The Championship 4 for the NASCAR Xfinity Series is set for Saturday’s season finale at Phoenix (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), and we know anything can happen when it all comes down to one race. For instance, the last time the series raced here back in March, Aric Almirola took advantage of a late caution and outdueled Justin Allgaier and Alex Bowman on the restart — the latter with a little shove up into the fence — to win by less than five-hundredths of a second. This track is designed so daring passes and desperate dive-bombs are never very far away.
But even though each Champ 4 driver — whether it be Allgaier, Connor Zilisch, Carson Kvapil or Jesse Love — has to execute, avoid chaos and get the job done this weekend, it would be surprising if anyone other than Zilisch emerged as this season’s Xfinity champion.
The 19-year-old phenom has been nothing less than historically dominant in 2025, winning a series-high 10 races — more than double anyone else in the field — with eight poles, 19 top fives, 22 top 10s and an average finish of 8.2 in 31 races. Zilisch became just the third driver to earn double-digit wins in an Xfinity season (joining all-time series wins leader Kyle Busch, four times, and Sam Ard from 1983), and he did it on not only his patented road courses — COTA, Sonoma, Watkins Glen, Portland and the Charlotte Roval — but also ovals — Pocono, Dover, Indy and Gateway — and even a superspeedway — Daytona — for good measure.
According to the Adjusted Points+ index, which rates the quality of each driver’s per-race finishes (with increasing bonuses for wins and other high placements) relative to a field average of 100, Zilisch — at 279, or 179% better than average — is trying to cap off the most dominant single season by a non-Buschwhacker in the history of the Xfinity Series:
The only real close competition for Zilisch is Ard, who finished second in the very first Xfinity (then the Late Model Sportsman) Series in 1982 behind Jack Ingram, then rattled off a dominant championship campaign in 1983 and was even better in 1984, when he was the only driver to be 170 percent better than average until Zilisch came along this season.
Yes, we’ve seen even more absurdly dominant campaigns by full-time Cup drivers who used Xfinity for extra seat time, like when Busch won 10 of the 17 races he entered in 2016. But arguably, there hasn’t been an Xfinity Series regular as good as Zilisch this year. And did we mention he only turned 19 in the middle of the season, on July 22?
The combination of being this great, this soon, has fueled talk that Zilisch might be the greatest prospect in the history of the sport. And it’s not unfounded. Here’s a plot of Adjusted Points+ index versus age (as of July 1 during the season in question) for all primary Xfinity Series drivers with at least 15 starts in a season, all-time:
This really helps put in perspective how incredible what Zilisch has done this season is. In the top left-hand side of the chart, where young greatness resides, the only dots even remotely in the same neighborhood as Zilisch belong to Ty Gibbs — who had an Adjusted Points+ index of 233 at age 18.7 on July 1 of 2021, then improved to 237 at age 19.7 in 2022. Zilisch was age 18.9 on July 1, 2025 — slightly older than Gibbs was in 2021 — but his 279 Adjusted Points+ was significantly better than either Gibbs campaign.
And that’s as close as any other young driver has ever gotten to Zilisch’s current level. Other notables like Joey Logano and Chase Elliott were only around 200 on the Adjusted Points+ scale, slightly younger than Zilisch is now — which helped signify their future potential as champion drivers! — while a slightly older future champion, Kyle Busch, graded out at 219 in the 2004 season. Even Jeff Gordon, maybe the platonic ideal of a “young gun” driver in NASCAR history, never had an Xfinity season all that close to Zilisch’s 2025, even at older ages.
Of course, Gordon made up for it once he hit the Cup level, coming out with the two best under-25 seasons in history by Adjusted Points+ in 1995 (253) and 1996 (276), becoming the youngest driver in the modern era to win a championship in the first of those seasons. That’s the legacy Zilisch will be chasing as a full-time Cup driver for Trackhouse Racing starting next season, and there will no doubt be growing pains as he adjusts to life in the new car, series and higher level of competition.
