowed the race to start only a few minutes late and was widely praised.

 

The NASCAR Cup Series moves to another short track challenge next Sunday with the Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. Larson is the defending race winner.

 

NASCAR Cup Series Race – Toyota Owners 400

Richmond Raceway

Richmond, Virginia

Sunday, March 31, 2024

 

  1. (11)  Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 407.
  2. (10)  Joey Logano, Ford, 407.
  3. (1)  Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 407.
  4. (7)  Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 407.
  5. (2)  Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 407.
  6. (29)  Christopher Bell, Toyota, 407.
  7. (13)  William Byron, Chevrolet, 407.
  8. (23)  Brad Keselowski, Ford, 407.
  9. (14)  Chris Buescher, Ford, 407.
  10. (19)  Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 407.
  11. (30)  Josh Berry #, Ford, 407.
  12. (17)  Noah Gragson, Ford, 407.
  13. (5)  Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 407.
  14. (27)  Erik Jones, Toyota, 407.
  15. (3)  Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 407.
  16. (8)  Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 407.
  17. (4)  Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 407.
  18. (32)  Chase Briscoe, Ford, 407.
  19. (12)  Ryan Blaney, Ford, 407.
  20. (15)  Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 407.
  21. (6)  Todd Gilliland, Ford, 407.
  22. (20)  Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 407.
  23. (9)  Austin Cindric, Ford, 406.
  24. (22)  Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 406.
  25. (18)  John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 406.
  26. (31)  Michael McDowell, Ford, 406.
  27. (25)  Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 406.
  28. (16)  Ryan Preece, Ford, 406.
  29. (33)  Ty Dillon(i), Chevrolet, 406.
  30. (34)  Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 405.
  31. (35)  Kaz Grala #, Ford, 405.
  32. (36)  Justin Haley, Ford, 405.
  33. (24)  Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 405.
  34. (26)  Harrison Burton, Ford, 405.
  35. (28)  Zane Smith #, Chevrolet, 404.
  36. (21)  Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 404.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  94.076 mph.

Time of Race:  3 Hrs, 14 Mins, 41 Secs. Margin of Victory:  .269 Seconds.

Caution Flags:  5 for 54 laps.

Lead Changes:  16 among 7 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   K. Larson 0;C. Elliott 1-5;K. Larson 6-48;B. Wallace 49;K. Larson 50-150;B. Wallace 151;M. Truex Jr. 152-171;J. Berry # 172;M. Truex Jr. 173-234;J. Berry # 235;M. Truex Jr. 236-286;C. Bell 287-294;M. Truex Jr. 295-335;D. Hamlin 336-345;C. Bell 346;M. Truex Jr. 347-400;D. Hamlin 401-407.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  Martin Truex Jr. 5 times for 228 laps; Kyle Larson 2 times for 144 laps; Denny Hamlin 2 times for 17 laps; Christopher Bell 2 times for 9 laps; Chase Elliott 1 time for 5 laps; Bubba Wallace 2 times for 2 laps; Josh Berry # 2 times for 2 laps.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 5,23,48,19,22,38,9,1,4,41

Stage #2 Top Ten: 19,4,22,5,11,20,17,23,24,45

 

–30–

 

 


Brad Keselowski inches closer to Victory Lane

 

April 23, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - There’s a good argument to be made that one of the hottest driver in the NASCAR Cup Series right now hasn’t even hoisted a trophy. yet.

 

But Brad Keselowski has been awfully close. Sunday at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway he was in prime position to claim his first victory since 2021 – running second to fellow Ford driver Michael McDowell as the field came to the checkered flag. But a typically frantic Talladega finish instead left him runner-up by a fraction of a second to winner Tyler Reddick.

 

It wasn’t a victory, but it was the second consecutive second-place finish for the owner-driver of the RFK Racing team and fifth top-10 finish through the season’s first 10 races. Four of those have been top-five finishes, including the back-to-back runner-up showings Keselowski takes to Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway for Sunday’s Würth 400 (2 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Keselowski has a victory at Dover in 2012 – the same season he captured the NASCAR Cup Series championship. He’s finished inside the top-10 in three of the last five races there.

 

And yet for all the recent positives to consider, Keselowski has not wavered in his stance.

 

“Good finishes are important, but we want wins," Keselowski, 40, said after climbing out of his No. 6 RFK Racing Ford Mustang at Talladega. “We could really taste it today, but it just didn’t happen."

 

This is not to say that Keselowski, whose last race win was at Talladega in 2021, is not proud of the effort or encouraged by the recent results. He just has high expectations. And good reason for them.

 

His work this year is a strong sign that the team is absolutely progressed on-track. Keselowski became a partner with NASCAR Hall of Fame team owner Jack Roush only three years ago and has already infused exactly the kind of high-level expectation and championship thinking to help bring about a racing renaissance of sorts.

 

His four top-five finishes through 10 races this season is already half of the total he tallied in all of 2023. His five top-10 efforts are on-track to better the mark of 16 he had last year. He’s ranked 14th in the NASCAR Cup Series driver standings, but only seven points behind 10th place Alex Bowman.

 

Keselowski’s RFK Racing teammate Chris Buescher won three races last year and qualified for the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. And he’s got five top-10 finishes this season and is ranked 16th – only 16 points behind Bowman in 10th.

 

“I feel like the last two weeks especially, we’ve earned finishes we probably didn’t deserve," said Keselowski, one of the most analytical drivers on the NASCAR Cup Series grid. “It kind of ebbs and flows as the season goes. But when you have cars that are capable of winning, in general, you need to make it count."

