Power Rankings: Hocevar backs up talk, shines, surges in EchoPark spotlight
Pat DeCola
NASCAR.com's Pat DeCola ranks the top 20 Cup Series drivers competing for the 2026 championship after Ryan Blaney's win at EchoPark Speedway and before Sunday's Window World 450 at North Wilkesboro Speedway (7 p.m. ET, TNT Sports, truTV, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Cup Series standings
Analysis: Hamlin’s EchoPark night was mostly damage control, and it worked well enough to keep him atop both the standings and these rankings. Starting 28th, the No. 11 never became a true win factor but salvaged 12th, added Stage 2 points and left with a 24-point advantage over Tyler Reddick -- but has a hard-charging Ryan Blaney behind him who is now a concern for both. North Wilkesboro should offer considerably more upside: Hamlin finished second there in the 2024 All-Star Race and the short-track star also led 292 laps before finishing runner-up at Martinsville earlier this season. The early summer winning streak has cooled, but his command of the championship picture has not disappeared with it.Analysis: Reddick did not reclaim the points lead at EchoPark, but he made the conversation much tighter. No. 45 charged from 31st, finished second in both stages and came home eighth, cutting Hamlin’s cushion nearly in half without ever truly controlling the race. His North Wilkesboro sample carries more promise than warning, highlighted by a third-place run in the 2023 All-Star Race and seventh there last season. Reddick is back within one strong weekend of turning the points lead again, though the short-track portion of his resume is not quite as imposing as the season built around it -- or that of the guy he’s chasing.
Analysis: So much for merely occupying a sturdy third lane. Blaney obliterated the field for much of the night at EchoPark, sweeping the stages, leading 171 of 263 laps and reclaiming the top spot on the final circuit to earn his second victory of 2026 in dominant yet dramatic fashion. He has now finished in the top 10 eight straight times -- the longest such streak of his career -- and has thus cut a once-massive points deficit to 65. Between his Phoenix win earlier this year and top-six results in two of the past three North Wilkesboro All-Star Races, the schedule offers no obvious reason for the No. 12’s momentum to stall now.Analysis: No. 54 did not win at EchoPark, but leading 32 laps and finishing fourth after starting 23rd while also facing the pressure of holding a provisional top-five Chase standing added another entry to the growing file labeled “serious contender, Ty Gibbs.” He now owns eight top-five finishes through 20 races, remains fourth in points and continues to extract strong days from races that initially appear headed elsewhere. North Wilkesboro is also the perfect place to revisit what Gibbs can do on a short track: He led 53 laps in the 2023 Open before finishing second, then led all 100 circuits to win it in 2024. Add his Bristol victory and Martinsville fourth earlier this season, and the No. 54 has a far stronger argument this week than merely being the youngest guy near the top.Analysis: Elliott’s 13th at EchoPark was serviceable (he did advance in the In-Season Challenge, after all), albeit not memorable, though he briefly led and emerged from the chaos with another intact points day. The No. 9 remains fifth in the standings, but the gap between his early-season punch and current rhythm is noticeable. North Wilkesboro may be the venue that closes it: Elliott has finished fifth, eighth and fifth in the three modern All-Star Races there, and his Martinsville victory in March remains a top-tier short-track credential. Nothing about Sunday guarantees a breakthrough, but few drivers bring a cleaner combination of recent track form and 2026 short-track success.Analysis: Bell’s climb continues, and EchoPark required him to earn every inch of it. After starting 32nd, he worked to the front, led twice, supplied the decisive push that launched Blaney toward the win and finished second for his fifth runner-up result of the season. That is a maddening number for a driver still seeking victory No. 1, but he’s clearly close, with five top fives in the last eight races. Now comes North Wilkesboro, where Bell chased down Joey Logano late to win last year’s All-Star Race. He is no longer searching for normalcy -- and should be close to or at 100% this weekend in terms of his wrist injury -- he is searching for the final few feet between repeated contention and finally closing on a win.Analysis: Larson’s season continues to be a weekly exercise in finding new ways to separate speed from outcome. No. 