CHARLOTTE, N.C. (October 16, 2025) – NASCAR and United Rentals today announced that United Rentals, the world’s largest equipment rental company, has joined the league as an official IMPACT Partner in joint support of Team Rubicon, the veteran-led humanitarian organization that serves communities before, during, and after disasters and crises. As a centerpiece of the partnership, NASCAR and United Rentals will host recruiting stations during select race weekends where fans can sign up as Team Rubicon “Greyshirt” volunteers for critical disaster relief operations.
These pop-up recruiting stations will launch this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway and will continue throughout 2026, including a season kick-off activation during the 2026 DAYTONA 500 weekend and the United Rentals 300 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race. The initiative aims to grow Team Rubicon’s volunteer base by tapping into NASCAR’s passionate fan community and inviting them to join thousands of volunteers who respond to disasters, humanitarian crises, and community needs nationwide.
“We’re thrilled to welcome United Rentals as an official NASCAR IMPACT Partner in support of this shared mission to serve communities in their greatest time of need,” said Eric Nyquist, Senior Vice President and Chief Impact Officer at NASCAR. “By connecting our passionate fanbase with Team Rubicon’s critical mission, we’re creating meaningful opportunities for NASCAR fans to make a real difference in disaster relief efforts across the country.”
Launched in 2023, NASCAR IMPACT encompasses the sport’s commitment to create positive change in communities across the country by partnering with organizations on the front line. This partnership with United Rentals represents a significant expansion of NASCAR IMPACT’s veteran engagement and community-building pillar, leveraging the sport’s platform to support disaster preparedness and relief efforts.
“We are proud to partner with NASCAR in support of Team Rubicon’s vital work,” said Mike Durand, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer at United Rentals. “Our company has a long history of supporting disaster relief and community rebuilding efforts, and this partnership allows us to expand that impact alongside NASCAR’s incredible community. Together, we can mobilize more volunteers and resources to help communities recover and rebuild when they need it most.”
United Rentals, founded in 1997 and headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, is the world’s largest equipment rental company with a network nearly three times the size of any other provider. The company operates more than 1,600 rental locations throughout the United States and Canada, serving construction and industrial companies, utilities, municipalities and communities.
Team Rubicon is a veteran-led humanitarian organization that serves global communities before, during, and after disasters and crises. Founded in 2010 by U.S. Marine Corps veteran Jake Wood, the organization pairs the skills and experiences of military veterans with first responders, medical professionals, and technology solutions to provide rapid disaster relief. Team Rubicon’s volunteers, known as “Greyshirts” for their distinctive grey shirts, respond to disasters in all 50 states as well as international humanitarian crises. Volunteer recruitment and onboarding will be managed by Team Rubicon in accordance with its policies.
As the Cup Series Playoffs head to Talladega for the second race of the Round of 8, we have a much better idea of who will make the Championship 4 now than ever — and that’s bad news for the underdog drivers hoping to crash the party in Phoenix in three weeks.
While there was already a clear hierarchy in the playoff forecast odds this time last week, with a top tier of drivers hovering above the rest, every member of the final eight was bunched between 25 and 65 percent to advance, and all faced the pressure of big potential swings in the odds depending on what they did at Las Vegas.
Now, those swings have happened — and they illustrate the brutal numbers game that four playoff drivers already find themselves in after just one race this round.
As Denny Hamlin was locking up his spot in the Championship 4 with a win, Kyle Larson’s strong runner-up finish boosted his odds to 91 percent. But while those two solidified their positions, William Byron and especially Ryan Blaney saw their chances tumble from above 50 percent to below 30 percent (well below, in Blaney’s case), and the biggest underdogs from before the round — Chase Elliott and Joey Logano — drifted further out of reach. Meanwhile, Christopher Bell climbed from 57 to 69 percent and Chase Briscoe from 39 to 57 percent, giving the Joe Gibbs Racing teammates the inside track to claim the final two spots.
As a result of all that activity, we now have a sizable gulf in the odds between the four favorites to make Phoenix with their title hopes intact, and the quartet of drivers currently below the cutline in desperate need of a comeback. How can they pull it off? Let’s dig into the factors that could ignite a turnaround for Byron, Elliott, Logano and Blaney — including who their key rivals to beat are — and what needs to happen for things to go their way over the next two weekends.