 

Keselowski – a 35-race winner - closes out the Spring schedule with a good track record at promising venues. He’s scored victories at all four of the next four points-paying tracks (excluding the All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro, N.C.). He’s won at Dover and Darlington (S.C.) Raceway and has two victories at both Kansas and Charlotte.

 

Combine that with his strong current run and Keselowski has plenty of reason to feel positive. He characterized his organization two weeks ago at Texas as being filled with that same “kind of never-give-up spirit” that Keselowski - the driver - has cultivated and flourished from. Certainly, things seem absolutely headed in the right direction.

 

-30--

 


 

NASCAR Weekend Preview: Talladega Superspeedway

 

April 18, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

The uncertainty of Talladega gives hope to many looking for a win

 

For the second consecutive week, Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson holds the NASCAR Cup Series driver standings lead and this Sunday, the 2021 series champion will try to do something he’s never done: win a NASCAR Cup Series race at the iconic Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in the GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Neither Larson nor his closest championship challenger, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. have won on the Talladega high banks, which consistently present a one-of-a-kind challenge for the series’ very best, no matter the pedigree.

 

Drivers have certainly shared the victory hardware this season with six different winners through the opening nine races. But Talladega is a big opportunity for those still looking to hoist their first trophy in 2024. There have been seven different winners in the last seven races at the 2.66-mile track.

 

Seven of the nine former Talladega race winners entered this weekend – Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch, Ross Chastain, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Bubba Wallace – are racing for their first win of the season. Blaney, Keselowski and Logano are also hoping to give Ford its first win of the season.

 

Busch, driver of the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, is the defending race winner. Blaney, driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford was runner-up to Busch in this spring race last year then came back in the Fall to claim his third victory at the big track. He’s won races at Talladega in all three of NASCAR’s premier series.

 

Keselowski, who earned his best finish (runner-up) of the season at Texas Motor Speedway last weekend, has six Talladega wins – most among active drivers. He scored his very first NASCAR Cup Series win here in 2009. His last Talladega win came in 2021. A victory this weekend would be both sentimental and crucial to a championship run for the 2012 series champ.

 

“Talladega has been a special track for me, and I look forward to going there," said Keselowski, who is still looking to earn his first victory as an owner-driver for the Roush Fenway Keselowski (RFK) Racing team.

 

“I think we will have cars that can compete for the win. There are a lot of peripheral circumstances that would add to how special that would be if we were able to do that. From Mustang’s 60th birthday to where we are as a company to where I am at in my career. So, it would be special to be able to win."

 

Fellow Ford driver and reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion, Blaney, is openly optimistic that Talladega Superspeedway represents a good bet – perhaps the best yet - for a Ford Mustang to be celebrated in Victory Lane. Ford has won four of the last nine races at Talladega, and powered Blaney to his crucial Playoff win last Fall.

 

“The speedways have been pretty good for the Fords for a while," said Blaney. “Ever since I’ve been in the Cup Series I feel like we’ve always been super strong and really been able to compete and try to control the race.

 

“It helps when you have fast cars and Ford has brought fast cars," Blaney continued, adding, “I thought we were really strong at Daytona and I’m sure Talladega is going to be the same way. We’ll all be really strong so you just hope that you can be there at the end of this race and have a shot to win it. I have no doubt in the speed, it’s just about how you execute and try to get through the day."

 

Two opposing motivations are fueling Truex and Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott – both with potentially huge positive ramifications. Truex is 0-for-38 at Talladega and the 2017 series champion is more than ready and capable to put an end to this futility at the big track.

 

Elliott is a two-time Talladega winner and the Georgia-native is unquestionably the ‘Dega fan favorite. Having earned his first win since 2022 last week at Texas, Elliott would love nothing more than to carry that positive momentum into the weekend. He’s ranked fourth in the driver standings – the highest he’s been ranked since the 2022 season finale.

 

Qualifying is set for Saturday at 10:30 a.m. ET (on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin – a two-time Talladega winner - won the pole position for this race last year.

 

It's anyone's race in the Xfinity Series at Talladega this weekend

 

When it comes to racing on the 2.66-mile Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway high banks, everyone on the grid typically feels like they stand a chance to hoist the big trophy. This brand of all-out, pedal-down racing is a specialized artform for the drivers and Saturday’s Ag-Pro 300 (4 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) is always a fan favorite, must-see event.

 

There are only two former race winners among the season’s NASCAR Xfinity Series championship field. Kaulig Racing’s A.J. Allmendinger won in 2022 and Jordan Anderson Racing’s Jeb Burton is a two-time winner, including last Spring when he triumphed over Sheldon Creed in in a tremendously exciting overtime finish.

 

Both Allmendinger and Burton arrive in Alabama highly-motivated, racing for their first victories of the year. In Burton’s case, he’s competing for his first top-10 finish of the season after several hard-luck finishes.

 

As so often happens racing on superspeedways, the finishes in this race are typically wide-open with an anyone-can-win feel. That may be a good thing for several of the 2024 championship leaders, who have not typically fared particularly well at ‘Dega.

 

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chandler Smith brings a 19-point advantage atop the Xfinity Series driver standings over reigning series champion Stewart-Haas Racing’s Cole Custer. He has a 33-point lead on Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill and is 56 points ahead of JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier.

 

Smith, driver of the No. 81 JGR Toyota, has crashed out in both of his previous starts at Talladega with finishes of 38th and 25th-place. Custer, driver of the No. 00 SHR Ford, is batting .500 with two top-10 finishes in four starts. He finished fourth last year.

 

Hill has been a victim of Talladega aggressiveness with zero top-10 finishes in four starts – twice he’s crashed out. His best finish was 14th-place in 2022. However, Hill has started on the front row the last three races and won pole position the last two.