5 ran near the front again at EchoPark, led four laps and remained in the mix deep into the night before two late incidents left him 34th and five laps down. There’s hope on the horizon, however. North Wilkesboro is not simply a potential rebound spot -- it is where Larson won the 2023 All-Star Race after leading 145 laps and the Craftsman Truck Series race the same weekend after pacing 138. His broader short-track record includes six wins, 22 top fives and 36 top 10s in 66 starts. At some point, one of these tailor-made opportunities will stop turning into another paragraph about what might have been, along with his growing winless streak.Analysis: Buescher’s 10th-place EchoPark finish was vintage No. 17: not especially noisy, but useful enough to keep the larger season picture on task. The RFK driver remains in the championship picture, though he watched faster Toyotas and Penske Fords command most of the night. North Wilkesboro has offered both ends of the spectrum -- 16th in 2023, third in 2024 and 10th last season -- which makes the 2024 result the more important clue given RFK Racing’s short-track capability; he can definitely get it done here. Buescher is still accumulating the body of work of a true 2026 title contender, but the only missing ingredient remains a race that unmistakably belongs to him.Analysis: The spotlight found Hocevar before EchoPark and stayed on him until the checkered flag, yet he never appeared an ounce bothered by it. After a highly public weekend centered on his Zane Smith feud, the No. 77 led five times for 25 laps, carried the field to the white flag and finished third after one final frantic exchange with Blaney and Wallace. North Wilkesboro is hardly unfamiliar terrain: Hocevar won last year’s All-Star Open after leading the final 46 laps and finished fourth in the 2023 Craftsman Truck Series race after leading 16. He is having one of the best seasons of his young career while everybody is looking directly at him — and so far, that appears to be exactly how he likes it.Analysis: One ugly result does not erase the Sonoma runner-up and Chicagoland victory, but Briscoe’s EchoPark crash stopped his surge cold enough to drop him three positions here. He scored points in Stage 1 and remained on the lead lap until the late pileup, ultimately finishing 36th and giving back 27 points relative to the Chase cut. His North Wilkesboro results are encouraging -- all top 10s -- but trending the wrong way: fourth in the 2023 All-Star Race, seventh in the 2024 Open and ninth in last year’s main event. The No. 19’s midsummer form still carries more weight than one drafting-track wipeout, but the immediate task is proving the heater survives outside its two headline weekends.
Analysis: Suárez’s EchoPark finish landed him 21st, yet the day contained more substance than that number suggests. He finished fifth in Stage 2, charged from 20th to fifth after one restart and spent portions of the middle stage looking capable of something much better before fading from contention. North Wilkesboro carries a similar split personality: Suárez led the opening 54 laps of the 2023 All-Star Race and finished seventh, then produced 15th and 23rd in the next two editions. With 91 points separating him from the cutline, he can afford a modest week; what would help more is rediscovering the version of No. 7 that dictated terms earlier this year rather than merely hoping to bank what remained.Analysis: Byron’s Chicagoland revival did not travel cleanly to EchoPark. He started 26th, scored no stage points and finished 16th, returning the No. 24 to the murky middle ground it has occupied too often since the spring, all the while trading barbs with his crew chief. North Wilkesboro has not been a natural showcase either, though sixth place with 12 laps led last season was a substantial step forward from 20th and 19th in the previous two All-Star Races. His fifth earlier this year at Martinsville provides a stronger short-track indicator than the exhibition history alone. The talent and speed are still easy to locate; the uninterrupted run of weekends proving it lately remains far more elusive.Analysis: SVG’s sixth-place EchoPark finish deserves more attention than it will probably receive, but it’s very much worth commending. He finished sixth in both visits to the track this season and now owns three oval top 10s in 2026, continuing to chip away at the idea that his relevance begins and ends when the schedule turns left and right. North Wilkesboro supplied another piece of that development last year, when he led the first 54 laps of the Open before Hocevar took control, while an 11th-place Martinsville run showed