But as we noted around his Cup debut back in March, Zilisch is on a historic track for his age in terms of how old a driver was when appearing in their first race at the series’ top level. At 18 years and 223 days old when he started at Circuit of The Americas, Zilisch became the youngest driver to hit the track in Cup since Joey “Sliced Bread” Logano did it at 18 years and 113 days in September 2008 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. And to find a younger driver than Joey, you’d need to go back to Darryl Sage in July 1982, who drove for his father Lee’s team at Nashville at 17 years and 62 days old — establishing himself as the youngest driver to appear in a race in all of NASCAR’s modern Cup Series era (since 1972):
These are all imperfect measures of perceived potential, of course. For every Logano or Ricky Rudd, who debuted even younger than Zilisch did, there’s Bobby Hillin, Jr. — who had a long journeyman Cup career at best — or plenty of other drivers who barely stuck around at all — Sage only appeared in eight Cup races, after all.
Likewise, our chart of the best young Xfinity prospects also includes Gibbs (whose improvements have come only in fits and starts over three-and-a-half seasons in Cup), Trevor Bayne (who never won another race after taking the 2011 Daytona 500), Reed Sorenson (who became a journeyman after his early promise with Chip Ganassi fizzled), Harrison Burton (who lost his Cup ride with the Wood Brothers last year) and Brian Vickers (whose career was limited by health problems). Early returns — particularly in a lower-tier series — are no guarantee of lasting success.
Ultimately, Zilisch will be judged on what he does in a Cup car, just like Gordon, Logano, Elliott, Busch and every other hot prospect who came before him. But just the same, seasons like this one don’t come around too often. By every available measure — production, precocity and potential — Zilisch has already set a standard no prospect before him quite reached. Win or lose on Saturday, if Zilisch’s Xfinity Series campaign is any indication, the sport might be watching the arrival of a truly special generational talent behind the wheel.
As part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, drivers can compete for a variety of different championships. They include national, regional and track titles across the United States and Canada.
Included among those championships are regional championships in Divisions II-V. Regional championships are determined by a driver’s best 14 finishes within each region.
Below is a closer look at every regional champion in Divisions II through V from the 2025 season.
NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division II regional champions
Southeast: Chase Robertson
The Sportsman division champion at Bowman Gray Stadium, Chase Robertson put together a dream season that saw him score six victories, including one at Ace Speedway, which helped him win the Southeast Region Division II crown. He also captured the Division II national championship.
Northeast: Donovan Lussier
Donovan Lussier triumphed six times and swept the Sportsman track championships at Autodrome Granby and Le RPM Speedway. He captured the Northeast Region Division II title by two points ahead of fellow Canadian Jacob Nadeau.
Midwest: Brent Kane
Racing mainly at Minnesota’s Elko Speedway, Brent Kane collected six checkered flags on his way to the Thunder Car track championship in 2025 as well as the Midwest Region Division II title.
West: Curtis Heldenbrand
Racing in the Pro Truck division at Colorado National Speedway, Curtis Heldenbrand picked up one victory in eight races and never finished outside the top 10. That was enough for him to capture not just the track championship, but also the West Region Division II championship.
NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division III regional champions
Southeast: Brad Lewis
Despite coming up just shy of the track championship in Bowman Gray Stadium’s Street Stock class, Brad Lewis still captured four victories in 14 features to help him lay claim to the Southeast Region Division III championship.
Northeast: Colby Lambert
Colby Lambert captured four wins in 13 features to add the Northeast Region Division III championship to his list of accomplishments this season while competing at Seekonk Speedway in the Sportsman division.
Midwest: Shawn Kralik
Shawn Kralik raced in the B Modified division at Iowa’s Adams County Speedway this season, winning five times and never finishing outside the top five. That allowed him to capture the track championship at Adams County, the Midwest Region Division III championship and the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division III national championship.
West: Cole Rarden
Cole Rarden was nearly unbeatable in the Mini Stock division at Washington’s Evergreen Speedway this season. He won eight times in 11 starts to not only capture the track championship, but also the West Region Division III championship.
NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV regional champions
Southeast: Brandon Brendle
The champion of Bowman Gray Stadium’s Stadium Stock division, Brandon Brendle captured seven wins between Bowman Gray and Tennessee’s Kingsport Speedway to also secure the Southeast Region Division IV championship.