 

The sustained qualifying achievements certainly show Hill – who has three wins at the series’ other big track, Daytona International Speedway - knows his way around a superspeedway. And he is optimistic about his chances on Saturday working with rookie teammate Jesse Love, who won pole position in the Daytona season-opener that Hill won.

 

“So, I think that going into this weekend, a lot of guys are going to do all they can to split the 2 (Love) and the 21 (Hill) up and try to keep us from leading the field," said Hill, a two-race winner this season. “Because if we’re leading the field, him and I both, we do a really good job of stringing the line around. Yes, we have fast race cars, but we know what to do with them as well."

 

This week marks the third race of the season’s Dash 4 Cash incentive program. Last week’s Texas winner, Sam Mayer (No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet), his Texas runner-up Ryan Sieg (No. 39 RSS Racing Chevrolet), Allgaier (No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet) and Allmendinger (No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet) will compete for the money this week. The highest finishing driver among this quartet pockets an extra $100,000 check. The top-four eligible finishers will then qualify for the final leg of the Dash 4 Cash program next week at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway.

 

There is no practice session for the field at Talladega. Qualifying is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. ET on Friday (FS1).


 

Journey back to the top has brought Elliott and the No. 9 team closer

 

April 16, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

It was undoubtedly one of the more popular victories of the season. Chase Elliott’s win Sunday in double-overtime at Texas Motor Speedway was not only the conclusion of an exciting race, but a bold reminder of what Elliott means to the sport and his success means to a wide-open championship battle.

 

It had been 42 races since the 28-year old perennial Most Popular Driver in the sport had celebrated in a Victory Lane – that last win coming in October 2022 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway, where the series competes Sunday in the GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

An off-track injury and one-race suspension early last season put Elliott in a catch-up mode all year and while he certainly turned in competitive race showings, the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series champion missed the Playoff for the first time in his celebrated eight-year career to that point.

 

That disappointment, however, only motivated his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports team and Sunday’s trophy hoist was a sort of comeback culmination – a high-profile reminder that Elliott and this team are absolutely championship-capable. After his win Sunday, Elliott spoke at length about how the recent adversity has only made this team closer and more determined than ever.

 

“One, I’ve just been really proud of our group for sticking together, ‘cause I’m sure a lot of you guys have been around the sport long enough to understand and know that when you have a couple bad years, a period of time that things aren’t going well, it is so easy to jump ship and to start bailing out on one another," Elliott said.

 

“I think that the win’s great, all that stuff is fantastic, but I’m truthfully more proud of the journey and the group of people that we have climbed back up together with. We’ve made each other better. They push me to be a better driver and a better person.

 

“I just feel like we’re all in a really good place and we have been," he continued. “It’s nice to see all the hard work pay off. Those guys really deserve to win. They’ve been busting it for a while, have been doing a really good job.

 

“That’s what I’m most proud of, is the journey and all of us sticking together at the 9-team."

 

That focus has been evident all season and in the last three weeks, in particular, the on-track results made Sunday’s outcome – Elliott’s 19th career win - seem almost inevitable. After mid-teen finishes in five of the opening six races, Elliott finished fifth-place (Richmond, Va.) and third-place (Martinsville, Va.) going into the Texas race leading laps in both, including a season-best 64 laps at the Martinsville half-miler.

 

“I feel like just generally speaking, from a competitive standpoint, we’ve been better to the competition throughout really most of the season, we just hadn’t always had great finishes and great results," Elliott said.

 

“But relative to the guys that won a lot of these things over the last year or so, I felt like we’ve been close to them. I still think we have a lot of work to do, for sure. A lot of things went our way today, I’m not naïve to that, for sure as well.

 

“You have to be in the mix. You got to be up front to even have things go your way. We were close enough to do that. We still want to be better. I think we have room for improvement. Just proud of the way everything worked out. It’s a lot more fun when you’re fighting for wins and up front battling, whether it goes your way or doesn’t go your way. Just to have a shot is enjoyable."

 

And judging by his track record, Elliott can feel especially optimistic about the upcoming weeks on the schedule. He is a two-time winner at Talladega Superspeedway (2019, 2022). He’s also a two-time winner at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway (2018, 2022) and the 2019 winner at Kansas Speedway – the following two stops on the schedule.

 

It all speaks to another important competitive trait Elliott has shown in NASCAR’s big leagues – an uncommonly high level of diversity. That Texas victory gives him wins at 13 different tracks on a schedule that includes 26 venues. And the next slate of races where Elliott has earned trophies prove his keen adaptability. Talladega is a 2.66-mile superspeedway, Dover is a concrete mile and Kansas is a 1.5-miler like Texas.

 

He’s won on four different current road courses (Watkins Glen, N.Y., Charlotte, Austin and Elkhart Lake) and both Watkins Glen and Charlotte are now part of the Playoff 10-race run. He’s won at the Martinsville short track – also on the Playoff schedule - and the Phoenix one-miler, where the Championship 4 will settle the NASCAR Cup Series trophy on Nov. 10.

 

It all bodes well for Elliott, whose team is the third different Hendrick Motorsports car to win this year. His teammate Kyle Larson leads the season championship, and his teammate William Byron leads the series with three victories.

 

It is not lost on Elliott, that he earned his first career Xfinity Series win at Texas in 2014 and it propelled him to a series championship. It’s not unfathomable that Sunday’s victory on those 1.5-mile Texas high-banks puts Elliott back on the NASCAR Cup Series championship path too. It certainly did a lot for the confidence and spirit so essential to driver and team.

