Power Rankings: Byron opens 2026 on top — is a Daytona 500 three-peat next?
Pat DeCola
NASCAR.com's Pat DeCola ranks the top 20 NASCAR Cup Series drivers competing for the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series Championship before Sunday's season-opening Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron enters as the defending winner.
RELATED: 2026 Daytona Speedweeks schedule | Full 2026 Cup Series schedule
Analysis: Byron's 2025 was a study in consistency with another Daytona 500 win and Regular Season Championship, yet the title still eluded him in the finale. He opened 2026 off on a strong note once again with a runner-up in the Cook Out Clash, showing early speed in chaotic conditions. Daytona suits his strengths and history, and he'll arrive looking for a third straight Harley J. Earl with real momentum in a retooled Chase era as a top-tier threat who should be in the title conversation -- or leading it -- all season.
Analysis: Blaney's four-win 2025 season culminated in an emotional championship race victory -- but was ultimately short of the championship itself, however -- reinforcing his status as one of the sport's most reliable week-to-week performers. A third-place finish in The Clash suggested he and his No. 12 Penske group aren't missing a beat in transition to 2026. Daytona's draft chaos usually plays into his wheelhouse, and Blaney projects as a perennial top-five driver with a legitimate shot at breaking through for another title bid -- or his first Daytona 500 win.
Analysis: Larson closed 2025 by seizing a second Cup crown after taking advantage of late Phoenix drama, validating his championship mettle. He showed early pace in the Bowman Gray Clash before weather and attrition reshuffled the order, and while exhibition doesn't define a season, it confirms he's sharp heading into Daytona and still firing on all cylinders. As defending champ, Larson's outlook is as high as anyone's, and a repeat is not a bit of bold talk.
Analysis: Hamlin was arguably the best driver in 2025 before being denied his first title after Phoenix heartbreak, but his trademark tenacity was on display again at Bowman Gray with a solid top-five in tough conditions. Carrying an aggravated shoulder injury into Speedweeks adds a layer of intrigue to his Daytona script, though his grit won't be in question and still profiles as an elite contender. If his body holds and his team continues to execute, Hamlin should be in the championship mix yet again, with a format in which he can maximize his strengths.Analysis: Briscoe's breakout first year with Joe Gibbs Racing was real -- three wins and a Championship 4 berth -- even if the Phoenix finale didn't go his way. He landed in the top 10 amid Bowman Gray's chaos, an encouraging sign that his momentum will carry into 2026. Year 2 with an elite organization should see Briscoe further establish himself, particularly if his raw speed continues to translate to deepening race craft.
Analysis: Bell's four wins and regular-season excellence in 2025 further established him as a perennial contender, though a Round of 8 exit highlighted execution gaps. At Bowman Gray, he was competitive inside the top 10 in tricky conditions, a hint of early form and Daytona, where power and patience mesh, should play to his strengths. Bell looks once again like a season-long contender with the firepower to grab wins and sustain a deep Chase push.
Analysis: Elliott's 2025 was defined by consistency more than flash, and a Clash at Bowman Gray performance that didn't make headlines mirrored that stable, workmanlike approach. Last year's Clash winner arrives at Daytona with confidence, and his superspeedway savvy and race management give Elliott a credible shot to contend in the 500. Over a full season, expect him to be a fixture near the top of the rankings as his team pushes for more wins while maintaining his unparalleled consistency.
Analysis: Buescher again hovered around the playoff bubble in 2025, emphasizing RFK's steady if unspectacular upward trajectory. The Bowman Gray Clash didn't shift perceptions, but he remained in the mix -- proof RFK's consistency can keep him relevant, and the team also won the race itself with driver Ryan Preece. Buescher's steady approach could pay dividends in a return to The Chase as well, and his season looks like he'll be in the mix, if not an outright title threat.
Analysis: Logano's 2025 didn't mirror his 2024 magic, but an even year and some championship format tweaks have the No. 22 team buzzing for 2026. Daytona's draft may play into his strategic strengths for a past 500 winner looking to build some early momentum, so look for Logano to be a key figure in the upper tier -- as the even-year championship isn't a narrative to dismiss at this point.
Analysis: Reddick's 2025 was a letdown by his standards, but there were clear extenuating factors, and there's nothing that suggests the slump will be a prolonged one. Daytona's wild brand of racing offers him a reset opportunity, and if Reddick can clean up qualifying and short-run speed, the aggression that defines his style should yield wins once again as he aims for resurgence and reclamation.
