Of all the heartbreaking championship losses that Denny Hamlin has suffered, Sunday at Phoenix Raceway was the most unusually cruel in a career filled with NASCAR title devastation.

The Joe Gibbs Racing star started from the pole position and had the fastest car in the Cup Series season finale, leading 208 of 319 laps.

He overcame a persistent clutch problem — the latest in a series of recent mechanical woes involving power steering issues, engine failures and stuck throttles that seemed destined to derail his 2025 title bid.

He rebounded from a slow pit stop that dropped him outside the top 10.

For more than 300 miles, nothing seemingly could deny Hamlin his first title. His supersonic No. 11 Toyota was “40 seconds from a championship” — when disaster struck yet again, just three laps from the scheduled finish.

A caution wiped out a comfortable lead, triggering an overtime restart and a cascading series of events that left Hamlin three spots behind Kyle Larson for the championship at the checkered flag.

WATCH: What a victory cigar would mean

“Everything I really prepared for happened today,” Hamlin said. “I felt like we responded. Even losing track position at one point, just battling back. Did really well on restarts. Hadn’t been good on restarts for the bulk of the year.

“The team brought a great championship car. I felt like I drove it just right up until two laps to go. This is the part that stinks.”

It’s the part that Hamlin knows all too well, having come up short in five Championship 4 appearances as well as three other legitimate title chances prior to the elimination playoffs.

If the breaks had always fallen his way, the case plausibly can be made that there’s an alternate universe where Hamlin, who entered the 2006 season finale as a rookie with his first shot at the title, might have celebrated his eighth championship Sunday.

The first crown still seemed well within his grasp until William Byron lost a tire and slammed the wall to cause the fateful yellow.

four-tire pit stop and a restart bobble later, Hamlin was left wondering after his 20th season how a championship had yet again eluded a future NASCAR Hall of Famer whose 60 career victories rank 10th all time.

The best driver never to win a Cup championship has said for years that he already is at peace without a title after a lifetime of playoff adversity.

But amid the numbing shock of Sunday’s loss, he vowed to keep trying through 2027 over the final two seasons of what’s expected to be his last contract.

“I got a couple more shots at it,” he said. “Man, if you can’t win that one, I don’t know which one you can win.”

Revisiting our story from last week, here were the five championship losses that previously had been the most gut-wrenching for Hamlin — before Sunday:

Denny Hamlin makes a pit stop after sustaining front end damage during the NASCAR Cup Series Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 21, 2010 in Homestead, Florida.
Sam Greenwood | Getty Images

2010

Track: Homestead-Miami Speedway

Date: Nov. 21, 2010

The scene: Hamlin entered the season finale with a 15-point lead on Jimmie Johnson. The gap should have been much larger if not for a 12th-place finish at Phoenix Raceway, where Hamlin led a race-high 190 of 312 laps but needed an extra pit stop because of faulty carburetor settings that hurt his fuel mileage. He said all the right things afterward: “I’ll be all right. I’ll be OK. All I can do is concentrate on next week and put it behind me. Trust me, I’d rather race next week knowing I need to win the race than knowing I need to finish 15th. That’s the mentality I’m going to have next week.” But Hamlin seemed unable to shake the team’s error, appearing flustered during a Miami news conference a few days later as fellow title contenders Johnson and Kevin Harvick playfully took pot shots at the points leader.

The stumble: After qualifying 37th (31 spots behind Johnson), Hamlin was trying to make up the points needed to retake command of the championship. He had moved up to 18th and was attempting to pass Greg Biffle on the inside off Turn 2. Squeezed down the track by Paul Menard as they went three wide, Biffle contacted Hamlin, who spun through the backstretch grass. His No. 11 Toyota suffered suspension damage and was never the same. He refused to blame anyone for the crash. “Nobody’s fault at all. Just one of those things where it was not enough space for three cars at that point.”

Outcome: Hamlin got back on the lead lap and climbed to a 14th-place finish that left him 39 points behind Johnson, who finished second to Carl Edwards to win his record-extending fifth consecutive championship.

Quotable: “Our car was just unbelievably fast at the beginning. I knew we had a car that could contend for a win, and obviously, when we got in that incident on the back straightaway, it tore up the front, and obviously, the car did not drive as well for the rest of the day. We’ll just keep fighting and get ’em next year.”

The Toyota of Denny Hamlin is pushed off of the track after an electrical problem during the NASCAR Cup Series Tums Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway on Oct. 28, 2012 in Ridgeway, Virginia.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2012

Track: Martinsville Speedway

Date: Oct. 28, 2012

The scene: The championship fight was a three-way battle with 20 points separating leader Brad Keselowski, Johnson, and Hamlin, who had the home-state advantage of entering his best track on the circuit. He qualified fifth and then sped on Lap 47 but still was fast enough to take his first lead on Lap 165. After another speeding penalty for pit entry on Lap 200 (prompting angry cries of disbelief from the No. 11 driver and crew chief Darian Grubb), Hamlin still was good enough to climb back into the lead with 150 laps remaining when disaster struck.

The stumble: In third place with just more than 100 laps remaining, Hamlin’s gauges suddenly began going haywire as his car shut off entirely. Pulling into the garage for repairs that dropped Hamlin 34 laps down, the culprit was discovered to be a broken bolt on a master electrical switch — a rare failure for a part unrelated to car performance and estimated to cost $40 by Sports Illustrated.

Outcome: Hamlin finished 33rd and fell two spots to fifth in the standings behind Clint Bowyer and Kasey Kahne, effectively ending his championship bid at the 0.526-mile oval he often has owned in his career.

Quotable: “It’s something that I couldn’t control. I’ve been in these Chases for seven years and I’ve had my fair share of electrical issues and motor issues and things like that. All I can do is just drive my heart out, and if it’s not meant to be, it’s not meant to be. We’ll have our time; it’s just our time is not now. … It sucks it’s got to end this way. Just got to suck it up and move on.”

Kevin Harvick passes Denny Hamlin to take the lead and win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 16, 2014 in Homestead, Florida.
Patrick Smith | Getty Images

2014

Track: Homestead-Miami Speedway

Date: Nov. 16, 2014

The scene: In the debut season of the elimination playoffs, Hamlin entered the Championship 4 with winless Ryan Newman and first-time championship contender Joey Logano as underdogs to favorite Kevin Harvick. After slogging through a mostly quiet survive-and-advance playoffs (aside from a Charlotte battle with Keselowski, 2014’s chief instigator), Hamlin came off his first top five (a fifth from the pole at Phoenix) in over two months, but still brought some swagger to South Florida as the defending winner at Homestead. Hamlin boldly proclaimed on his team radio after final practice Saturday that he would win the following day (he called his shot the same way in the 2013 season finale), and longtime friend and NBA legend Michael Jordan showed up on race day to join his cheering section. (“He asked for tickets. I told him we could handle that.”)