Northeast: Jacob Vanada
Consistency was the name of the game for Jacob Vanada in the Sport Truck class at Massachusetts’s Seekonk Speedway. Vanada won twice and finished inside the top 10 a dozen times on his way to the track championship and the Northeast Region Division IV championship.
Midwest: Cody Werner
Despite falling just short of the Hobby Stock division track championship at Adams County Speedway, it was still a big season for Cody Werner. He won five times in 15 starts to capture not just the Midwest Region Division IV title, but also the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV national championship.
West: MacKenzie Deitz
Splitting time between Evergreen Speedway and Coos Bay Speedway, MacKenzie Deitz bagged two wins on her way to the Super Stock Figure 8 championship at Evergreen. Her success also allowed her to secure the West Region Division IV championship.
NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division V regional champions
Southeast: Zach Curtis
No one was better in the Bomber B division at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway this season than Zach Curtis. Not only did he cruise to the track championship thanks to 13 victories, but he also captured the Southeast Region Division V championship.
Northeast: Cameron Ruggles
Making the long drive from his home in Virginia to Pennsylvania’s Jennerstown Speedway each weekend paid off in a huge way for Cameron Ruggles, who captured 4 Cylinder track title at Jennerstown this year. That success, buoyed by eight wins, also helped him win the Northeast Region Division V title and the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division V national championship.
Midwest: Tyler Hoover
Competing in Adams County Speedway’s Compact class, Tyler Hoover triumphed four times and never finished outside the top five in 15 starts. He secured the track championship to go along with the Midwest Region Division V championship.
West: Damon Claibourn
Damon Claibourn finished 11 points shy of the track championship in Evergreen Speedway’s Hornet division this year. Despite that, his strong season that included three wins in 14 starts was enough for him to capture the West Region Division V championship.
Denny Hamlin has driven race cars for Coach Joe Gibbs ever since the 2005 season. No driver on the NASCAR Cup Series roster outranks him in terms of longevity and loyalty to one team.
Coincidentally enough, one of the closest connections on Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota team has him beat in terms of workplace service anniversaries at JGR.
“Like, I know everybody, right?” says No. 11 crew chief Chris Gayle. “Like, I’ve not quite outlasted everybody, but a lot. So it does feel like home, and that’s the real reason why, to be quite honest with you, there was a lot of tough decisions I had to make last offseason.”
Gayle was faced with a crossroads before this pivotal season, one that will end with a title shot in Sunday’s season finale (3 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) at Phoenix Raceway. The 50-year-old veteran seriously considered leaving the only big-league team he’s ever worked for, even though entertaining offers from other teams potentially meant starting over at this stage of his career. By staying, he was still faced with a reboot.
Hamlin was in a similar place. Chris Gabehart, his crew chief for the previous six seasons, was due for promotion to JGR competition director, and Hamlin’s bond with the No. 11 team’s philosophical, longtime leader was set to change in the twilight of his career. “Shocked” was how Hamlin described it on the cold morning before the NASCAR Awards banquet last November, but he ultimately left the decision in Gibbs’ hands.
Gibbs said the move was a needed jolt after his four-car team went winless in the second half of the 2024 season. From his experience as a Hall of Famer in both the NFL and NASCAR, he knew that stagnation in an ever-evolving sport could be harmful. “If you’re sitting still, you’re falling behind,” Gibbs said this week. “You’ve got to be on the forefront of what’s taking place.”
Hamlin ultimately placed his faith in Gibbs’ personnel move. The next step was building that same degree of trust between driver and crew chief.
“My reaction there, it was twofold,” Gayle said, thinking back to last November. “I was super-excited about working with an experienced guy, to be in the situation I’m in now, but I also knew that to make that work, I had to have buy-in from Denny, or it wasn’t going to work. And so, there were a few days there when Denny’s kind of mulling over, ‘Oh, man, I don’t really want to rebuild everything. I’ve been doing this for a while. Do I want to start over? That’s not really what I want to do,’ and ultimately, I think Coach let him think about that, and the ultimate response that I have always heard was, I trust you. Denny said he trusts Coach, that he’ll make the right decision and you’re going to do what’s best for me. So then I left it at that.”