 

And it was a strong message to his competitors that Elliott is back up front and perhaps, more determined than ever.

 

“It’s been an extremely important thing to me and fortunately to our entire group, to try to climb this mountain again together and try to get back to where we need to be as a group," said Elliott, noting that most of his team has been together his entire nine years in the NASCAR Cup Series.

 

“That’s pretty special," he said of the closeness of his team. “I look at it as a credit to them because I think they’ve made me better and they’ve pushed me to be better, helped me identify some of my faults and some of my bad habits and been patient with me as I’ve addressed them, or at least started to.

 

“.. I think we still have work to do, no doubt. We had a lot of stuff go our way today. But we’ve been back in the mix more often. That is certainly progress. I think that is worth being proud of."

 


 

 

 Martinsville race may prove to be a watershed moment for Bubba Wallace

 April 9, 2024

 By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Three Hendrick Motorsports drivers—William Byron, Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott—finished 1-2-3 in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway.

 

That aspect of the eighth NASCAR Cup Series race of the season has been well documented. Hendrick is the first organization to sweep the podium positions at the 0.526-mile short track.

 

All but lost in the Hendrick hoopla, however, was the performance of a driver who now seems poised for lasting stardom—Bubba Wallace.

 

Examination of the statistics from Sunday’s race reveals emphatically that, as strong as the Hendrick trio was at the front of the field, those drivers had company.

 

Wallace was closing fast on Larson at the end of the first stage and finished second to the pole winner. At the end of the second stage, he was runner-up behind his 23XI Racing team owner, Denny Hamlin, by less than a half-second.

 

In the two-lap overtime shootout that decided the race, Wallace was fourth by the nose of a car behind Elliott, roughly three feet away from spoiling Hendrick’s storybook sweep.

 

Wallace scored 18 stage points at Martinsville, matching Larson for the highest total. His 51 points for the race were second-most behind Larson’s 53.

 

NASCAR’s loop data statistics for the event are even more telling. With a driver rating of 115.8, Wallace was fourth behind Larson, Elliott and Byron, the race winner. Wallace’s average running position was 3.79, third behind Elliott (3.15) and Larson (3.50), with Byron’s statistics skewed by an 18th-place starting position.

 

Wallace was third fastest late in a run at 89.003 mph, again behind Elliott (89.166 mph) and Larson (89.093 mph). He spent 412 of 415 laps in the top 15, behind only Hamlin (415) and Elliott (413).

 

Cumulatively, the statistics tell a compelling story, namely that in Sunday’s race at Martinsville, Wallace was a formidable challenger to the three powerhouse drivers who swept the top three positions.

 

The statistics, however, don’t tell the whole story. There was a different character to the way Wallace raced at Martinsville. He raced, not as an interloper with an atypical gift of speed, but as if he belonged at the front of the field.

 

But for an adjustment that loosened the handling condition of his No. 23 Toyota too much for the final run, Wallace might well have contended for the victory.

 

“We were almost great today,” Wallace said of SiriusXM NASCAR Radio after the race. “In races past, we’ve just been good, been decent, nothing to hang our heads about.

 

“But even today, we took an uptick in performance, so it’s something to build on for the fall and a hell of a points day for us, so it’s good.”

 

It was more than that. Reflecting on his fourth-place run, Wallace acknowledged that he has embraced what Byron seems to have known instinctively, that the intensity of a driver’s work ethic can have as much of an effect on performance as raw talent.

 

“We do a lot of stuff during the week, and I’m finally starting to understand that it all pays off,” Wallace said. “You’ve got to give the effort, because these guys (his 23XI team) are busting their ass. It is days like this that you appreciate it.

 

“We needed that. My Toyota was strong today. We lost a little bit on that last stop. We got too free, but all in all, I was content in finishing sixth (where he was running before the overtime), and that’s why you never give up. Top-five—good day, and we will go on to Texas.”

 

Indeed. Wallace will go to Fort Worth with a sense of accomplishment, well-earned confidence, a feeling of belonging at the front of the field and more than a hint of budding stardom.


 

NASCAR Weekend Preview: Martinsville Speedway

 

April 4, 2024

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing share dominance at Martinsville Speedway

 

During a six-year period after the turn of the century, Hendrick Motorsports owned Martinsville Speedway, at least where competition on the track was concerned.

 

Jeff Gordon won both 2003 races at the 0.526-mile short track from the pole, embarking on a dominant run during which he and Hendrick teammate Jimmie Johnson would take the checkered flag in 10 of 13 races.

 

Hendrick Motorsports will celebrate its 40th anniversary at Martinsville this weekend, with team owner Rick Hendrick serving as honorary pace car driver and Gordon and 1984 Martinsville winner Geoff Bodine performing Grand Marshal duties for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

It was Bodine’s victory in the eighth race of the 1984 season that kept Hendrick in business. Including that triumph, the organization has accumulated 28 wins at the historic short track, a record for team victories at a single venue.

 

In recent years, however, Hendrick has been forced to share the Martinsville spotlight with Joe Gibbs Racing. In the fall race of 2009, Denny Hamlin started his own streak of three straight victories at the venerable facility.

 

In the nine most recent Martinsville races, Hendrick and Gibbs drivers have won four each, the only exception being NASCAR Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney’s victory for Team Penske in last year’s Playoff race.

 

Though the four recent Hendrick wins are evenly divided among four drivers—Chase Elliott, Alex Bowman, William Byron and defending spring race winner Kyle Larson—Martin Truex Jr. has accounted for most of JGR’s success with three victories to one for teammate Christopher Bell.