The stumble: There was no mistake this time, just a cruel twist of fate. Hamlin took the lead by staying on track for a restart on Lap 253 of 267. With Harvick having fallen out of the top 10 on his pit stop, there was a good chance Hamlin wins the race and championship if the race stays green … but it doesn’t with two yellow flags in the final 15 laps.

Outcome: Harvick seized the lead from Hamlin immediately after a Lap 259 restart and held off runner-up Ryan Newman on a three-lap shootout for the championship. Hamlin faded to seventh after leading 50 laps.

Quotable: “Obviously, we had a championship‑type car, championship‑type effort, but those last breaks just didn’t go our way. I thought we had the best car, and we just struggled with restart speed. We had a car that was capable of winning today. Our effort was 100 percent. It’s just that the breaks didn’t quite work out for us tonight. Strategy is part of winning, and the strategy for us didn’t work out with what happened with the cautions. The race goes green, maybe things probably are a lot different. But it’s a part of racing, and you can’t predict those things. I’m proud of the effort we put forth after the year we’ve had. …  This is the third time around that I’ve had an opportunity to win a championship, but each one has been different, and this has by far been our best effort as far as trying to get it done.”

Denny Hamlin leads a pack of cars during the NASCAR Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami000 Speedway on Nov. 17, 2019 in Homestead, Florida.
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

2019

Track: Homestead-Miami Speedway

Date: Nov. 17, 2019

The scene: Hamlin reached the Championship 4 with a must-win victory at Phoenix Raceway, his sixth of the season after a winless 2018 (his only year in Cup without a win). He entered the most recent championship race at Homestead-Miami Speedway with all the momentum in his first season with crew chief Chris Gabehart. He finished fifth in both stages, but his No. 11 Toyota seemed optimized for evening conditions and was gaining speed as night fell, so Gabehart made an aggressive call to bring Hamlin in for a final pit stop with 58 laps remaining — ahead of the other contenders.

The stumble: In a misguided attempt at an aerodynamic enhancement, the pit crew applied a massive swatch of tape to the front grille of Hamlin’s car. The adjustment resulted in too much restriction of airflow to the engine, which quickly began to overheat. Hamlin was forced to pit again from third place 12 laps later to address his spiking engine temperatures, wiping out his shot at the championship.

Outcome: Teammate Kyle Busch won the race and his second Cup championship with Joe Gibbs Racing’s record-setting 19th victory of the year. Despite the unscheduled second stop, Hamlin still managed to make up a lap and finish 10th as the race stayed green to the finish. Gabehart later admitted Hamlin might have won without the tape, given how fast he was. The crew chief took full blame for making the call that “wasn’t in our playbook. We just didn’t execute the play. I wish I could have it back and just not have been so greedy. What we tried to pull off is trying to win Homestead, and we let the emotion of the moment get the best of you trying to do it. We just got too aggressive, plain and simple. That’s OK. That’s on me.” Hamlin turned 39 the day after the race and said he still planned to have a party in Miami and expected Michael Jordan (who again was at the championship finale to root on his friend) to be in attendance.

Quotable: “I feel like I did all I could. I didn’t leave anything out there. The first half of the race, we just weren’t fast enough, and all of a sudden it went nighttime, and we took off, and suddenly I perked up and was thinking that we’ve got a chance. Then just didn’t work out. …  I said I was going to do the best I could and live with the result either way. I definitely feel I couldn’t have done anything different. Certainly, we got a little aggressive, and it cost us, but (Gabehart) also has been really aggressive and won us races, too. It’s just he’s going for it. He saw an opportunity there to really add some speed to the car, and it just didn’t work out.”

Kyle Larson, Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin race during the NASCAR Cup Series Championship at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 7, 2021 in Avondale, Arizona.
Christian Petersen | Getty Images

2021

Track: Phoenix Raceway

Date: Nov. 7, 2021

The scene: In the previous Joe Gibbs Racing vs. Hendrick Motorsports showdown in the Championship 4, Hamlin was a decided two-win underdog with Kyle Larson being the overwhelming favorite with nine wins (and four in the playoffs). But in the final race with the Gen-6 car, the No. 11 Toyota hung in with the championship contenders, and the race seemed to be breaking Hamlin’s way late. He was ahead of title contenders Chase Elliott and Larson and closing on teammate Martin Truex Jr. for the lead. Just minutes after Gabehart radioed that “this is all playing out right,” debris from a lapped car’s broken rotor with 30 laps remaining brought out a yellow flag and the final pit stop of the five-lug nut era.

The stumble: Hamlin’s team executed a flawless pit stop and gained a position on Truex … but still lost the lead to Larson, who had the first pit stall after winning the pole and jumped three spots from fourth to first with an 11.8-second stop that was the team’s second fastest of the season.

Outcome: Unable to control the restart as the leader, Hamlin slipped from second to fourth. He recovered for third as Larson fended off several challenges by Truex for his 10th win and first championship. For the second consecutive year, Hamlin was the only Championship 4 contender without a lap led.

Quotable: “We knew after practice that we were going to have this go a certain way. It was going a certain type of way until 25 to go. Pit crew did a really good job in getting us out ahead of (Truex), and (Larson) just had a blazing fast stop, and the pit stall was such an advantage, that was it. He probably had the fourth-best car all day, and just once you get out front, that’s it. The first half of the race, we were kind of mediocre. But in the long run, we just were really fast. Just didn’t have that short-run speed. … I have to live with the result because I can’t change it. Disappointed, absolutely, for sure. But I knew going into today I was going to need the race to go a certain way. If it goes the way it did last year, it goes green, we’re probably winning. But it didn’t.”

Shane van Gisbergen added to his list of racing accolades this season, earning the title of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series’ top rookie at the spring-chicken age of 36. While the “young gun” label from long-ago marketing campaigns might not apply, the New Zealand import says it feels no different to him.

“Yeah, but I don’t feel old,” van Gisbergen said this past Saturday before Cup Series qualifying at Phoenix Raceway. “I don’t know, it’s just a number.”