That trust has been rewarded in a banner season for one of stock-car racing’s elite teams, which stacked up a series-best six wins and established a performance benchmark for the rest of the field. A self-assured march through the playoffs has placed both Hamlin and Gayle in position for their first Cup Series championship — not bad for a Year 1 partnership with an origin story cloaked by so much uncertainty.
To further sustain that level of confidence between the two, Gayle sat down with Hamlin and reviewed what would be expected. Gayle eventually came to learn the extent of his new driver’s determination and analytical attention to detail. Hamlin initially thought of his new crew chief as “reserved,” but that pre-loaded impression gave way to regarding him as smart, decisive and thorough in his preparation. A meticulous nature would be their common ground.
Making that transition even smoother was Gayle’s choice to keep the core of the No. 11 team intact. Rebuilding the driver-crew chief pairing was plenty, without the potential disruption of swapping engineers, mechanics and other crew members.
“It was just me getting changed,” Gayle says. “I felt a lot more at ease at that point.”
* * *
As a personal part of Tuesday team meetings at Joe Gibbs Racing — where all six pit crews, coaches and shop employees gather — one attendee tells the group their story of how they made it to NASCAR. Three weeks ago, before the Cup Series visited Las Vegas Motor Speedway, it was Gayle’s turn to share. His version, retold before on-track activity began a couple of weeks ago at Talladega Superspeedway, went something like this.
Digging all the way back to the beginning, Gayle still remembers the moment he became hooked on racing, back in his formative middle school to early high school years growing up in Little Rock, Arkansas. He and a buddy watched a neighbor open a garage door, revealing a purpose-built racer sitting idle, waiting for the weekend when it would be unleashed to carve up area dirt tracks.
From that point on, his interest in pursuing any other sports waned.
“So that was the path, right?” Gayle says. “And the parents laughed at me a little bit about thinking I could make it as a profession. But you know, it worked out OK.”
He became involved in dirt-track racing to start, and his vocation-to-be stuck with him after he enrolled in the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. Though his devotion to the Razorbacks was strong, he still felt the pull to a career in stock car racing. After a relationship with a girlfriend ended, his ties to his home state loosened as well. Gayle packed up his broken heart, his Chevy S-10 pickup and headed to Charlotte.
A summer tour of the area prompted his move to Kannapolis in 1999. Gayle transferred to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte to study engineering, and he knocked on the doors of any race shop that would take his resume. An open garage door led him to Mark Reedy, a veteran of Big 10 Super Late Model competition at Concord Motorsports Park. More introductions followed: seating innovator Brian Butler, the Craig brothers and All Pro Series driver Jeff Fultz. Gayle did whatever was asked around the shops, balancing his school schedule with the on-the-job training.
Fresh out of college, he landed with Team Bristol Motorsports in the Busch Series, but the long hours on the understaffed team took its toll. So when an opening became available at Joe Gibbs Racing, he contacted Mark Catania, then a JGR engineer who had also spent time with the Craigs on the All Pro circuit. Catania put in a good word, and before the 2002 season, Gayle was a JGR employee — a shock specialist with Coy Gibbs’ team in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
“Then from there, I’ve been at Joe Gibbs Racing ever since,” Gayle says. “So it’s a long path there.”
Gayle’s first crew chief assignment came 11 years later in the Xfinity Series, spending two seasons with Elliott Sadler before working with several current Cup Series standouts as a rotating cast on JGR’s “all-star” car. Wins came quickly while paired with those moonlighting veterans, including a staggering 10 victories in 17 races with Kyle Busch in 2016, but Gayle soon gained a reputation for shaping young talent in the Toyota development pipeline.
Todd Warshaw | Getty Images
When Erik Jones was tapped for his first season in NASCAR’s top division, Gayle became a Cup Series rookie alongside him with the JGR-affiliated Furniture Row Racing operation. Jones recalled Gayle as energetic and motivated in their four seasons together, saying with a laugh that he’s since settled down some since those early “wound-up” years.
“In ’17, that was his first role as a Cup crew chief with myself, and we were both going through a huge learning curve, looking back at it,” said Jones, now in his ninth Cup season. “I was, obviously, with moving into the Cup world. He was, with working with a young guy in myself at the time, and a rookie in Cup. So we were both learning a lot as we were going through everything, but I do feel like he helped me. He helped me grow in that early, early part of my career and become a better driver and figure out what I needed to do to improve.”