William Byron
Forecast odds to advance: 28.7% Margin to cutline: -15 Playoff finishes: 21-11-12 | 3-9-11 | 36
Although his odds to advance dropped by 25 percentage points with last week’s disappointing 36th-place finish at Las Vegas — in a race he led 55 laps before plowing into the back of Ty Dillon to ruin his day — Byron is still within some striking distance of Briscoe, down just 15 points heading to Talladega. Byron doesn’t strictly need a win in either of the next two races in order to make the Championship 4, either, as a pair of (non-win) Top 10s give him a 73 percent chance to advance in the forecast simulations. It’s always tough to bank on a win — or even a top 10 — at Talladega, but Byron is one of the better superspeedway artists in the sport, having won at Daytona three times. And at Martinsville, he ranks eighth among active drivers in both Adjusted Points+ index and Driver Rating in his career.
But the odds do show how little margin for error Byron has as well. If he so much as finishes in the teens at Talladega, even a non-win finish in the single digits at Martinsville would give him just a 35 percent chance to drive for the title at Phoenix. So Byron will have to very much be on his game for the next two races — and he’ll need to outduel Chase Briscoe in particular. Briscoe and Byron are the two drivers under the most pressure this weekend, in terms of how sensitive their odds are to slight changes in fortune. And in the simulations, they also emerge as the Round of 8’s biggest nemeses, i.e., the pair of drivers least likely to both advance to the Championship 4 at the same time. And just for good measure, the second-biggest rivalry is Byron versus Christopher Bell. The No. 24 car’s driver is going to have his hands full for the rest of October.
Joey Logano
Forecast odds to advance: 21.1% Margin to cutline: -24 Playoff finishes: 20-5-5 | 4-21-20 | 6
Logano’s odds were already not in a great place last week, though he was coming up on a series of tracks where he has a strong pedigree. Las Vegas provided one of those opportunities, and he did finish a strong sixth after having to battle to stay in the top 10 for most of the day. Because of this, Joey ended up not losing as much advancement probability as some others, but he nonetheless is in the exact same place where he began the round: 24 points below the cut. And in the odds table, we see that he would be living right on the edge without a win, even if he puts together two more runs like the one he had last week. It’s hardly impossible to make it without winning, but he would need a lot of help.
Joey does also have a pair of very good résumés to call upon at Talladega (where he’s won three times and is second among active drivers in career Driver Rating) and Martinsville (where he has one win and ranks fourth in Driver Rating), making him a threat to get that win. But if not, when it comes to jockeying for position, Logano’s big battle is also with Chase Briscoe, which is the third-most impactful rivalry of the next two races. There’s an interesting dynamic there as well — Logano is better than Briscoe on superspeedways but Briscoe is better on short tracks, so Logano needs to take extra advantage at Talladega to put himself in a good position entering the penultimate race of the year at the Paperclip.
Chase Elliott
Forecast odds to advance: 18.5% Margin to cutline: -23 Playoff finishes: 17-3-38 | 5-1-8 | 18
Unsurprisingly, Elliott checks in with a very similar set of scenarios to Logano — which makes sense, as both are nearly tied on points (Chase is 23 below the cutline, Joey 24). The only reason why Logano has slightly higher overall odds to advance is just that he is projected for a slightly better Driver Rating at both superspeedways and short tracks, making him more likely to punch his Championship 4 ticket with a W. But Elliott has won races and produced strong ratings at both sites before as well, so for all intents and purposes they may as well be tied here. That works to both drivers’ detriment, though, as it provides one additional evenly matched rival to fend off while trying to scramble back up above the cutline.
Still, the playbook for the No. 9 car looks a lot like that of the No. 22. Because Elliott’s biggest statistical nemesis of the round is, you guessed it, Chase Briscoe, Elliott needs to gain as much on Briscoe as he can specifically at Talladega, the track where he has the bigger advantage — and based on the way things ran there in April, there should be a lot of Chevys up front for Elliott to work with. But he’s in the unwelcome spot of needing to finish highly at both a superspeedway and a short track in back-to-back weeks, while also hoping for Briscoe, Christopher Bell and even teammate William Byron to simultaneously have bad weeks in order to advance.