Van Gisbergen may be the oldest Sunoco Rookie of the Year since Andy Lally won in 2011 at the same age, or 40-year-old Mike Skinner (1997) and 47-year-old Dick Trickle (1989) before them. But the Trackhouse Racing driver is also the most decorated honoree in modern NASCAR history, riding a stellar five-win season and maiden appearance in the Cup Series Playoffs to seal the award.

RELATED: Final Cup Series standings | 2026 schedule

The honor became official at the conclusion of the Cup Series season Sunday at Phoenix, then was set to be made official-official in Tuesday’s NASCAR Awards celebration. The contest, though, had been virtually decided far earlier as SVG’s victories in five of the six road-course events on the Cup Series schedule began to mount. He easily outdistanced fellow rookie Riley Herbst, who was 35th in the final series standings.

Van Gisbergen resided in that same outside-the-top-30 domain for a significant section of the season’s first half as he attempted to make incremental gains on oval tracks — a new motorsports discipline that’s a departure from his extensive road-racing background. The learning process — both for him and No. 88 crew chief Stephen Doran, in just his second Cup season — was a difficult but valuable one.

“Although it was a struggle, it was a good struggle to go through, and I feel like we ground it out and got better as a team together,” van Gisbergen said. “It was pretty cool. … Like, you go through that frustration, but no one’s angry at each other that we have a lot to learn as a team. You know, Stephen was a pretty new crew chief, and the driver was the problem at that stage. It was all new to me, so I think we kind of built up together. Yeah, we were a 35th-, 36th-place car at the start of the year, and it’s amazing where we’re at now compared to where we started.”

Van Gisbergen’s progress on ovals started to show palpable results in the latter stages of the season. SVG secured his first oval-track top 10 in 10th place in September at Kansas Speedway, then notched steady results in 11th in October at Talladega Superspeedway and 14th at Martinsville Speedway.

Part of the maturation process involved going back to tracks for a second time, which van Gisbergen said should help him improve even further with return trips in his second Cup Series campaign next year. The other part was establishing trust in his car’s behavior, especially on the intermediate-sized ovals.

“There’s just been lots of things like that, learning how the car dynamics work,” van Gisbergen said. “You know, tracks like Vegas when you’re going so fast and when you go slow into the corner, the cars don’t feel that way. You got to go in flat, land in the banking and then see what the car does, and it’s pretty eye-opening to tell yourself just to tighten the belts and grow some balls and drive in flat. Like it’s tough, this stuff, and yeah, it’s just taken me a while to get used to it.”

SVG now sits at exactly 50 Cup Series starts. Five of his six career wins came this year, two seasons removed from his victorious NASCAR debut in the 2023 Chicago Street Race.

MORE: Rookie winners in the Cup Series | All-time NASCAR road-course winners

While van Gisbergen might not be on the brink of an oval-track win, at least one of his Trackhouse teammates envisions the day that his signature victory celebration materializes on an oval.

“There’s a chance,” says Ross Chastain, who joined Trackhouse in 2022. “I think Stephen and his group on the 88 are definitely finding their stride on that and what he needs, and yes, I could see rugby balls flying over the grandstands at an oval track.”

Making adjustments and gathering information should help van Gisbergen’s progress grow next year, when SVG will team with Chastain and another promising rookie in Connor Zilisch, who makes the move from the Xfinity Series to Cup in the offseason. Pressed to single out one aspect of his development, SVG pointed to the sum of all the parts.

“I think it’s just everything,” van Gisbergen says. “I’ve gotten a lot better, the cars have gotten better, and yeah, just as the confidence grows, things start to snowball and momentum forms. It’s just a continuation of many things. It’s not just one thing, and it’s all added up.”

The 2025 NASCAR Awards will occur Tuesday evening in Scottsdale, Arizona, capping off a thrilling 2025 NASCAR season that will be remembered for the ages. This prestigious ceremony, most recently held in Charlotte, North Carolina, will take place in Arizona for the first time in the event’s history, reflecting NASCAR’s continued commitment to delivering memorable experiences to new markets.

While the venue may be different from years past, fans will still have the opportunity to join in on the celebrations. You can watch this year’s edition on The NASCAR Channel, beginning at 6:15 p.m. ET on Tuesday with the 2025 NASCAR Awards Red Carpet Show, followed by the Awards Show at 7 p.m. ET. The NASCAR Channel is currently available on Tubi, Xumo Play, Samsung TV Plus, The Roku Channel and Prime Video.

RELATED: How to watch The NASCAR Channel | 2026 NASCAR schedule

Before the ceremony, learn more about the key awards and recognitions that will be honored throughout the event, in addition to celebrating the sport’s champions.

The Comcast Community Champion of the Year is awarded to an individual in the NASCAR industry for their service-focused efforts to make the world a better place. Daniel Dye is the 2025 recipient.

The National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) Most Popular Driver Award will be honored across all three national series.

Chase Elliott is aiming to capture the Cup Series honor for an eighth consecutive year, while Justin Allgaier (Xfinity Series) and Rajah Caruth (Craftsman Truck) will both look to claim the hardware once again after triumphing in 2024.

MORE: Most Popular Driver Award winners in Cup | 2025 Most Popular Driver top five revealed for each series

The Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award recognizes the efforts of those who make a difference in children’s lives through local children’s organizations. This year’s finalists include John Grieshaber (Wilmington, Delaware), Gregg Morton (Bradenton, Florida), Kate O’Neal (Hazel Green, Alabama) and Hannah Smith (Richmond, Virginia).

Finally, the NMPA Myers Brothers Award recognizes individuals who have made outstanding contributions to stock car racing.

It’s time to rev up those streaming engines and tune in to the always-on NASCAR Channel, which is streaming on Xumo Play, Samsung TV Plus, Amazon Prime, Amazon Fire TV, The Roku Channel and Tubi. The NASCAR Channel is also available on NASCAR.com.

Keep reading to learn how you can access the NASCAR Channel 24/7.

WHAT IS THE NASCAR CHANNEL?

The NASCAR Channel is a FAST (Free Ad-Supported Television) channel. Programming includes live events, 2025 full race replays, classic NASCAR races and more. The NASCAR Channel will also air original programming, including timely content like Kid Racers, in addition to original documentaries and much more.

HOW CAN I WATCH THE NASCAR CHANNEL?

You can watch The NASCAR Channel on your TV or mobile device by downloading Xumo Play, Amazon Prime, Amazon Fire TV, The Roku Channel and Tubi, or on Samsung devices with Samsung TV Plus.