Gayle’s next assignment meant returning to the Xfinity Series, but he was entrusted with bringing Ty Gibbs, the team owner’s talented grandson, to NASCAR’s national-series level. He was atop the pit box when the 18-year-old scored a stunning win in his Xfinity debut in 2021, and he guided Gibbs to seven victories and the series title the following year.
When Gibbs was destined for a Cup Series ride in 2023, Gayle was ready to make the move, too. His reputation as a rookie whisperer, however, had taken hold.
“Just because I’m probably a workaholic and those guys were not necessarily knowing, I would work myself to death trying to make sure they know everything, make sure that I’m not missing something,” Gayle says. “And again, my background is not as a driver, so I’m trying to put myself in their shoes. I’ve worked with enough drivers, worked with enough people to where you can understand what they’re looking for when you work with the good ones, and so you’re just trying to help them because they don’t know yet. They don’t know what they don’t know. And to be honest with you, when I was young at it, I didn’t, either. You’re just trying to cover every possible base.”
That approach shifted with Hamlin. “I’ve been able to relax, knowing Denny knows what he needs, knowing he’s going to come ask for it and knowing he’s searching for it a lot on his own,” Gayle says. “He’s kind of refined what he thinks he needs, so I don’t have to do quite as much of that, and I do a little more managing of the whole team and spending time in different areas.”
Telling his story to the rest of the team gave Gayle a moment to reflect on his journey, a luxury that time usually doesn’t afford crew members amid the bustle of frequent travel and tireless at-track work in a 40-week season. He also found the value in listening to others share their life and career experiences, and he’s taken some of those best qualities and tried to adopt them as his own.
“Until you sit here in the midst of it and think about all the little steps that got you there,” Gayle says, “it was kind of getting me thinking about the whole path, and like, wow, how far I’ve come, how many years I’ve been here, and a lot of stories about all the different roles at Joe Gibbs Racing, and how you kind of learn from all of them, how many crew chiefs I had worked under. … I’ve thought about that over the last week-and-a-half more than I probably have in a long time.”
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
* * *
Martinsville Speedway has long been regarded as one of Denny Hamlin’s best tracks. The cozy, inviting venue in his home state had been the site of five previous wins for the Virginia native, but it had been a maddening 10 years since Hamlin had collected one of the track’s grandfather clock trophies.
The next phase of the trust-building process for Hamlin and Gayle was about to get a sizable early test, one that the No. 11 team passed with a decidedly old-school performance, leading all but one of the last 275 laps and turning back the clock by about a decade. Hamlin was quick to credit Gayle on the cool-down lap, and he lauded the newfound approach with the car’s setup, a departure from previous years.
“I mean, that certainly was a big one for me personally, and certainly one of the more special ones early in the season to get back in Victory Lane at that race track,” Hamlin said. “So he knew how bad I wanted that race in particular, and for him to kind of trust my instincts on what I needed for overnight adjustments. That was key for us.”
Their seventh race together survived the trust fall. From there, Gayle felt more relaxed making calls, and Hamlin found more comfort in letting him make them.
“Nothing really makes it solidify until you go win races,” Gayle said, “and then when you win races, he’s still got that seed of doubt, ‘I’m willing to give you the chance,’ but at the back of his mind, you’ve still got the seed of doubt until we go win. It’s not the same. I think even though I don’t think many of the team members would say that, I know they’re probably thinking the same thing. It’s just human nature, right? So for me, that was the thing. He at least gave me the rope to get there and let me prove that I deserve to be here.”
Any other doubts about the partnership’s promise were scuttled as more wins mounted up — the next week at Darlington, a return to form at Michigan International Speedway, a delivery at Dover Motor Speedway, then two key postseason victories (Gateway, Las Vegas) that helped him power through the playoff bracket and reach a career milestone with Cup Series win No. 60.
Those accomplishments have dwarfed what Gayle said were more modest preseason aspirations, with Hamlin aiming to win “two or three” races and reach the Championship 4 for the first time since 2021. The No. 11 team eclipsed the first part of those goals; now it has an opportunity to surpass the second on Sunday at Phoenix.