Ryan Blaney
Forecast odds to advance: 14.7% Margin to cutline: -31 Playoff finishes: 18-4-4 | 1-24-13 | 38
Blaney is arguably the most tragic, and potentially the most dangerous, driver in our group of underdogs. Not long ago, Blaney was the 2025 title favorite according to the forecast model, with a 73 percent chance of making the Championship 4. But after cutting a tire just 70 laps into the race at Las Vegas, Blaney’s last-place finish knocked his advancement odds down by a staggering 48 percentage points in a single week. He is now staring at little more than long-shot status to find a way into the final race at Phoenix for a third consecutive season.
As we can see from the odds chart, Blaney is practically in must-win mode now. He has no margin for error at either Talladega or Martinsville; any finish outside the top 10 effectively dooms any chance to point his way into the next round. And even a pair of strong runs leaves him 70 percent likely to miss out on the title race anyway. He could get help if Chase Briscoe and Christopher Bell struggle, but neither of those rivalries rank among the Top 7 most important head-to-head comparisons the rest of this round.
So Blaney should probably treat it like he needs a win at one of the next two races. And the good news is that he can absolutely still pull that off. He’s traditionally been an excellent drafting track racer, even if his form this year (76.4 Driver Rating) is down quite a bit, and he’s been nothing less than amazing (109.4 rating) on short tracks in 2025. As one of the best active career drivers at both remaining tracks this round, Blaney will still have a say in shaping how this championship plays out — even if the odds aren’t currently in his favor to make it himself. And, hey, if he doesn’t complete the comeback, his record at Phoenix suggests his fingerprints could still be all over the title fight as a spoiler, too.
After a week off, the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to action with Friday’s Love’s RV Stop 225 (4 p.m. ET, FOX, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Talladega Superspeedway — the second of three playoff races in the Round of 8 that will decide which four drivers race for the 2025 championship.
The odds-on title favorite is Corey Heim, who is the first driver in series history to win 10 races in a single season and the only driver so far to have advanced to the Championship 4 via his victory two weeks ago at the Charlotte Roval. The driver of the No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota has won five of the last six races coming to Talladega.
Only one of the current eight playoff drivers has won previously at Talladega — Alabama native Grant Enfinger, who won in 2016 and again in the last race in 2024. He could use that kind of showing this weekend, as he is among the four drivers below the cutline with only the Talladega race and the Oct. 24 race at Martinsville Speedway remaining to set the championship field.
Beyond Tricon Garage driver Heim, it’s a very — very — tightly bunched standings. McAnally-Hilgemann teammates Tyler Ankrum and Daniel Hemric — both two points above the cutline — and Spire Motorsports’ Rajah Caruth, who is just a single point to the good.
Front Row Motorsports’ Layne Riggs is one point back, followed by reigning series champ, ThorSport Racing’s Ty Majeski (minus-2), CR7 Motorsports’ Enfinger (minus-4) and Halmar Friesen Racing’s Kaden Honeycutt (minus-4).
Four of the last six Talladega races have featured a first-time Craftsman Truck Series winner.
Kennametal Pole Qualifying is Friday at 12:30 p.m. ET (FS2). William Sawalich started from pole position last year. The last polesitter to win at Talladega was Timothy Peters in 2015.
Late afternoon. October 15, 2000. Talladega Superspeedway. Forty-five laps to go in the Winston 500. Over that stretch run, Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., John Andretti and Mike Skinner will lead laps.
Another typically wild Talladega finish is anticipated. No one, however, can project the extreme nature of this one. Arguably, it will mark the biggest magic moment of that season, and for reasons that won’t be fully understood until months later.
A Talladega crowd of more than 100,000 is watching, enthralled. Outside the speedway, sitting in his office near the intersection of the track entrance road and Speedway Boulevard, is the man ultimately responsible for bringing all this together.
Grant Lynch, track president.
He is football fields away from the finish, but he will not miss it. The crowd won’t allow it.