Quick links:

Xumo Play

Amazon Prime

Amazon Fire TV

The Roku Channel

Tubi

Samsung TV Plus

IS THE NASCAR CHANNEL FREE?

Yes, the NASCAR Channel is free to watch on our partner platforms. No subscription or registration is required. Just open the app on your partner platform of choice (see links above) and start watching now.

WHEN DID THE NASCAR CHANNEL LAUNCH?

The NASCAR Channel launched Jan. 29, 2025 with Tubi, and has since expanded to additional distributors.

In addition to national, regional and track championships, each season, the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series also crowns champions at the state and provincial level.

This year, 28 drivers secured state or provincial championships at venues across the United States and Canada. Below is a closer look at every state and provincial champion from the 2025 season.

RELATED: Division I regional champions for 2025

  • Alaska: Jeremy Copley

Racing in the Late Model class at Alaska Raceway Park, Jeremy Copley made eight starts and scored five victories this year to capture the Alaska state championship for the first time.

  • Alberta: Cameron Medd

Capturing the Alberta provincial championship for the second straight year is Cameron Medd, who scored four feature wins at Edmonton International Raceway on his way to the Late Model track title.

  • Arizona: Dylan Jones

Racing in the Super Late Model division at Tucson Speedway, Dylan Jones nabbed five wins in 15 starts on his way to the Arizona state crown. It’s his second Arizona state title and first since 2022.

  • California: Kenna Mitchell

Kenna Mitchell split her time between All American Speedway and Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway this year. She nabbed a pair of wins at All American on her way to the Limited Pro Late Model track title as well as her first California state title.

  • Colorado: Michael Scott

A native of Wyoming, Michael Scott spent his season racing at Colorado National Speedway. In nine feature starts, he won four times, which helped him capture the Colorado state championship for the first time.

  • Florida: Gavan Boschele

A strong start was all Gavan Boschele needed to secure the Florida state championship this season. Boschele made six starts at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway during the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing in February. He won three times on his way to the Super Late Model title during the annual event as well as his first Florida state title.

  • Idaho: Brendon Fries

Racing in the Modified division at Idaho’s Meridian Speedway, Brendon Fries bagged three wins in 17 starts. A strong season that saw him finish in the top 10 in every race allowed him to capture the track title, the Idaho state title and the West Region Division I championship. The Idaho state crown is his second in three years.

  • Illinois: Ricky Baker

Ricky Baker made the most of his 13 starts this year at Grundy County Speedway. He won four times and never finished outside the top 10 on his way to his first Illinois state championship.

  • Iowa: Josh Cooper

Racing in Adams County Speedway’s ultra-competitive Modified class, Josh Cooper triumphed four times in 15 starts this year on his way to the track title. That success allowed him to claim his first Iowa state championship in 2025.

  • Massachusetts: Jacob Burns

Jacob Burns enjoyed a strong season at Massachusetts’ Seekonk Speedway that saw him win three times and 14 starts while never finishing outside the top 10. As a result, he clinched his first Massachusetts state championship.

  • Michigan: Austin Hull

Austin Hull enjoyed a breakout year in Berlin Raceway’s premier Super Late Model division in 2025. He won the track championship and the prestigious TEKTON 250 Battle at Berlin, both of which helped him secure the Michigan state crown for the first time.

  • Minnesota: Chris Marek

Chris Marek was the man to beat this season in Elko Speedway’s Late Model division. He won three times and captured the track championship to go along with his first Minnesota state championship.

  • Missouri: Ryan Gillmore

There is domination, and then there is what Ryan Gillmore did this year at Monett Motor Speedway. In 16 starts at the Missouri dirt track, Gillmore won 13 times to claim the B Modified track title as well as his first Missouri state championship.

  • Nevada: Cody Brown

Racing in the Pro Late Model class at The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Cody Brown nabbed an impressive five wins from March to September to secure his first Nevada state championship.

  • New Hampshire: Brian Robie

Splitting time between Claremont Motorsports Park and Monadnock Speedway turned out to be a good choice for Brian Robie, who won track titles at both venues this year. He won 12 features between the two tracks in addition to his second New Hampshire state title.

  • New York: John Beatty Jr.

For the second consecutive season, John Beatty Jr. proved to be the king of New York. Racing in the Modified class at Riverhead Raceway, he scored one win, eight top fives and 10 top 10s to capture the track title and the New York state title.

  • Newfoundland and Labrador: Sarah Thorne

Racing in Eastbound International Speedway’s Sportsman division, Sara Thorne secured three wins in seven events to capture the track title and her first Newfoundland and Labrador provincial championship.

  • North Carolina: Brandon Ward

The champion of Bowman Gray Stadium’s headlining Modified class, Brandon Ward earned three wins this season to narrowly claim his first North Carolina state crown by two points ahead of fellow Bowman Gray competitor Tim Brown.

  • Ohio: Aidan Hinds

In his first season of racing in Limaland Motorsports Park’s Modified division, Aidan Hinds bagged three wins, the track championship and his first Ohio state championship.

  • Oklahoma: Mitch Keeter

Making the drive to Oklahoma from his home in Missouri, Mitch Keeter won eight times in 14 starts on his way to the Salina Highbanks Speedway B Modified championship. He also claimed his second Oklahoma state title and first since 2017.

  • Ontario: Jeramy Curtis

Jeramy Curtis bagged one win and never finished outside the top five this season at Ontario’s Grand Bend Speedway. He claimed the Late Model track title as well as the Ontario provincial championship.

  • Oregon: Toby McIntyre

Toby McIntyre continues to be the man to beat in the state of Oregon after he captured the Street Stock title at Coos Bay Speedway as well as his third consecutive Oregon state championship in 2025.

  • Pennsylvania: Barry Awtey

For the first time ever, a Jennerstown Speedway driver has captured the Pennsylvania state title. The honor goes to Barry Awtey, who won three times in Jennerstown’s Late Model class to win the track title as well as the Pennsylvania state title by two points ahead of Grandview Speedway’s Duane Howard.

  • Quebec: David Hébert

David Hébert continues to be among the best in the province of Quebec. Racing in the 358 Modified class at Autodrome Granby and Le RPM Speedway, Hébert won the Northeast Region Division I championship as well as his fourth consecutive Quebec provincial championship.

  • Tennessee: Zeke Shell

Competing in Kingsport Speedway’s Late Model class, Zeke Shell triumphed 13 times and never finished outside the top 10 in 23 starts. That allowed him to claim his second Tennessee state title and first since 2018.