“I feel like we should have as good a shot as anybody,” Gayle said before Talladega. “I feel like, I mean, I hate to say probably the favorite, but I think that that’s probably the case, right?”
Gayle pointed to the team’s familiarity with the tire setup, a solid baseline for the car’s balance at Phoenix, plus the advantage of being locked in after Vegas, providing two extra weeks to divert the team’s focus toward the final race. Gayle’s nature should have the team prepared for the season’s culmination and the title race, but he’s also striving to embrace the moments as they come and reflect — much as he did when telling his story to the team a few weeks back.
That story may get a whale of a capper this weekend, but Gayle says he’s trying to enjoy the journey as much as the destination.
“Not once did we talk about once we got to the Championship 4, then winning the championship,” Gayle said of his preseason goal-setting with Hamlin. “Now, maybe he just thought at that time that was going to be a good year and unrealistic to expect more than that. But no, for me, I’m going to stick with that. I’m trying to learn how to appreciate the moment — right now — and that’s impossible to do completely because you’re so involved with what you’re trying to do that there’s no way to remove yourself from the situation and completely do it, but I’m trying to do a nice balance of stopping a little bit, not letting it overwhelm me, and go, OK, you’re in a good spot. We’re ahead on things. Don’t get so in the minutiae that you can’t have a little fun with it.”
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (Oct. 27, 2025) – Kids continue to yell “6-7” despite it having no meaning and no context. Christopher Bell, however, could yell “11-2” and receive a tip of the cap, for it holds serious meaning and strong context for the driver of the No. 20 Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry XSE.
In the 35 NASCAR Cup Series races run this season, Bell’s average finish is 11.2. That’s more than a position better than his nearest pursuer in this category, Bell’s Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) teammate Chase Briscoe, and more than two positions better than Kyle Larson, who bested Bell by seven points Sunday at Martinsville Speedway to take the final, coveted spot in the Championship 4 finale this Sunday at Phoenix Raceway.
Despite owning the best average finish this year – a number bolstered by Bell earning a single-season career-high four victories – the 30-year-old racer from Norman, Oklahoma, is a bystander in Sunday’s winner-take-all championship.
“We just weren’t strong enough at Martinsville,” said a subdued Bell after the race. “We practiced in the teens, we qualified in the teens, and kind of raced back there most of the day.”
With William Byron dominating Martinsville by winning the pole, sweeping both stages and leading three times for a race-high 304 laps en route to the win, he locked himself into the Championship 4. Byron joined the JGR duo of Denny Hamlin and Briscoe, who secured their Championship 4 berths by winning at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway, respectively, in the penultimate Round of 8 where only the top-four drivers after Martinsville advanced to Phoenix’s Championship 4.
Bell held a single-point advantage over Larson coming into Martinsville, but with Larson finishing fifth to Bell’s seventh-place result, the die was cast.
“I feel content with the results,” Bell said, ever gracious in light of his disappointment. “I think the four going there are legitimate contenders. Whoever the champion is, it’s going to be well-deserved. This year there’s four great drivers. All have had championship seasons. Whoever the champion is, it’s going to be well-deserving. I think the format worked out this year.”
The format, where 16 drivers become playoff eligible by either winning a race during the 26-race regular season or by pointing their way into the playoffs, and then joust for position during three elimination rounds where the lowest four drivers are jettisoned until a final four remains for the season-ending championship, is likely to change in 2026. Whatever the format ends up being, Bell and his Cup Series counterparts will attempt to strategize their way to the top step of the championship stage.
“I’m definitely more seasoned now. Every year that goes by, you have more experience and understand the name of the game a little bit more and how to play it,” said Bell, a back-to-back Championship 4 member in 2022 and 2023. “Whatever the format ends up being next year, I’ll continue to improve and work within whatever the parameters are. I haven’t reached my ceiling.”
Bell’s words are particularly appropriate at Phoenix, where on Sunday he will make his 216th career Cup Series start and 12th at the 1-mile, desert oval.
After his first Cup Series start at Phoenix in March 2020 resulted in a 24th-place finish, Bell has since become a master of its flat and fast layout. He has won two of the last three Cup Series races at the track, including the series’ most recent visit in March, and he has led a total of 298 laps.