“Dale Earnhardt made the pass for the lead on the white-flag lap, and the fans went crazy,” said former Talladega official Russell Branham. “Grant was in his office. He told me later the fans were so loud that he could hear them that far away. He knew there had been an Earnhardt moment.”
And that it was. In one of the most storied runs of his long, decorated career, Earnhardt, beloved by many in the Talladega crowd, charged from 18th place to first in three laps, then led the final lap to finish 0.119 seconds in front of drafting partner Kenny Wallace. He drove from oblivion to sunshine.
The earth shook that day in eastern Alabama. The win would be Earnhardt’s last. He would die in the last lap of the following February’s Daytona 500. But, in the glow of that October moment, Lynch could lean back in his office chair and smile. At his track, on this day, before another bonkers Talladega crowd, it was a wonderful sleight of hand by one of the masters of the art.
It was more than a race. It was Talladega.
• • •
Grant Lynch, 71, died October 2 of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. He retired as Talladega Superspeedway chairman in 2019. As teams, drivers and fans gather at Talladega for this weekend’s NASCAR playoff events, his absence will feel like a black cloak. His life will be celebrated in a private gathering at the track Friday night.
Few speedway presidents develop the strong sort of ties Lynch carried for 26 years at Talladega. He was a South Dakota native and built the beginnings of his career working for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company sports programs in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, but home became Sweet Home Alabama.
Photo courtesy of Talladega Superspeedway
He took Talladega’s reputation as the biggest, boldest, fastest track to heart and was the speedway’s biggest influencer before that even became a thing. He wore an outsized cap announcing that “Size Matters!” and scoffed at protests from others that their racing might approach the excitement of a Sunday afternoon south and west of Eastaboga, Alabama, where drivers and cars ran wild and free.
On race mornings, he roamed the infield, garage area and media center, spreading the Talladega gospel. He met with sponsors, other promoters and drivers. But by race’s end, he typically could be found in his office, which served as the track command center if problems appeared. Often, they did. “People come here to have a good time,” he once said. “Sometimes they need help understanding how much of a good time they should have.”
Before Talladega, Lynch built a reputation for getting things done during his years at RJR’s Sports Marketing Enterprises, the tobacco company’s widely respected public relations unit that, under directors Ralph Seagraves and T. Wayne Robertson, led Reynolds’ sports promotions activities. Most notably, RJR fueled NASCAR for more than three decades as the primary sponsor of what then was known as the Winston Cup Series.
Lynch’s work gained the attention of top brass at NASCAR, and he accepted the general manager position at Talladega in January 1993 with the track’s departure of another NASCAR leadership icon, Mike Helton, who moved on to Daytona Beach and, eventually, the NASCAR presidency. Soon, Lynch would be elevated to track president and later chairman as he became Citizen One in the larger world that included the track and its surrounding communities. In Oxford, Eastaboga and Pell City, there were locations where everybody knew his name.
Although his focus was Talladega, Lynch’s reach extended beyond Alabama. He was a key player in the development of Chicagoland Speedway and Kansas Speedway and became an important France family lieutenant in handling tough projects. In 2007, Grant was named senior vice president of business operations for International Speedway Corp. and became Talladega Superspeedway chairman in 2009. Although his fingerprints could be found on numerous ISC projects, Talladega was his base of operations for more than a quarter-century, and the track was sacred ground.
Former Las Vegas Motor Speedway president Chris Powell, another “graduate” of RJR’s NASCAR program, said Lynch “was in so many ways a character, but at the same time someone who took his job very seriously. Some in the sport will never know what a hero they lost in Grant.”
• • •
Talladega Superspeedway’s 50th anniversary rolled around in 2019, Lynch’s final year at the track, and Russell Branham, leading the track’s public relations efforts, built the foundation to celebrate what had been determined to be Talladega’s biggest electric moment (of many). That would be Earnhardt’s powerful sprint to victory from 18th in 2000.
This required a Lynch telephone call to Richard Childress. Lynch and Childress were fast friends of many years, hunting partners who probably had more fun away from the track than on it. Evidence of the success of those hunting trips was readily visible in Lynch’s office — various creatures preserved by taxidermy. “You felt like you were on a safari in there,” Branham said.