  • Virginia: Chase Johnson

Chase Johnson was almost unbeatable in the Late Model class at Dominion Raceway this year. He won 15 times in 26 starts and easily claimed the track title, NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Josten’s Rookie of the Year Award, the Southeast Region Division I title and the Virginia state title.

  • Washington: Naima Lang

For the ninth time in his career, Naima Lang has captured the Washington state title. Competing at Evergreen Speedway, he won twice in nine starts to also capture the track’s Pro Late Model championship.

  • Wisconsin: Jacob Goede

Jacob Goede won just about every championship he could this year. In addition to his second NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national championship, the driver from Minnesota won his first LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway Late Model title, the Midwest Region Division I title and his second Wisconsin state title.

Today, Comcast announced NASCAR driver Daniel Dye as the 2025 Comcast Community Champion of the Year, becoming the 11th champion to receive the prestigious annual award. Comcast will award $60,000 to Dye for Race to Stop Suicide, which was established in 2018 to break the stigma around mental health and suicide.

“I’m super proud that this mission is getting talked about more — it means a lot to me, to my family, and to our communities,” Dye said. “Being named the Comcast Community Champion is a big deal, and the fact that we’re able to raise more awareness is really what it’s all about. This isn’t a race you can ever truly win, but we’re doing everything we can to run up front and be leaders in this mission.”

RELATED: Dye’s goals off track are even bigger than those on it

At just 14 years old, Dye turned unimaginable loss into action after losing his cousin to suicide. From that moment, his mission was clear: use his platform to spark life-saving conversations and help end the silence around mental health. That mission became Race to Stop Suicide, a now-national nonprofit dedicated to raising awareness, providing resources and bringing hope to individuals and families in times of need.

Through community outreach, school visits, church events and speaking engagements across the country, Daniel has opened the door for difficult but necessary conversations. With the support of his father, Randy Dye, and a growing team of advocates, he has built a movement that’s saving lives and breaking down stigma at every turn.

As his racing career has taken off, so has the reach of his message. Dye’s advocacy is front and center on his No. 10 Chevrolet with Kaulig Racing, which featured custom Race to Stop Suicide paint schemes during both Mental Health Awareness Month in May and Suicide Prevention Awareness Month in September. From World Wide Technology Raceway to Mexico City’s Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez, his message has traveled internationally, turning every lap into a platform for hope.

“Daniel represents exactly what the Comcast Community Champion of the Year was created to honor,” said Matt Lederer, Vice President of Brand Partnerships and Amplification at Comcast. “He’s not just raising awareness; he’s driving a movement that’s changing lives. Through honesty, compassion and a deep commitment to mental health advocacy, Daniel has built something far bigger than himself. He’s using his platform to give others a voice, and that kind of leadership is both rare and deeply inspiring. We are proud to name Daniel Dye as the 2025 Comcast Community Champion of the Year.”

Dye was selected by a panel of Comcast and NASCAR executives, including 2024 Comcast Community Champion Erik Jones, who was honored last year for his work supporting early cancer screening and detection, reading literacy and animal welfare.

In addition to the winner, this year’s finalists were recognized for their outstanding contributions to their communities. Jerry Caldwell, President, Bristol Motor Speedway, will receive a $30,000 donation to Speedway Children’s Charities — Bristol Chapter, which supports children across 18 counties. Wayne Auton, Former NASCAR Xfinity Series Director, will receive a $30,000 donation to The Corner Table, which ensures thousands of children and neighbors have consistent access to nutritious meals and support.

Since its inception in 2015, the Comcast Community Champion of the Year program has donated over $1 million to 33 nonprofit organizations, amplifying the efforts of NASCAR community members who dedicate their time and energy to helping others. Comcast remains committed to strengthening communities, leveraging its resources to drive positive and lasting change.

To learn more about Comcast’s community impact and partnerships, visit Comcast Community Impact.

AVONDALE, Ariz. – Denny Hamlin was three laps away from his championship moment. Instead, he left Phoenix Raceway with perhaps his worst heartbreak yet.

The 44-year-old veteran led a staggering 208 laps from pole position in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race, set the fastest lap and was out front when a late caution pushed the event to overtime. But Hamlin ultimately finished sixth, second in the championship fight as Kyle Larson surged late to score his second Cup Series title.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Hamlin had been on the precipice of a championship before, most notably in 2010 when he fell runner-up to Jimmie Johnson, coupled with four Championship 4 appearances since 2016 before Sunday. But never had he dominated a title race in which he could win the title, leading a combined 52 laps in his four prior attempts.

In the final run of regulation, Hamlin led 28 consecutive laps, including Lap 312, the scheduled distance. But the caution flag waved at Lap 309 for fellow Championship 4 contender William Byron, who was running second when he suffered a tire issue entering Turn 3 and crashed into the retaining SAFER barrier.

Under caution, Brad Keselowski, Ryan Preece and Alex Bowman stayed out on old tires while six others opted to take right-side tires only. Hamlin was the first off pit road to take four tires, but that slotted him 11th in the running order.

Larson restarted on the outside lane in Row 3 while Hamlin chose the bottom of the race track in Row 5, hoping to more easily make ground in Turns 1 and 2. Larson instead prevailed to take the checkered flag third, highest of the title contenders and hoist his second Bill France Cup while Hamlin was mired in sixth.

The emotions were palpable as he wheeled the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to a stop on pit road, taking a full minute-and-a-half to climb from the vehicle as he reflected on what was his best opportunity yet to win a championship.

Eighteen minutes later, he sat inside the media center, still trying to process his latest gut-punch.

MORE: Larson wins 2025 Championship

“I really don’t have much for emotion right now,” Hamlin said. “Just numb about it because I’m just in shock.”

While Hamlin was numb, those closest to him felt the heartbreak firsthand. Fiancée Jordan Fish was the first to meet Hamlin after his exit, greeting him with a tearful embrace as Hamlin leaned upon his race car. Following her was crew chief Chris Gayle, who immediately placed his hand on Hamlin’s shoulder and offered words of encouragement. Later, Hamlin was joined by his young daughters, Taylor and Molly, both crying as they absorbed the weight of the moment.

In that moment, the man who probably needed the most consoling at Phoenix Raceway had to snap back into fatherhood to console his children.

“It’s just something (that) will be one of those life lessons years down the road,” Hamlin said.

Each championship-winning scenario is different, but this one was particularly unique because of how close he was in such a dominating fashion.