he can navigate a traditional — and difficult — short track without disappearing. This is not yet a weekly oval contender, but it is no longer especially wise to assume the No. 97 will be overwhelmed by one.Analysis: Cindric quietly had one of the richest points nights around the Chase bubble at EchoPark. He finished fifth and fourth in the two stages before settling 14th, gaining five points on the cut and stretching his advantage to 32. His North Wilkesboro record is considerably less flattering -- 21st, 20th in the Opens and 18th in the 2025 race the last three years -- though eighth at Martinsville earlier this season offers a more current reason for confidence. No. 2 does not need to become a short-track revelation Sunday. Cindric simply cannot let one of his weakest recent venues erase the margin he just worked to create.Analysis: Wallace crossed the line second at EchoPark and left with a 29th-place finish, which is a violent swing after an extremely long night. He led 11 laps and helped liven the race’s closing act, but NASCAR ruled that he advanced below the yellow line on the final lap and dropped him down the running order, costing him 22 points against the cut. North Wilkesboro is a far more conventional opportunity for the No. 23: Wallace finished second in the 2023 All-Star Race, sixth in 2024 and fifth in that weekend’s 2023 Truck race after leading 13 laps. The ranking drop reflects the points damage, not a disappearance of speed, and this may be one of his cleaner rebound spots left.Analysis: Jones has gone from bubble occupant to bubble survivor, and EchoPark bought him another week of oxygen. His fifth-place finish helped him match his entire 2025 top-10 total at five and moved him eight points above Joey Logano for the final provisional Chase position. North Wilkesboro has been uneven -- eighth in the 2023 All-Star Race, 18th in the 2024 Open and fourth in last year’s Open -- but the most recent result at least points in the preferred direction. The Jones-led Legacy Motor Club revival does not need a trophy Sunday, but it does need another day that keeps No. 43 from handing a spot back.Analysis: The landscape could be about to change, because here comes the track Logano has probably had circled since the schedule was released. His ninth-place EchoPark result, supported by fourth- and third-place stage finishes, pulled him to eight points below the cut and supplied another hint that Team Penske is finally gaining traction beyond Blaney. North Wilkesboro is where Logano led 199 of 200 laps to win the All-Star Race in 2024, then dominated another 139 before Bell passed him late last season. He also finished third at Martinsville this spring. For weeks, No. 22’s potential rebound has felt like a low simmer, and Sunday offers the most credible chance yet to convert it into something real.Analysis: Preece’s EchoPark result did nothing to slow the points leak. He led one lap during the pit cycle but finished 24th, losing 22 more points against the cut and falling 26 below Jones after briefly working his way onto the good side of the line last month. North Wilkesboro is not entirely hopeless territory -- Preece placed fourth in the 2023 Open, eighth in 2024 and 11th last season -- and his 12th at Martinsville suggests a competent baseline. But with six races remaining, the No. 60 needs to stop producing weekends that require the next one to repair the previous one.
Analysis: Chastain re-enters after an 11th-place EchoPark run that looked modest on paper but moved him within 45 points of The Chase. That is still a substantial deficit, though not quite the dead zone it resembled earlier in the summer. North Wilkesboro has become increasingly productive for him: 11th in 2023, seventh in 2024 and third last season. Add 14 laps led at Martinsville this spring, and there is enough short-track evidence to view this as an opening rather than another survival exercise. No. 1 still needs a much bigger swing than 11th, but at least the schedule is beginning to cooperate.Analysis: Keselowski remains last here because every supposed launch point keeps becoming another missed departure. He started 10th at EchoPark, finished 26th, scored no stage points and fell 43 below the cut despite entering a stretch built around tracks expected to suit Ford and RFK Racing. North Wilkesboro provides one last compelling historical case: Keselowski led 62 laps in last year’s All-Star Race before crashing from contention, though his other modern finishes there are 19th and 16th. The No. 6 clearly knew how to find speed at this place 14 months ago. Whether any of it survived the season-plus since is now the more urgent question.