Denny Hamlin prevailed in Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway – a race that featured a 56-minute red flag for rain, late-race strategy decisions, and involved a pair of overtime restarts before the trophy was ultimately settled between a pair of Joe Gibbs Racing teammates.
But the veteran Hamlin got it all right when it mattered most, getting a jump on the field in both overtime restarts and in the end holding off newest teammate Chase Briscoe, who was even on fresher tires. It marks back-to-back wins at the Dover concrete mile for Hamlin and a NASCAR Cup Series-best fourth victory of 2025.
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“Things were going pretty well there before the rain and then obviously had to endure a few restarts there,” said a smiling Hamlin, 44, who collected his 58th career Cup victory and first trophy since the birth of his son, Jameson, last month. “It was tough, those guys gave me a run for it, no doubt about it. Winning here at Dover is super special to me. This is a place I had not been very good at the first half of my career and then to have back-to-back (wins) here the last couple years is amazing.”
Briscoe certainly pushed Hamlin on that final two-lap sprint to the checkered flag. The two ran door-to-door on the white-flag lap — their cars even making slight contact — before Hamlin’s No. 11 JGR Toyota Camry was able to pull around and clear Briscoe’s car, racing off to a 0.310-second victory to become the 13th driver in track history to win consecutive races.
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Hendrick Motorsports teammates Alex Bowman and Kyle Larson finished third and fourth with another JGR driver, Ty Gibbs, rounding out the top five.
For most of the day, it looked as if Hendrick’s Chase Elliott would continue a summer hot streak and claim his second race win in the last four weeks. He led a race-best 238 of the 407 laps — taking his first stage win of the season and overcoming an early pit road miscue, when his No. 9 Chevrolet fell off the jack during a swap of left-side tires. But he just wasn’t able to challenge Hamlin.
There was some consolation in Elliott’s sixth-place finish, however, as it — combined with teammate William Byron’s accident with two laps remaining in regulation — now gives Elliott a 17-point championship lead over Byron with five races remaining in the regular season. It’s the first time he’s led the Cup Series standings this year.
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Elliott led so many laps and essentially controlled the race pace, but it was a cycle of pit stops that gave Hamlin an opportunity out front. He cycled to the lead when Elliott pitted for tires during a caution, beating his JGR teammate Christopher Bell on a restart with 60 laps remaining. Hamlin held the lead position when the 56-minute red flag came out for rain with 14 laps to go.
After all that, Hamlin had to hold off Briscoe on consecutive overtime restarts — ultimately leading the final 67 laps.
“I thought I did everything I needed to and thought I had it there for a second,” Briscoe said. “I was so close to clearing him and just couldn’t do it. Obviously racing a teammate, I wanted to make sure at least a JGR car won. Honestly it was a great day. We weren’t probably a second-place race car, we were probably a fifth- to 10th-place car. Glad we were able to make a good finish out of it.”
Behind Elliott, Bubba Wallace, Ryan Blaney, Chris Buescher and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top 10.
While the top of the championship standings changed with Elliott taking the lead, the four drivers – Reddick, Bowman, Buescher and Wallace – still chasing a points-position in the 16-driver playoff grid remained the same. Wallace’s seventh-place finish gives him a 16-point edge on Ryan Preece for the 16th and final transfer position. Kyle Busch, who finished 11th Sunday, is now 39 points behind Wallace.
The race also set the In-Season Challenge championship matchup next week at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Gibbs and longshot Ty Dillon advancing to the title round.
Gibbs was paired against Tyler Reddick at Dover, and Dillon had to beat John Hunter Nemechek in the other bracket to settle the final two positions for $1 million to win grand finale of the inaugural incentive program presented by TNT.
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In both head-to-head battles, the two drivers ran near each other all afternoon. Gibbs got around Reddick in the closing laps, and Dillon was the free-pass beneficiary on the final caution period, finishing 20th as the last driver on the lead lap to Nemechek’s 21st, one lap down.
“Super cool today, I really appreciate my team,” Gibbs said smiling.
Dillon, who drives the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet, was similarly ecstatic for the opportunity. He was seeded 32nd among the 32 drivers to qualify for the In-Season Challenge tournament and had to race past drivers like Hamlin in earlier rounds.
“All respect to John Hunter. We ran next to each other all day,” a thrilled Dillon said. “Just so grateful to have this opportunity and this is one of the greatest things to happen in my career.”
Shane van Gisbergen’s two-race win streak ended at Dover, where the No. 88 Trackhouse Racing team was slowed by an unscheduled pit stop on Lap 11 because of a punctured right-front tire. Van Gisbergen — who won the last two weekends at Chicago and Sonoma — finished 3oth in the 37-car field.
The Cup Series resumes next Sunday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Brickyard 400 Presented by PPG (2 p.m. ET, TNT Sports/truTV, HBO Max, IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Larson is the defending race winner.
Note: Post-race technical inspection in the Cup Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Hamlin as the Dover winner. No cars will return to the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, North Carolina for any further inspection.