Lynch asked Childress if he would drive a ceremonial pre-race lap before the October race that year in the same black Chevrolet Earnhardt drove to the 2000 win.
It was an offer Childress couldn’t refuse.
Photo courtesy of Talladega Superspeedway
The car, which had not been raced since Earnhardt’s final win that day at Talladega, was in the Childress Racing Museum near the team shop in Welcome, North Carolina. It was refurbished by mechanics and supplied with a new engine.
“I said, ‘Man, I don’t know,’ but Grant convinced me to do it,” Childress said. “I told him I’d do it if I could take Johnny Morris (a sponsor and associate of several NASCAR teams) with me. It’s one of the last things Grant got to do at the track. I wasn’t sure I could get through it, but it’s a memory I’ll never forget. After we did a lap, Johnny told me to keep going. He said he’d pay the fine.”
Branham watched from the infield and “saw the crowd go crazy. After the car went around, Grant came up to me and gave me a high-five and said, ‘What a great idea.’ He helped push the idea across the line.”
It was a final triumph for Lynch and Childress and a vivid reminder of a spectacular day at Talladega almost 20 years earlier.
“Grant brought so much to the kind of NASCAR he helped build through his life and career,” Childress said. “I couldn’t imagine anybody who ever met him not loving him. He was just that type of person.”
Grant Lynch arrived at Talladega Superspeedway in January 1993 and almost immediately faced the sort of challenges that could batter a rookie track operator, despite years of experience at a vibrant place like RJR.
On April 1 of that year, defending Cup Series champion Alan Kulwicki died in a plane crash in Tennessee. Barely three months later, the pain grew practically beyond imagining. Davey Allison, Alabama’s favorite son, was injured in a helicopter crash while trying to land in the Talladega infield. Allison died the next day.
Lynch was at the track on the day of Allison’s accident. Much of the state of Alabama plunged into the sort of mourning not seen since the death of beloved Alabama football coach Bear Bryant.
“It was a tough day and a tough year for Grant and a lot of other people,” Branham said. “He would get choked up talking about it 20 years later. What a tough way to start a new part of your career. He was still learning the ropes. It ate him up. But in times of adversity when people needed him to be a rock, he was that rock.”
Lynch settled in to build a life and a reputation at Talladega. He joined local charitable organizations and led a few. He found hunting and fishing buddies and became a prominent member — and later president — of the Alabama Wildlife Federation. He held an annual wild game cookoff competition at the speedway, going so far as to invite long-time NASCAR driver Dave Marcis to show up with his famous bear stew.
Lynch developed a web of traditions at Talladega. Three stand out.
Near the end of pre-race ceremonies, he would step to the microphone on the stage and lead fans in a chant that traveled up and down the long frontstretch grandstand: “This is more than a race … this is Talladega!”
After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, Lynch wanted a special way to honor America in that October’s pre-race program. Johnny Ray, a former driver who lived near the speedway, said he could bring a diesel rig from his trucking company to the track on race day and use it to carry a huge American flag around the speedway during the playing of the national anthem. Officials tried to time the arrival of the truck at the finish line with the end of the anthem. The flag ride was a big hit, one that continues today.
With tens of thousands of fans arriving at Talladega for race weekend, the days of competition and the days leading to the events are filled with activity for track staff members. By the end of race day, many are exhausted. But Lynch had one final task. He asked staffers to report to the speedway by 7 a.m. the day after the Cup race so they could wave to campers and display “Thank You For Coming” and “That Was Talladega” signs as the crowded rush to leave the speedway began.
“When Grant was in or around the facility, he was a personality,” said Patrick Barfield, now a guest services director for several NASCAR tracks and a long-time Talladega employee. “Everybody knew who he was. He was very popular with the fans, and he’d be out there with us on the highway holding up signs as people drove by.
Kaulig Racing tabbed reigning ARCA Menards Series champion Brenden “Butterbean” Queen as its first RAM truck driver for the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season, the team announced Thursday. Queen is the first of five drivers to be revealed for Kaulig’s RAM-backed NCTS lineup.