 

Starting with the fall race of 2019, Truex won three of four events at Martinsville. He comes to Sunday’s race after suffering a heart-wrenching loss last Sunday at Richmond, where a late caution gave Hamlin a chance to steal the win.

 

In 2022, Truex struggled at Martinsville—and elsewhere—in the Next Gen Cup car introduced into the Cup Series that year. Since then, his fortunes have improved dramatically.

 

“Definitely high confidence going into Martinsville compared to the first year of this car,” said Truex, who led 228 laps at Richmond before finishing fourth after an overtime restart. “To be able to go run like we did at Richmond, it gives me a lot of confidence going forward that our Martinsville stuff should be good.

 

“I love going there. It’s been a really good track for us over the years, aside from the first year of the Next Gen.”

 

Note: Given the clear advantages of securing pit stall No. 1, it’s surprising that no Cup driver has won a Martinsville race from the pole position since Johnson accomplished the feat in the spring race of 2013. Hamlin, who leads active drivers with five wins at the paper-clip-shaped track, is the only driver in Sunday’s race who has won at Martinsville from the pole (2010). 

 

Justin Allgaier leads hungry JR Motorsports contingent at Martinsville

 

In the first Dash 4 Cash race of the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, the incentive for JR Motorsports drivers is clear. They will be competing for the victory, not the $100,000 prize that goes to the Dash 4 Cash winner, in Saturday’s DUDE Wipes 250 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

No JRM driver finished high enough last Saturday at Richmond to qualify for the initial Dash 4 Cash bonus, which is available to four eligible drivers: Richmond winner Chandler Smith and runner-up Aric Almirola, both of Joe Gibbs Racing; Sunoco rookie leader Jesse Love of Richard Childress Racing; and Parker Kligerman of Big Machine Racing.

 

Though out of the running for the bonus, JRM’s Justin Allgaier and teammate Brandon Jones are the only former Martinsville winners in the field for Saturday’s race. Allgaier won the 2023 fall race at the 0.526-mile short track.

 

“It’s great to be returning to Martinsville this weekend,” Allgaier said. “We showed last fall that we were capable of getting to Victory Lane there, and I feel just as confident that we will have a fast Jarrett Chevrolet when we hit the track on Friday (for practice and qualifying).

 

“(Crew chief) Jim (Pohlman) and this entire No. 7 team has been fighting hard all year long and I know that we will give it everything we have to get a solid finish and be in position for the win come Saturday night.”

 

Jones hopes to reverse his fortunes after an early engine failure knocked him out of last Saturday’s Richmond event.

 

“We had great speed in Richmond last weekend, but just had some bad luck come our way,” Jones said. “Martinsville has always been a strong track for me, so I am ready to get there and try to turn our luck around.

 

“I trust this Menards/Atlas Roofing team will give me a fast car like they have all season, so it’s time to get it done.”

 

One word of caution: there have been 13 different winners in the last 13 Xfinity races at Martinsville, which didn’t host the series between 1994 and 2006 and experienced another gap between 2006 and 2020.

 

Kenny Wallace was the last repeat winner at the track (1992 and 1994).

 

Supercars star Cam Waters to make NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck debut

 

In a case of extremes, 11-time Australian Supercars winner Cam Waters will make his first NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series start in Friday night’s Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

At the other end of the spectrum, Waters’ ThorSport Racing teammate, Matt Crafton, will make his record 550th Truck Series start—all consecutive—at the 0.526-mile short track.

 

Waters follows three-time Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen into the NASCAR ranks. Van Gisbergen won his NASCAR Cup Series debut in last year’s Chicago Street Race and now competes full-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

 

“I'm absolutely pumped, so I’m super excited to be finally having a race over here in a truck,” said Waters, who will drive ThorSport’s No. 66 Ford on Friday. “I’ve always followed NASCAR and done a little valuable stuff myself on dirt in Australia, so to do a pavement oval is pretty cool for me and something I’ve always wanted to do.

 

“I’ve wanted to do it for years, but with what I do in Australia, (that) has always been my focus and still is my focus, for sure. But we came to Martinsville 12 months ago and watched a race, and that’s what probably sparked a bit more interest in me to pursue it.

 

“I’ve just been chipping away in the background over the last 12 months to make something happen like this.”

 

Starting in 2001, Crafton has raced at Martinsville 40 times in the Truck Series, winning twice and posting a record 23 top 10s. The three-time series champion has completed a record 8,736 of a possible 8,915 laps at the vaunted short track.

 

For the fourth time since the inception of the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series in 1995, the first five races of the season have produced five different winners and five different polesitters.

 

Corey Heim, winner of the Mar. 23 race at Circuit of The Americas, leads the series by eight points over second-place Ty Majeski and by nine points over third-place Tyler Ankrum.

 

The last 10 Truck Series races at Martinsville have produced 10 different winners. Heim is the defending winner of Friday night’s event.

 


 

 

Truex Jr. uses Richmond disappointment to fuel Martinsville charge

 

April 2, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

After leading a dominant 228 of the 407 laps in Sunday night’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond (Va.) Raceway but not getting to celebrate in Victory Lane, Martin Truex Jr. was understandably frustrated in the checkered flag moments.

 

The good news for Truex, however, is that he heads north in Virginia for this weekend’s race at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway the driver points standings leader for the second consecutive week – 14 points ahead of Hendrick Motorsports' Kyle Larson.

 

Truex is riding a streak of five consecutive top-10 finishes, highlighted by a runner-up finish at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway three weeks ago. He’s led laps in six of the seven races – his 362 laps total this season second only to Larson’s 368.