“We were 40 seconds from a championship. It’s just unfortunate,” Hamlin said. “The only difference before is the cautions came maybe a little sooner than that, but I don’t know. It’s just … gosh. You work so hard. It’s just this sport can drive you absolutely crazy because it’s just that sometimes speed, talent, all that stuff just does not matter.”

Hamlin, who earned his historic 60th career victory on Oct. 12 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to lock him into the Championship 4, has also expressed his 75-year-old father Dennis is in ailing health, telling the Associated Press this week: “I know for a fact this is my last chance for my dad to see it. I don’t want him going and never getting to see the moment.”

The results will show Hamlin fell short at Phoenix, but the strength Hamlin showed in his latest championship fight will reign supreme within his family. Simply, the message Hamlin had for his father is: “I did the best I could.”

“Everything I really prepared for happened today,” Hamlin said. “And I felt like we responded, losing track position at one point and just battling back. Did really well on restarts; hadn’t been good on restarts for the bulk of the year.

“The team brought a great championship car, and I felt like I drove it just right up until two laps to go. This is the part that stinks.”

On pit road, moments after being comforted by Fish and Gayle and in his own moment of defeat, Hamlin walked to his pit box to greet his pit-crew members and embrace them.

“They did a great job,” Hamlin said. “We had one hiccup, but it wasn’t their fault. We got fortunate with the left-rear tire that was flat under caution (at Lap 188). They executed a great day. Man, I really wish I could have got it for them.

“While the championship … It wouldn’t have changed anything I felt truly about myself. I just wanted it so bad for everyone else, all of my supporters, all my friends and family, and whatnot. They want it so bad. Just not going to happen.”

In his first year atop the pit box with Hamlin, Gayle led the No. 11 team to its first Championship 4 appearance since 2021 and to its most wins (six) since 2020. But his overriding emotion after the race was disappointment for his driver.

denny hamlin after the cup series championship race at phoenix
James Gilbert | Getty Images

“Even though I wasn’t around for the previous four attempts, I was around for this one, and I know the effort that he put into this one,” Gayle said. “I know how much time we spent in sim. I know the time he was looking at stuff, preparing for that qualifying lap weeks ahead. I know that.

“And that’s what I hate, is I hate that it came down to some chaotic late-race restart where we were the dominant car and didn’t get the win.”

The pivotal decision came under that final caution in overtime, taking four tires while others either stayed out or took two. Gayle stands by his call despite the end result.

“For a second, I could think, ‘Oh, well, if I took two tires…’ – I don’t know if that would have worked,” Gayle said. “The 5 (Larson) … this was their only shot, and it really was going to dictate on just how many other cars stayed and who fit between you. I think four tires was the right call. We just didn’t get clear on the bottom – and I thought for a split second we were. And the 5 got the outside run, and then it was just boxed in with chaos a little bit.”

While Larson went on to win the championship, Hamlin was joined in the media center by both Byron and Chase Briscoe, the other Championship 4 contenders who weren’t fortunate enough to bring home the title.

Hamlin was first to the desk, but Byron was next, immediately placing his hand upon Hamlin’s shoulder and apologizing: “Sorry, man.”

Hamlin responded: “It happens.” Byron reiterated his thoughts, though: “You deserved it.”

Despite his Hendrick Motorsports teammate Larson becoming a two-time Cup champion in light of Byron’s misfortune, Byron couldn’t help but feel bad for Hamlin.

“It just doesn’t seem right, you know?” Byron said. “He had beat us, right? We’re running second, and four laps to go, you go into the wall and cause a caution. It sucks, right? I don’t want to be that guy, even if I’m in the Championship 4. That doesn’t really matter. I just don’t want to change the outcome, so it sucks.”

Even Larson, in his moment of glory, couldn’t help but think of the empathy he has for Hamlin, who has long been a friend of Larson’s.

“It’s great to celebrate and all that, but it does feel a little awkward because he has put so much time and energy and has been so close to winning so many championships, and this is as close as he’s ever been,” Larson said. “And sure, he’s a competitor, but he is a friend, you know? I was gonna be happy for him to win. That’s kind of what I was thinking about. Like, man, I can’t wait to go tell him good job. And then the caution came out and the script flipped right there.

“I haven’t seen him. I haven’t seen an interview. I haven’t seen the moments that I’m sure he had with his family and shared with his daughters. But I mean, sure, I’m happy, but there’s definitely a piece of me that is sad for him as well.”

Hamlin signed a two-year contract extension with Joe Gibbs Racing in July that keeps him in the No. 11 car through the 2027 season. At age 44, he has said that this will be his final driving contract.

Whether or not he gets another chance to contend for a championship in that time, Gayle believes the way Hamlin conducted himself and performed Sunday is worthy of the title.

“He prepared like a champion,” Gayle said. “He’s not going to walk away here with a trophy, but he prepared like one. He did everything he could do all weekend, the three weeks leading up – really all year. Even though he doesn’t have the trophy, I feel like he’s a champion.”

denny hamlin at phoenix
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

AVONDALE, Ariz. — When William Byron hit the Turn 3 wall with bone-jarring impact at Lap 310 of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Championship, the gut punch it delivered to Denny Hamlin was exponentially more painful.

The resulting caution and strategic call by crew chief Cliff Daniels allowed Kyle Larson to snatch the Cup Series championship from Hamlin without leading a lap at Phoenix Raceway.

Larson finished third behind race winner Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski to claim his second title in NASCAR’s top division and the 15th for team owner Rick Hendrick as the highest finisher among the Championship 4 drivers — Hamlin, Byron and Chase Briscoe.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

It was the 15th Cup championship for team owner Rick Hendrick, and it came with a major plot twist in the final stage.

With the scheduled 312 laps winding down, Hamlin led Byron by nearly three seconds and appeared headed for the first Cup title in his 20 full-time seasons behind the wheel of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

In dominating fashion, Hamlin led seven times for 208 laps. Though he battled a balky clutch and rallied from a flat left-rear tire after winning the second stage, he failed to win the championship for the fifth time under the elimination playoff format.

Instead, it was Larson who went to Victory Lane to receive the Bill France Cup, almost in disbelief.

“Honestly, I can’t believe it,” Larson said. “Like, we didn’t lead a lap today. Somehow won the championship. I mean, really, I’m just speechless. I can’t believe it. We had an average car at best.”

SHOP: Champion’s gear

After Byron’s wreck, which sent the race to overtime, Daniels opted for two right-side tires for the second straight pit stop. Hamlin pitted from the lead and took fresh Goodyear rubber on all four corners.