“A big thanks to Matt Kaulig, Chris Rice, RAM, and everyone at Kaulig Racing for this opportunity,” said Queen in a team release. “I’m just a short-track kid who’s worked hard every day, never really knowing if I’d ever make it to this level. I’m very thankful for this chance and can’t wait to get rolling with RAM and Kaulig Racing. The goals are simple: build a winning team and chase championships.”
Queen earned the role after winning eight races and scoring 17 top-five finishes in the 2025 AMS campaign, ultimately securing the championship. He also impressed in Kaulig Racing’s No. 11 Xfinity Series entry, finishing ninth and leading eight laps at Kansas in one of his two starts. Kaulig announced earlier this week Queen would finish out the NXS season behind the wheel of the No. 11.
“It’s been amazing to see what Brenden is capable of, from winning multiple championships at his local short track to his dominant ARCA championship season,” said Chris Rice, CEO of Kaulig Racing. “He’s proven he deserves this opportunity, and we can’t wait to see what he does in the Truck Series next year.”
Details about Queen’s truck number and partners will be announced later.
For the first time, the annual fall Talladega Superspeedway playoff race takes place during the pivotal midpoint in the Round of 8, where the remaining title-eligible drivers look to clinch their spot in the Championship 4.
Denny Hamlin claimed his championship spot by winning last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, while drivers such as William Byron, Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott all suffered misfortunes to find themselves beneath the cutline before what could be all-out chaos at the largest oval on the NASCAR circuit.
Cinderellas will look to spoil the playoff party, and the Round of 8 competitors will have to weigh risk and reward in a tight-knit, 40-car pack for 500 miles. If you can avoid attrition when the checkered flag waves, you’ll be in a good spot to advance before the elimination race at Martinsville. Before the green flag waves for Sunday’s YellaWood 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), Racing Insights has you covered with important story lines and stats to note before cars hit the track.
Byron hit bad luck in the final stage in Vegas after slamming into Ty Dillon as the No. 10 Kaulig Racing driver attempted to pit, but didn’t signal to the No. 24 Chevrolet behind him. It only makes sense that fortune turns back in favor of the 2025 Regular Season Champion, as Byron is projected to score his third win of the season Sunday at Talladega. The 27-year-old is the first driver out of the Championship 4, 15 points behind Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase Briscoe.
Byron has avoided the usual calamity at Talladega with five top fives in 15 starts at the 2.66-mile behemoth. He’s finished seventh or better in the last five Talladega races and has the best average finish at the track (7.0) among all drivers in the Gen 7 era.
His Hendrick Motorsports counterparts in Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott are also projected to sweep the podium. Elliott doesn’t come as a surprise as a multi-time winner at Talladega, but Larson is starting to get the hang of things on drafting tracks. You could previously write off the 2021 Cup Series champion at just about every superspeedway, including EchoPark Speedway since the reconfiguration, but the No. 5 Chevrolet driver has put together a 9.6 average finish at Daytona, Talladega and Atlanta this season, which leads all drivers.
Talladega can’t be discussed without Team Penske. The winningest active Cup drivers at the track all have history with the team, with current drivers Joey Logano and Blaney (three wins each) and current RFK Racing driver and co-owner Brad Keselowski, who won five during his time with the organization.
Looking at the numbers, however, the results are volatile for both Logano and Blaney. One move can decide whether or not the two can get one of them into the Championship 4 with the other in good shape for Martinsville, or both wreck in a shower of sparks and fall into must-win territory before an elimination race. Since his 2023 playoff win to set himself up for his first championship, Blaney hasn’t finished better than 20th at Talladega.
As for Logano, his three victories probably feel like they were decades ago. His last top-10 Talladega finish? You have to go back to the fall of 2021 (third). A post-race disqualification in the spring plays a role on the stat sheet, but even if you take away that race, the three-time Cup titleholder’s best result at the track since his last top five is 19th in the spring of 2024.
TYLER REDDICK: The No. 45 23XI Racing driver won the 2024 spring Talladega race and has three top 10s in 11 Talladega Cup starts. He’s also finished top six in four of the last nine races on superspeedways.