 

So, while Sunday night was unquestionably a tough outcome to stomach, his season has been impressive. And the expectations remain high.

 

“Unfortunately, that’s happened to us a few times over the years," an obviously frustrated Truex said of leading the most laps, but not hoisting the trophy.

 

“Definitely sucks but a good solid day and another car capable of winning," he added, “just have to come back next week and try to get them again."

 

The good news is Truex and his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota team are headed to a place  - Martinsville (Va.) Speedway - where he’s had plenty of success. The 2017 NASCAR Cup Series champion is a three-time race winner (2019, 2020, and 2021) at the historic half-mile track.

 

He’s finished inside the top-10 in half his starts (16) there – 10 times he’s earned a top-five finish. He turned in one of the most impressive afternoons in modern history in 2019, leading 464 of the 500 laps en route to his first victory there. Four times he’s led at least 100 laps at Martinsville. No one has won as many races there as Truex since 2019 and he’s the last driver to win back-to-back races (2019-20).

 

He was third in last year’s Spring race and started from pole position in the Fall Playoff race there - leading 47 laps and finishing 12th .

 

“Definitely high confidence going into Martinsville compared to the first year of this car," Truex said. “To be able to go run like we did at Richmond it gives me a lot of confidence going forward that our Martinsville stuff should be good.

 

“I love going there, it’s been a really good track for us over the years aside from that first year of NextGen. Hopefully, we can continue that, and use that going forward with our Bass Pro Shops Camry [this week]."

 

Since his amazing 2017 NASCAR Cup Series championship run with Furniture Row Racing when he won a career single season high eight races – he’s led the championship standings in all but one season. The confidence level is higher than the disappointment threshold this week.

 

“Plenty more races left so we’ll keep fighting," Truex’ crew chief James Small said Sunday night.

 

And that’s something you can bet on.

 

 

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NASCAR Weekend Preview: Texas Motor Speedway

 

April 11, 2024

 

By Holly Cain

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Texas could be a great place for those looking for their first win this season

 

Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron arrives in Fort Worth this weekend both the most recent NASCAR Cup Series winner – at Martinsville, Va. last week – and also the defending winner of Sunday’s AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

It’s been that kind of season for the 26-year old Charlotte native. But winning back-to-back races at the 1.5-mile Texas high banks has proven to be quite the task in recent years. The last driver to do so was another Hendrick star, seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson who actually won three straight in the 2014-15 seasons. Johnson, owner-driver of Legacy Motor Club, will be making his second start of the season this week at Texas, where he is the all-time winningest driver (seven victories).

 

Texas has certainly proven to be its own unique challenge and that may open the door for a handful of drivers high in the rankings still racing for their first victories of the year.

 

Hendrick’s Kyle Larson leads Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. by 14 points in the standings. Larson, last year’s Texas runner-up and the 2021 race winner, spent part of this week participating in the Indianapolis 500 open test in preparation to run racing’s great “Double” the Indy 500 and NASCAR’s esteemed Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, N.C. in the same day.

 

Truex, the 2017 series champion has never won at Texas but has three runner-up finishes. His No. 19 JGR Toyota has led laps in four of the last five races. And 12 of 34 career wins have come on 1.5-mile tracks.

 

“It’s been one of those places where we have been snakebit a lot," Truex said. “We’ve had some good runs, we’ve had some struggles at times since they repaved it. Just one of those things, but I feel confident going there with what we have that we’ll run well, especially how we ran there the last couple of years.

 

“It’s been tough, we’ve gotten a lot of poles there and led a lot of laps, but we just haven’t been able to win there."

 

Truex is one of three drivers ranked among the top-6 still looking for that first win of this season. Reigning series champion Ryan Blaney and 2020 series champion Chase Elliott are the other two.

 

Blaney, driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford, has top-10 finishes in eight of the last 10 Texas races winning the pole position and finishing runner-up in 2018. He has top-five finishes in four of the eight races this season, including both 1.5-mile tracks with a season-best runner-up at Atlanta in February. He’s coming off a fifth-place finish at Martinsville last week.

 

Elliott scored his first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory at Texas in 2014. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet finished top-10 in half of his 13 NASCAR Cup Series starts at the track, with a career best showing of fourth-place in 2016. He’s had only a single top-10 in the last seven races, however.

 

This season marks a huge turnaround for the former champ, who missed seven races last year recovering from a skiing injury and a suffering a one-race suspension. He’s ranked sixth in points, only 51 points off the pace of his Hendrick teammate Larson and is coming off back-to-back top five efforts at Richmond, Va. and Martinsville.

 

Where a driver starts on the Texas high banks has proven to be especially key to where a driver finishes. More than 76 percent of the races have been won from a top-10 starting position. So far this season, Elliott and Team Penske’s Joey Logano lead the series with six top-10 starts, however, neither driver has won a race.

 

A 45-minute practice session is set for 10:35 a.m. ET on Saturday followed by Busch Light Pole Qualifying at 11:20 p.m. ET., both will be televised live on FS1.

 

Since the repave, Allgaier has Texas dialed-in

 

Veteran Justin Allgaier has plenty of reason to feel especially optimistic about this Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series Andy’s Frozen Custard 300 (1:30 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). A year ago, he started on pole position, led a race best 133 of the 200 laps but finished fifth as John Hunter Nemechek claimed the trophy leading only seven laps on the afternoon.

 

Allgaier, driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, had another trophy near-miss this season, claiming both stage wins and leading 52 consecutive laps in the closing portion of the Phoenix race when he crashed with a tire problem only three laps shy of the checkered flag.