“Phoenix is definitely a strong track for us. We know we should be competitive if we execute the way we’re supposed to,” Bell said.
And despite being out of the Championship 4, the motivation to win remains the same.
“The motivation is simple. There’s still a lot on the line, there’s a lot of money invested, and we have partners who expect results,” Bell said. “Interstate Batteries has been with Joe Gibbs Racing since its very beginning, and they’re on the car at Phoenix, sharing it with DEWALT. Between them and the 600-plus employees at Joe Gibbs Racing that put effort into this racecar, it’s unfair if we don’t put our best foot forward to try and win. There’s still a lot on the line.”
Bell’s Phoenix race weekend begins Friday with a 50-minute practice starting at 2:35 p.m. MT/5:35 p.m. EDT before qualifying on Saturday at 2 p.m. MT/5 p.m. EDT. TruTV and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio will provide live coverage of both. The Cup Series season finale goes live on Sunday at 1 p.m. MT/3 p.m. EST with flag-to-flag coverage delivered by NBC and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
William Sawalich has not yet been medically cleared to return to the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Sawalich announced Wednesday on social media, keeping him sidelined for Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series season finale at Phoenix Raceway.
Sawalich is recovering from concussion-like symptoms after a crash in the Oct. 18 race at Talladega Superspeedway. The 19-year-old rookie also sat out the Oct. 25 race at Martinsville Speedway to recuperate. As part of his recovery, Sawalich is working with Dr. Micky Collins at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC). Collins has helped other drivers navigate concussion-like symptoms previously, most notably NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr.
“Unfortunately, I didn’t get medically cleared to compete this weekend in Phoenix,” Sawalich said in a team release. “As a driver, you want to be behind the wheel for your team, but I understand the importance of being fully ready before returning. As I continue to work toward getting back to 100%, I want to express my sincere appreciation to Dr. Collins and his UPMC staff. I also want to thank (crew chief) Jeff Meendering, the No. 18 team and everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing for their unwavering support this season. We will be prepared and ready to go when the season begins in Daytona this February.”
Substituting for Sawalich is Justin Bonsignore, who wheeled the No. 18 Toyota to a 10th-place finish in Sawalich’s place at Martinsville, the first top 10 of Bonsignore’s Xfinity career. Saturday will mark Bonsignore’s ninth start this season and 10th in Xfinity competition. The four-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion finished runner-up in the tour’s 2025 campaign, which concluded Oct. 23 at Martinsville.
Pre-race inspection will be the same for a dozen title contenders, but NASCAR officials will need extra time to verify the champion in its three national series this weekend.
On the latest “Hauler Talk” podcast, NASCAR senior director of racing communications Amanda Ellis outlined how post-race inspection will work for the Championship 4 in the Craftsman Truck, Xfinity and Cup series at Phoenix Raceway.
In addition to the regular checks on body measurements and weights, the champion’s vehicle also will undergo a full engine teardown that can extend the inspection process to about three to four hours. (It usually takes about 90 minutes for NASCAR to clear the race winner.)
For Cup, the champion’s engine will be checked by Sunday evening. With the Truck and Xfinity races ending under the lights, the engine inspection is completed the following morning.
“To add several hours to what is already a pretty long day would be really putting both teams and officials on a time constraint of how long they had been working, and you want people to be fresh in that role,” Ellis said. “Because the Cup event essentially kind of ends the weekend, obviously, you want to be able to know who your champion is on Sunday evening for a lot of reasons.
“That’s truly the last step, when you think about crowning a champion officially, is the completion of the engine teardown.”
Just as with last week’s Round of 8 finale at Martinsville, NASCAR also will maintain an expanded staff at its remote race control in Concord, North Carolina. Managing director of communications Mike Forde said officials would be assigned specific channels to monitor for the entirety of each race, just as at Martinsville.
“We will have pretty much the same staff, maybe different humans, but the amount of people will be pretty large and pretty much the same,” Forde said. “So I’m sure the Championship 4 drivers and their teammates, they’ll have a scanner dedicated to (monitoring) those channels in the off-site race control, and they’ll be able to relay that information if necessary to the race control in Phoenix Raceway.”