But with Keselowski, Ryan Preece and Alex Bowman staying out on older tires, and Blaney, Larson, Joey Logano, Josh Berry, Kyle Busch and Chase Elliott taking right sides only, Hamlin lined up 10th for the overtime restart — five spots behind Larson — and chose the bottom row for the final run.

From the outside lane, Larson charged through the first two corners and maintained a gap between his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and Hamlin’s Camry. On the final lap, Hamlin lost momentum on the bottom in Turns 1 and 2 and couldn’t recover.

He finished sixth, with Blaney beating Keselowski by 0.097 seconds for the race win.

Larson got the confidence he needed on the first two-tire call under caution on Lap 281. He restarted second beside Briscoe and was able to maintain fifth place before Byron hit the wall.

MORE: Relive epic championship race

“We had the right-front go down (earlier), lost a lap,” Larson said. “Got saved by the caution. Did the wave-around. Was really bad that run. We took two tires. I was like, “oh, God, here we go. We’re going to go to the back now.’

“It had a lot more grip than I anticipated. We got lucky with the final caution. I was really hoping we were going to take two again. I felt like I learned a lot on that restart, bombing (Turns) 1 and 2 really hard. Thought I could do the same thing if we got another one.

“Just unbelievable. What a year by this Hendrick Motorsports (team). Cliff Daniels, everybody, his leadership, his complete leadership just showed that whole race. Keeping us all motivated. Always having a plan. All of that. That’s just the story of our season.

“Again, just unbelievable. I cannot believe it. This is insane!”

Doubtless, Hamlin would agree. He and his team brought the fastest car to Phoenix and executed a near-flawless race. The clutch issue and flat left-rear tire were challenges the No. 11 team overcame without panicking.

But the championship eluded Hamlin once again.

RELATED: Hear from Denny Hamlin

“Did the best I could,” Hamlin said. “Everything I really prepared for happened today. I felt like we responded. Even losing track position at one point, just battling back. Did really well on restarts. Hadn’t been good on restarts for the bulk of the year.

“Yeah, the team brought a great championship car. I felt like I drove it just right up until two laps to go. Yeah, this is the part that stinks …

“Golly, in this moment, I never want to race a car ever again,” Hamlin said with a wry smile. “I mean, my fun meter is pegged.”

Blaney’s win was almost an afterthought, but it also was tantalizingly close to a second championship for the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford. Blaney finished second to Byron in a must-win situation last Sunday at Martinsville Speedway — one spot away from qualifying for the Championship 4.

“It’s just cool to end it on a good note,” Blaney said. “It’s just cool, and obviously, we had a fast car all day. Those other guys (Hamlin and Byron) were just kind of faster getting going, and I could never retain the lead.

“Those guys were just really good, and it took my car a while to come in, but it was a really good call for two (tires) there and keeping track position. I got a decent restart, and I was able to kind of roll the bottom in (Turns) 3 and 4 and eke the 6 (Keselowski) out at the line.”

Byron, who finished 33rd after leading 52 laps and winning the first stage, expressed sympathy for Hamlin, even though the Lap 310 accident gave his teammate the chance to win the title.

MORE: Hear from William Byron

“I’m just super bummed that it was a caution, obviously,” Byron said. “I hate that. Hate it for Denny. I hate it for the 11 team.

“I’m happy for Kyle, for Mr. Hendrick, they deserve it. Yeah, it stinks, right? I don’t know, three laps to go, I’m thinking, ‘let me get to the end.’

“I felt something funny off of (Turn) 2, thought it might be a flat. I thought at the time, if it’s left rear, you can kind of get back. It just went straight into (Turn) 3. Laid down on the right rear, went straight (into the wall). I hate that.”

Briscoe rallied from flat tires twice on Sunday, restarted 15th in overtime and finished 18th.

RELATED: Hear from Chase Briscoe

In a race that featured nine cautions for 65 laps, Logano finished fourth, followed by Busch and Hamlin. Berry, Michael McDowell, Preece and Elliott completed the top 10.

Blaney led 20 laps in securing his fourth win of the season and the 17th of his career. The win was his first at Phoenix after three straight runner-up finishes in the championship race. In 2023, however, second place was good enough to earn Blaney his only series title to date.

The Cup Series now heads into off-season mode before returning Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, for the Cook Out Clash exhibition race at Bowman Gray Stadium. The 68th running of the Daytona 500 follows on Feb. 15 to officially open the season.

Note: Inspection was completed in the Cup Series garage with no issues, confirming Blaney as the race winner and Larson as the champion. No cars will return to the NASCAR R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina for further evaluation.

AVONDALE, Ariz. – Rick Hendrick made two admissions after Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series championship race. Both were telling.

The first was about the difficulty of keeping up with the breakneck pace of a frantic ending to the season finale at Phoenix Raceway, where title contenders rose and fell like fishing bobbers. The second admission was about how bleak things looked, even after Kyle Larson replaced William Byron as Hendrick Motorsports’ strongest championship threat to Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin in overtime.

MORE: Race resultsChampionship Weekend photos

“I almost jumped off the box,” Hendrick said. “I mean, I was ready to call Joe and say congratulations to Denny. All of a sudden, here we are, we’re going to win this thing.”

That call of congratulations ended up being unnecessary. Larson summoned just enough from his battle-tested No. 5 Chevrolet in a two-lap dash to the end, denying Byron and Joe Gibbs Racing contenders Hamlin and Chase Briscoe in a winner-take-all final.

“Never did I feel like I had it,” Larson said, sharing some of the same uncertainty as his team owner held.

The triumph that sealed Larson’s second Cup Series championship was a microcosm of the No. 5 team’s tribulation-filled season, one marked by loss, by change and by resilience. Each time, the group coalesced and forged ahead.

Sunday, the No. 5 team found that same style of perseverance, flipping the script on a pair of powerful performances by Hamlin and Byron, who combined to lead 260 of the 319 laps. All the while, Larson remained within striking distance, running among the top five through the first two stages.

In that second intermission, though, came the first setback. The No. 5 pit crew executed a four-tire stop, but the wheel fastener came free while tire-changer Jafar Hall tended to the left-front corner of the car. The miscue dropped Larson from fourth to 18th in the running order, forcing the team to regroup.

SHOP: Champion’s gear

“It was ugly,” Hall told NASCAR.com. “I mean, after I lost the lug, the next thing I’m thinking is go to my belt fast to grab my spare, so that’s what I did. It didn’t turn out the way that I would like it, but we did the best that we could with it.”