AUSTIN CINDRIC: While no longer in the Cup playoffs, Cindric is arguably NASCAR’s current best superspeedway driver. He’s the most recent Talladega winner, and six of his 12 top-five finishes at the Cup level have come on superspeedways. Look for him to also connect with his playoff teammates toward the front of the field.
RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: All four of Stenhouse’s Cup Series victories have come on superspeedways, and he is the defending winner of the Talladega playoff race. He enters Sunday’s race with five finishes of sixth or better in the last 10 superspeedway events.
ALEX BOWMAN: The No. 48 Hendrick driver has yet to win on a superspeedway, and his finishes can tend to flip-flop at these types of tracks. However, Bowman has two finishes of seventh or better in the last three Talladega races, and he’s posted seven top 10s in the last 13 superspeedway races.
JUSTIN HALEY: Both of Haley’s Talladega top 10s have come in the last four races at the track, and he has four top-15 results in the last 14 races. One can’t forget that Haley was dominant at superspeedways in the Xfinity Series with Kaulig Racing and owns two Talladega victories (both in 2020).
RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR YELLAWOOD 500:
Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula incorporates current track, track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to predict a projected winner and provide full race results. Updated on race day with practice and qualifying factored in.
Kaulig Racing and Joe White, the spotter for the No. 10 Chevrolet driven by Ty Dillon, have parted ways in advance of this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway.
A spokesperson from Kaulig Racing confirmed to NASCAR.com that the team has made personnel changes at spotter.
White leaves the team days after a costly incident last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway involving Dillon and 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs contender William Byron.
Late in the race, while Dillon was running off the lead lap, the driver attempted to pit for a green-flag stop. Byron was running second when he collided with Dillon, who made a sharp left turn toward the pits while running 35th. Byron, who said he had no indication Dillon was pitting, finished 36th and fell 15 points below the playoff cutline after winning the regular-season championship in Cup.
Kaulig reshuffled its spotter assignments for both Dillon and No. 16 driver AJ Allmendinger. According to the team rosters, Frank Deiny will move from spotting Allmendinger to Dillon. TJ Bell will take over spotting duties for Allmendinger.
The Las Vegas incident ignited discussion over spotter protocols and driver communication during pit cycles, especially under green-flag conditions where split-second relays are crucial.
1. Is Hendrick Motorsports’ best shot for Phoenix actually Chase Elliott?
Despite how strong William Byron and Kyle Larson looked at Las Vegas — and the fact that No. 9 is currently below the cutline — the 2020 champ might be the Hendrick driver with the clearest Championship 4 path.
Hendrick Motorsports stalwarts Kyle Larson and William Byron flexed on the field this past Sunday with plenty of laps out front at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Larson landed a runner-up to walk away with a strong points cushion, and Byron, unfortunately, got caught up in a late, race-ending wreck, but has only a 15-point deficit. The pair remains Hendrick’s most likely championship hopefuls per the latest NASCAR DraftKings odds, but is there another among them that’s actually more likely to compete for the title in a few weeks at Phoenix Raceway?
At first glance, Chase Elliott’s 23-point deficit after a no-laps-led P18 in the Round of 8 opener doesn’t scream “championship imminent,” but No. 9 has a real shot to gain momentum over the next two weekends that he could ride all the way to title No. 2. It may even tip the scales to make him the most likely Hendrick driver remaining to punch his ticket to Phoenix.
Chase in the hole? No problem.
Elliott’s record at Talladega Superspeedway, the next challenge in this playoff stretch where strategy and survival dominate, is a critical piece of the puzzle. He’s a two-time winner at the sport’s most mercurial venue and has been remarkably consistent (a hallmark, notably, of his whole 2025 season), nearly averaging a top-10 finish across the last seven there (10.85), including a win in this race in 2022 and a top five earlier this spring.
James Gilbert | Getty Images
Across five drafting-track races in 2025, Elliott has earned 173 points — second most among all drivers, not just those in the playoffs — and boasts four drafting-track wins in his career, including one earlier this year at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta). This point haul sits just behind Larson’s 177 tally and well above Byron’s 150.