Analysis: Chastain's lone 2025 win was impressive in isolation, but a lack of depth was salient and prompted a crew chief change in the offseason. In the Bowman Gray brawl, he was able to eke out a top 10, hinting that the pieces might be finding early cohesion. Expect Chastain to be a thorn most weeks and a sleeper for big runs if the new crew dynamic clicks.
Analysis: Bowman heads into 2026 with a quiet ledger of late, but flashes over the years that show he has the ceiling to be in the conversation -- including solid laps at Bowman Gray in mixed conditions last week. This is a make-or-break season for Bowman's narrative, not his talent -- expectations are higher now, and he's had the time to compete for championships in top-tier equipment in multiple formats. If things come together, he'll be a regular top-10 threat with upside for more, or the seat could get hotter by season's end.Analysis: Preece finally broke through in The Clash at Bowman Gray with a dramatic and memorable win, ending a long winless Cup run in a way that feels seismic for his confidence and garage cred -- exhibition or not. That result instantly reframes Speedweeks for him; he's not just going to Daytona, he's going to contend for more than just dramatic, highlight reel clips in which he is airborne. All of a sudden, this feels like the year he turns fringe credibility into weekly contention.
Analysis: SVG's 2025 rookie season lit up the sport, and the Bowman Gray Clash was, somewhat surprisingly, no exception, as he handled the mixed conditions with the kind of poise and car control that underlined he belongs in every conversation. If he keeps progressing on ovals, SVG could be one of the year's biggest surprises. His ceiling is legit title contention; the only question remains consistency on courses that only turn left.
Analysis: Wallace's 2025 -- punctuated by a standout crown-jewel victory -- demonstrated a level of maturity and nuance he's chased for years. The question now is if he'll continue to elevate or if he has reached his ceiling. Daytona's draft tends to play to his risk-reward style, potentially putting him in the mix early this year. Look for Wallace to be a dependable top-15 driver with occasional flashes that reward aggression, with a Chase spot more likely than not.
Analysis: Gibbs underperformed expectations last season, missing the win column yet again and turning in an uneven body of work, but flashes of speed -- including a decent amount of laps led -- suggested the tools are there and still developing. In the Bowman Gray melee, he showed fight before chaos intervened, hinting that the time might be right for his long-coming breakout. If Gibbs can translate his raw talent into results, 2026 could be the year he shakes the "underachiever" tag and makes JGR a top-to-bottom powerhouse.
Analysis: Berry's sophomore campaign saw a breakthrough Las Vegas win, and he carried that steam into a solid short-track presence -- his bread-and-butter -- at Bowman Gray, showing he belongs amid the sport's scrappy middle pack with room to grow. Daytona's penchant for unpredictability could hand him another high-profile result if circumstance and track position align, especially if he can find his Penske pals to work with. He's still rounding into a weekly contender rather than an outright frontrunner, but expect Berry to push for consistent top 20s with frequent top-10 flashes.
Analysis: Cindric's 2025 numbers weren't eye-popping, but subtle improvements and occasional front-pack runs built a quiet case that his progression is real and continuing. Year 5 should be about finding that next gear for the 2022 Daytona 500 winner, with upside for strong results with growing consistency.
Analysis: Busch's 2025 was a historic downward tick by his standards, yet a new crew chief, organizational shakeup and return to a familiar championship format offer as real a reset as he can hope for at this point in his career. The fight hasn't left him, even if results have the past couple of years, so it's more conceivable that they'll come back than not. If he and his team find rhythm, "Rowdy" can surprise a lot of people and shake off a narrative that's gotten louder than his talent level, which is still immense and unprecedented.
Analysis: Zilisch arrives in Cup off a decorated NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts season and gave a spirited effort in the Bowman Gray melee, reminding everyone that raw talent can translate even in bizarre conditions. Daytona will be the first real gauge of whether his oval progression can keep pace with his road-course ascent, but there's no reason in the world to think it can't. He's still a rookie in the literal sense, but the tools are as sharp as any newcomer's, and his experience level for his age is massive. A breakout run or two isn't out of the question, and a solid points season -- with multiple wins potentially on the table -- looms if he keeps adapting.