 

The near-misses are something drivers always remember, but Allgaier goes into the weekend feeling more motivated than frustrated. He’s got a promising record at the Texas 1.5-miler. He’s had 14 top-10 finishes in 26 starts and led at least 20 laps in five of the last seven races.

 

“Texas has been a really strong track for us since the repave," Allgaier said. “We came so close here in the [2023] Fall of bringing home the win and I know that we will have the same speed again this weekend."

 

He’ll certainly need it in a similarly highly-motivated field. The championship points leader, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chandler Smith holds a 35-point edge over reigning series champion, Stewart-Haas Racing’s Cole Custer. Smith is the only driver in the series to earn top-10 finishes in all seven races this season. And his 242 laps led is most among fulltime drivers.

 

Smith and Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill each have two wins this season – the only fulltime championship contenders to hoist a trophy. Smith finished fourth at Texas last year in his only previous start.

 

Custer is the only former Texas winner among the 2024 championship contenders and has quite the Lone Star resume himself. The driver of the No. 00 SHR Ford has six top-10 finishes – four top-five - in seven Texas starts, including the 2018 victory.

 

The always exciting Dash 4 Cash incentive program returns this week with Allgaier, his JR Motorsports teammate Sam Mayer along with Chandler Smith and his JGR teammate Sheldon Creed all eligible for the big $100,000 prize. The bonus will be awarded to the highest finisher of the four drivers.

 

The top four eligible drivers coming from the Texas race will compete for the big money at Talladega Superspeedway next Saturday.

 

Of note, Ryan Truex returns to competition this week driving the No. 20 JGR Toyota that Aric Almirola drove to victory last weekend at Martinsville, Va. And NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series standout Daniel Dye will make his second Xfinity Series start of the year driving the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. Truck series championship contender Corey Heim is entered in the No. 26 Sam Hunt Racing Toyota and former NASCAR Cup Series driver Matt DiBenedetto will drive the No. 38 RSS Racing Ford.

 

Practice for the Andy’s Frozen Custard 300 begins Friday at 6 p.m. ET followed by qualifying at 6:30 p.m. ET – both will be televised on FS1.

 

CRAFTSMAN Truck Series standings remain tight heading into Texas

 

NASCAR’s second straight triple-header weekend kicks off with the SpeedyCash.com 250 on Friday night (8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) with a tight battle atop the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series standings and a history of dramatic Texas Motor Speedway endings.

 

Carson Hocevar led only the last lap in claiming last year’s race with the evening’s most dominant driver, Nick Sanchez finishing a frustrating 16th-place after being collected in a last lap wreck. Sanchez, driver of the No. 2 REV Racing Chevrolet had led 168 of the 172 laps and swept both stage wins.

 

There are three former Texas race winners among the fulltime competitors this week – Stewart Friesen (2022), Ty Dillon (2013) and the only multi-time Texas winner on the grid, former three-time series champ Matt Crafton who won in Fort Worth in 2014 and ’15.

 

Kyle Busch and Johnny Sauter – both five-time Texas truck race winners – are also entered this week.

 

ThorSport Racing’s Ty Majeski arrives in Texas the championship points leader by seven-points over both TRICON Garage’s Corey Heim and McAnally-Hilgemann’s Tyler Ankrum. The season’s only multi-time race winner, McAnally-Hilgemann’s Christian Eckes – last week’s Martinsville, Va. champ – is ranked fourth, a mere 11-points off the lead. Eckes’ 306 laps led this season is nearly three times that of the next closest mark – Majeski’s 117 laps out front.

 

Neither Majeski atop the championship nor Eckes, the winningest driver of the season, have celebrated in Texas Motor Speedway’s iconic Victory Lane, but both have strong records on the 1.5-mile high banks. 

 

Majeski has two top-five finishes in three starts – finishing fifth and fourth in the last two races – although he has never led a lap at the Fort Worth track. Eckes has two runner-up finishes in four starts – leading 52 laps and finishing second in 2020 and leading 40 laps and finishing second in 2022.

 

Rajah Caruth (Las Vegas) and Kyle Busch (Atlanta) are the season’s previous 1.5-mile track race winners.

 

Practice for the SpeedyCash.com 250 is Friday at 4:05 p.m. ET followed by Cometic Gasket Pole Qualifying at 4:35 p.m. ET – both televised live on FS1 before the race.

 

--30--

 


 

Saturday Martinsville Notebook

 

April 6, 2024

 

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

 

Is pit stall No. 1 at Martinsville really that valuable?

 

MARTINSVILLE, Va.—Ask any NASCAR Cup Series driver which pit stall on the circuit is most valuable, and chances are most would point to pit stall No. 1 at Martinsville Speedway, closest to the exit from pit road.

 

Conventional wisdom says that pit box is worth two or three positions per stop, assuming the service for fuel and tires goes according to plan.

 

Possession of pit stall No. 1 typically is a perk for the pole winner, who has first choice of pit boxes for the ensuing race.

 

The anomaly is that no Cup driver has parlayed the pole position and the No. 1 pit box into a victory in more than a decade—since Jimmie Johnson accomplished the feat in the spring race of 2013, specifically.

 

Among full-time active drivers, Denny Hamlin is the last to win from the pole at Martinsville, in the fall race of 2010.

 

Notably, drivers have won the last three races at the 0.526-mile short track from outside the top 10 on the grid. Reigning series champion Ryan Blaney started 11th last year before winning the race that propelled him into the Championship 4.

 

“I think the No. 1 pit stall wherever you go is important—some more than others—but it’s still important,” Blaney said on Saturday. “It’s the best stall out there...