The team had more extensive crisis management to make just 20 laps after the final stage went green. Larson had made up 10 of the spots that he’d lost when a flat right-front tire slowed the No. 5 Chevrolet in a cloud of smoke. As he had done at multiple points this season, crew chief Cliff Daniels calmly, coolly guided the team through the mishap, reassuring his crew that they weren’t out of it. The team waved around to return to the lead lap, but Larson restarted 29th with just 86 laps left in regulation.

“After we had the flat tire, there wasn’t a lot of good things coming our way at the time,” Daniels said, acknowledging what had been “a pretty ugly day” for the team overall. “We knew we would have more shots for pit stops and for restarts and maybe mix it up a bit. The way that the team stuck together and continued to believe in each other, Kyle continued to believe that if we just had a shot, we could close it out. That was what was put on display today.”

The hot conditions and the dramatic tire wear that came with it put all of Daniels’ leadership and strategy savvy to the test. A pair of two-tire calls in the late going were enough to give Larson the track position he needed, and only Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota was within reach of the No. 5 at the end, restarting five spots back in overtime. The 33-year-old hotshoe did the rest, securing his second Cup Series title in a five-year span.

MORE: Hear from Larson after winning his second title

“Yeah, it’s insane,” Larson said with a smile in the media center post-race. “I don’t know. I mean, did anybody in here think that we had a shot? Like, I definitely — like Cliff was saying, we weren’t dead, but we were pretty close.”

The No. 5 team bore personal scars and the effects of significant changes throughout this championship season. The organization shifted up its pit crew in April, bringing in the No. 7 Spire Motorsports team’s over-the-wall bunch before the series’ first trip to Darlington. Just days later, the No. 5 team lost longtime public-relations manager Jon Edwards, a Hendrick Motorsports employee for nearly 30 years and a fixture in the Cup Series garage.

The loss didn’t end there, but the group pressed on through the 40-week season. There was symmetry with that journey, and on Sunday, it resonated with Daniels.

“A lot of our team guys have just been through a lot this year,” Daniels said. “We’ve had things going on away from the race track where we’ve had to overcome obstacles, sometimes even tragedy, and work through a lot of things together, which to me there’s just a lot of beauty in that, of a team banding together the way that we have this season. That was really showcased today.”

No. 5 jackman Eric Ludwig said he knew the feeling, especially after the team left the gates Sunday with a fast start, then “it was just, it can’t go right.” The season had that same sentiment, with much more magnitude on a personal level.

“This year has been a complete roller coaster,” Ludwig told NASCAR.com. “We’ve been all over the place, coming from the 7 as backups to filling in, to being on the car. We’ve had a lot of ups and downs this season as a group. Myself, my carrier, we both lost our moms this year. We lost Jon Edwards this year. So it’s been an emotional roller-coaster, to say the least, and I’m just glad that the man upstairs allowed us to perform our duties the way we’re supposed to today and just put us in the place to be able to do what we can to make it to this point.”

RELATED: Jeff Gordon on Larson chasing championships

After going through all the hardship and adversity – both Sunday and all season – the No. 5 crew allowed some moments of levity to come through. The over-the-wall group sat on the edge of the championship stage during the post-race ceremonies, posing for pictures and swapping out hats before bottles of champagne were handed out.

That’s when Annie, the Hendrick family’s 11-month-old goldendoodle, wedged herself between Hall and Ludwig to get in the frame. Ludwig swings a heavy metal jack from one side of the car to the other on race days. After a hard-fought championship, he instead handled dog-sitting duties with some well-received head scratches for the miniature pup.

“I love dogs,” Ludwig said with a laugh. “I mean, she wanted to be a part of it, so Annie got somethin’ somethin’.”

There wasn’t much else the No. 5 team couldn’t handle, especially Larson, who gathered up his second championship in a far different manner than his first in 2021. That year, Larson won 10 times and led twice as many laps as in this year’s three-win campaign. That method and the mix of unlikelihood didn’t make the accomplishment any less sweet.

“It’s still so fresh that it’s honestly hard to believe that I’m sitting right here talking to you guys after what we went through tonight,” Larson said. “I think that’s probably what’s going to probably be the thing that I look back on, is just how unbelievable today was, the last 40 minutes of the race for us. Just incredible.”

Kyle Larson bounced back from a right-front tire failure on Lap 215 in the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Championship to earn his second title Sunday at Phoenix Raceway.

“I’m just speechless. I can’t believe it. We had an average car at best,” Larson told NBC after the race. “What a year by Hendrick Motorsports. Cliff Daniels, everybody, his leadership, his complete leadership just showed that whole race. Keeping us all motivated. Always having a plan. All of that. That’s just the story of our season. Again, just unbelievable. I cannot believe it. This is insane.”

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Finishing Stage 2 in fourth, Larson had a lengthy stop on pit road and fell to 17th on the ensuing restart. The Hendrick Motorsports driver had worked back inside the top 10 before his tire went down, slowing in Turn 4 and gathering his Chevrolet up without major damage. He came back to pit road for service and fell a lap down before a caution for Carson Hocevar.

Chase Briscoe first had a tire go down in Stage 2, but had fought back to third before a second tire issue moments after Larson. Both drivers stayed on the lead lap with the timely caution. Larson took the wave around before the Lap 226 restart.

“We had the right front go down, lost a lap,” Larson said. “Got saved by the caution. Did the wave-around. Was really bad that run. We took two tires. I was like, Oh, God, here we go. We’re going to go to the back now.”

Using additional cautions to his advantage, Larson returned to the mix later in the final stage, and after a caution to fellow Championship 4 driver, the No. 5 driver capitalized. Taking two tires in his final pit stop, Larson jumped to fifth for NASCAR Overtime, while Denny Hamlin, the most dominant driver of the afternoon, took four and restarted 11th.

MORE: Larson is a two-time champion!

That six-position difference was enough of a gap for Larson to hold off the Joe Gibbs Racing phenom and earn his second career title, finishing third in the race.

“It had a lot more grip than I anticipated,” Larson said, recalling the final moments of the race. “We got lucky with the final caution. I was really hoping we were going to take two again. I felt like I learned a lot on that restart, bombing one and two really hard. Thought I could do the same thing if we got another one. Just unbelievable.”

Larson entered Sunday’s title-deciding race with three victories on the 2025 campaign, but has been winless since Kansas Speedway in May. He clinched the lone Championship 4 spot on points, recording a pair of top fives in the Round of 8.