On-site race control in Phoenix will remain the same, with NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell likely present for all three championship races.
Forde also said pre-race inspection would remain the same. NASCAR once pre-certified the Cup contenders’ cars at the R&D Center in Concord but now has the tools at track with its traveling optical scanning station.
Ellis also detailed the title celebration schedule, which includes expanded media obligations and a nationally televised trophy presentation. NASCAR also mics each champion for the duration of the celebration with family members and teammates.
“We capture all of those conversations that have been really nice to have,” Ellis said. “That is not always released per se to the public, but we do typically provide that content to the respected teams, and they get to have a chance to keep all that for their memory and celebrations that they might have.”
NASCAR orders more than 100 bottles of champagne for the weekend — and will have grape juice on hand for a potential underage champion (such as 19-year-old Connor Zilisch in Xfinity).
“There’s a specific place in each run of show that we truly stop to do a champagne celebration,” Ellis said. “A big part of the fun element on the stage is the champagne spray. And I did hear a rumor that one particular driver plans to bring their own champagne. So, it could be a long night.
Other topics covered by Forde and Ellis during the 39th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:
— The suspension of Sam Mayer from the Xfinity season finale at Phoenix for wrecking Jeb Burton after the checkered flag at Martinsville.
— How NASCAR determines whether a car receives the beneficiary status when involved in a caution.
— A new tire for the Cup finale at Phoenix.
Click on the embed above to listen or search for “Hauler Talk” wherever you download podcasts to hear it on your phone, tablet or mobile device.
Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He also has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.
Voting continues for the National Motorsports Press Association’s 2025 Most Popular Driver Award, and the opportunity is still available to hit the polls five times per day per unique email address for your favorite driver in the NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
Since our top 10 update, view the current top five vote-getters, in alphabetical order, for each NASCAR series as of Oct. 29:
CUP SERIES
Ryan Blaney, Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson
XFINITY SERIES
Justin Allgaier, Sheldon Creed, Matt DiBenedetto, Jesse Love, Connor Zilisch
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
Toni Breidinger, Rajah Caruth, Matt Crafton, Corey Heim, Layne Riggs
To vote, visit the Most Popular Driver page and click on the series logo for the series you want to vote for, select your favorite driver and click the submit button to cast your vote. Fan Rewards members will earn 25 points on their first vote from the Rewards dashboard.
Voting began at noon ET on Monday, Oct. 6, and will remain open until noon ET on Monday, Nov. 3. The winners will be revealed on Nov. 4 at the NASCAR Awards banquet in Scottsdale, Arizona, after Championship Weekend.
Chase Elliott has won the Most Popular Driver Award in the Cup Series for the past seven seasons, while Justin Allgaier (Xfinity) and Rajah Caruth (Craftsman Truck) also took home the 2024 honors.
Continue voting and play a part in helping your favorite drivers find Victory Lane in the ballot race.
The NASCAR Cup Series wraps up the 2025 playoffs with the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway. Qualifying at the 1-miler begins at 5 p.m. ET on Saturday (truTV, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). A 50-minute practice will take place at 5:35 p.m. ET on Friday, also on truTV.
The qualifying order below is determined via a metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).
Saturday’s qualifying session will be one round and one lap.
The race itself will be on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, NBC, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock) with Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe, Kyle Larson and William Byron competing for the championship.
The NASCAR Xfinity Series wraps up the 2025 playoffs with the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway. Qualifying at the 1-miler begins at 3:30 p.m. ET on Saturday (The CW App, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). A 50-minute practice will take place at 4:35 p.m. ET on Friday, also on The CW App.
Connor Zilisch, Justin Allgaier, Jesse Love and Carson Kvapil battle for the title Saturday night in the desert (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series will crown its 2025 champion this weekend at Phoenix Raceway. Teams will hit the track for a 50-minute practice session on Thursday at 7:35 p.m. ET (no TV) before qualifying Friday at 3:35 p.m. ET (FS2).
On Friday night, Corey Heim, Ty Majeski, Tyler Ankrum and Kaden Honeycutt will duke it out over 150 laps for top series honors (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).