 

“We had the first stall in (closest to the pit entrance) last year in the fall, and I thought it was fantastic, like it was really, really good for us. When you pull off to go in there, you gain spots on guys.

 

“We’ve always come with the mentality of stall No. 1 or anything on the straightaway ... Obviously, the goal is the pole, because it makes it easier on you.”

 

Easier, perhaps, but not decisively so—at least not in recent years.

 

Ross Chastain wants to make a different kind of history at Martinsville

 

Trackhouse Racing driver Ross Chastain can’t come to Virginia without being reminded of his remarkable “Hail Melon,” the extraordinary high-speed trip around the wall in Turns 3 and 4 at Martinsville that shot him into the 2022 Championship 4 race at Denny Hamlin’s expense.

 

Needing at least two positions on the final lap of the Round of 8 elimination event, Chastain grabbed fifth gear as he approached Turn 3, pinned his No. 1 Chevrolet against the outside wall and rocketed around the final corner as if his car were racing in a sped-up video game.

 

The move enabled Chastain to gain more than enough spots to advance, and the following week, he finished third behind champion Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney in the title race.

 

Chastain, however, doesn’t want the Hail Melon to be his definitive statement at Martinsville, as difficult as the feat might be to supplant in the history of the track.

 

“I do know that we have a small blip in the history of (Martinsville),” Chastain said. “I want more. I don’t want that to be my legacy here, so we’re working on that.

 

“But there’s no way we’re going to get in and out of Virginia here without talking about it.”

 

No extra pressure on Kyle Larson during Hendrick anniversary weekend

 

Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway is a huge one for Hendrick Motorsports, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary this weekend.

 

Martinsville is broadly significant to the Hendrick organization. In 1984, Geoff Bodine won the eighth race of the season there to keep the organization afloat. Drivers for team owner Rick Hendrick have won 28 Cup races at the 0.526-mile short track, a record for an organization at a single venue.

 

Bodine and NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon, who won four series championships at Hendrick Motorsports, are grand marshals for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Nevertheless, defending race winner Kyle Larson says he doesn’t feel extra pressure to win on Sunday. There have been no pep rallies at the Hendrick campus—because they’re not necessary.

 

“I wouldn’t say I feel any more pressure to win,” Larson said. “I don’t feel like any of us four drivers (Larson, Chase Elliott, Alex Bowman and William Byron) feel any more pressure to win, but we know what the magnitude of what a win this weekend would be for the company.”

 

Short Strokes

 

Toyota hit a major milestone on Friday night when Karter Sarff, racing in the Xtreme Outlaw Midget Series at 36 Raceway in Osborn, Missouri, recorded the car maker’s 500th national midget victory. Current NASCAR Cup Series driver Christopher Bell is responsible for 59 of those wins, more than any other driver.

 

“I’m very proud of that,” Bell said. “Honestly, I don’t keep track of my wins. I have no idea how many wins I have in my career, so whenever I saw that number, it was very overwhelming to me and something I’m very proud of.” ... Richard Childress racing announced Friday that NASCAR Xfinity Series title contender Austin Hill also will race part-time in the Cup Series under sponsorship from United Rentals. Hill’s first start under the RCR banner this year will come at Texas Motor Speedway on April 14.

 

 


   nascar cup series

2024 NASCAR CUP SERIES SCHEDULE

Date

Race / Track

Network

Start Time (ET)

Radio

Sunday, February 4

Clash (L.A. Memorial Coliseum)

FOX

8:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Thursday, February 15

Duel at Daytona

FS1

7:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, February 18

DAYTONA 500

FOX

2:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, February 25

Atlanta Motor Speedway

FOX

3:00 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, March 3

Las Vegas Motor Speedway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, March 10

Phoenix Raceway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, March 17

Bristol Motor Speedway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, March 24

COTA

FOX

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, March 31

Richmond Raceway

FOX

7:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, April 7

Martinsville Speedway

FS1

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, April 14

Texas Motor Speedway

FS1

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, April 21

Talladega Superspeedway

FOX

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, April 28

Dover Motor Speedway

FS1

2:00 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, May 5

Kansas Speedway

FS1

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, May 12

Darlington Raceway

FS1

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, May 19

All-Star Race (N. Wilkesboro)

FS1

8:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, May 26

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FOX

6:00 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, June 2

World Wide Technology Raceway

FS1

3:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, June 9

Sonoma Raceway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, June 16

Iowa Speedway

USA

7:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, June 23

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

USA

2:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, June 30

Nashville Superspeedway

NBC

3:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, July 7

Chicago Street Race

NBC

4:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, July 14

Pocono Raceway

USA

2:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, July 21

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

NBC

2:30 p.m.

IMS/SiriusXM

Sunday, August 11

Richmond Raceway

USA

6:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, August 18

Michigan International Speedway

USA

2:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Saturday, August 24

Daytona International Speedway

NBC

7:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, September 1

Darlington Raceway

USA

6:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, September 8

Atlanta Motor Speedway

USA

3:00 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, September 15

Watkins Glen International

USA

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Saturday, September 21

Bristol Motor Speedway

USA

7:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, September 29

Kansas Speedway

USA

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, October 6

Talladega Superspeedway

NBC

2:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, October 13

Charlotte Roval

NBC

2:00 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, October 20

Las Vegas Motor Speedway

NBC

2:30 p.m.

PRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, October 27

Homestead-Miami Speedway

NBC

2:30 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, November 3

Martinsville Speedway

NBC

2:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

Sunday, November 10

Phoenix Raceway

NBC

3:00 p.m.

MRN/SiriusXM

 

 
 

 

     

 

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