Larson, while strong overall and sitting comfortably 35 points above the cutline, has only three top-five finishes at Talladega in 21 starts and has yet to secure a win at any drafting track in his Cup career, often finding himself caught up in the chaos. The two-time defending Daytona 500 winner Byron has excelled on drafting tracks, including a team-high five wins on them and five consecutive top-10 finishes at Talladega … but none of those victories came in Alabama.
Of the three, the edge would appear to go to Elliott for at least the weekend ahead.
Just as important, though, is the race at Martinsville Speedway a week later. The unique, pressure-packed short-track racing at Martinsville demands precise car control, flawless pit strategy and a fearless mindset — and it’s where Elliott became a championship-worthy driver, notching his first Championship 4 berth there in 2020 on his way to the title. He’s finished in the top four there each of the last three times out, so expect to see him at the front of the field at some point; Elliott has averaged 108.2 laps led across the last 10 Martinsville races.
Byron, despite being a two-time Martinsville winner, can be streaky there with only two top-10 finishes in his last five visits. Larson has shown promising consistency with six straight top-six Martinsville finishes, including a win in 2023, but his peak results slightly trail Elliott’s dominance there. No. 5 has never led more than 86 laps in any Martinsville Cup race.
Crucially for Elliott, precedent shows that drivers with a points deficit this late in the playoffs have still navigated their way into Championship 4 with crucial wins. The points obviously matter, but we’re at the point that a win-and-in scenario is not out of the equation for any remaining playoff driver, either of these weekends. The fact that the next two tracks happen to be among Elliott’s best bodes well for him and crew chief Alan Gustafson.
Elliott’s 2025 campaign further bolsters his case. After a slow simmer to start the season, he’s found renewed top-tier form with more wins this season than the past two combined. He also advanced to the Round of 8 with a clutch Kansas victory, making him the most recent winner for the team. With his experience and success on these pivotal circuits, he has a clear statistical and historical pathway to Phoenix, even if he’s starting this stretch below the cutline.
The 21-time Cup winner’s demonstrated ability to excel on the toughest tracks left in the playoffs, combined with his championship-level pedigree and strength shown through the playoffs, makes him the driver to watch as Hendrick looks to secure its annual berth(s) in the Championship 4.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
2. Ranking Round of 8 drivers’ stress levels entering Talladega
Points standings tell only half the story as NASCAR’s most unpredictable track approaches at Talladega, where historical performance at 200 mph often matters more than current playoff positioning when determining who should be sweating and who can sleep soundly as we enter playoff pandemonium.
As NASCAR’s biggest wild-card track looms, playoff drivers face varying degrees of anxiety based on their points position and history at the 2.66-mile superspeedway. Here’s how each contender might be feeling as they approach Sunday’s chaos.
Stress-free zone
Denny Hamlin — The only driver who can truly sleep peacefully this week. Already locked into the Championship 4 with his Las Vegas victory, Hamlin can race without fear of points consequences. Ironically, this freedom might make him dangerous to everyone else’s playoff hopes, as he can afford to be aggressive when others must play it safe at a track where he’s won.
Surprisingly calm
Chase Elliott — Despite sitting 23 points below the cutline, Elliott might be the most relaxed driver in a precarious position a guy has ever been. His two Talladega victories and plus top-15 finishes in six of his last seven races there provide genuine confidence he’ll at least be able to make it cleanly to the end and be in the mix for the win. More importantly, he leads all playoff drivers in average points per race at Talladega (31.5), meaning even without a win, he can expect to gain on his competitors before heading to Martinsville, another great track for him. For a driver who needs to make up points, his comfort blanket is king-sized.
William Byron — The 15-point deficit looks manageable when you consider Byron’s Talladega mastery of late. His 13.67 average finish at the track leads all active drivers in the Next Gen era, and he’s finished top 10 in five straight races there. With five career drafting track wins, Byron has the credentials to not just survive Talladega but also vault into Championship 4 contention with a strong finish and/or win. The 40 points he gained to the bubble in this race last year were the most any driver had collected at ‘Dega from 2017-2024.
Cautiously optimistic
Kyle Larson — The 35-point cushion provides breathing room, but Larson’s Talladega history tells a more complex story. Despite leading the field with a 9.6 average finish on drafting tracks this season, he has just three top-five finishes in 21 Talladega starts in his career. However, recent form suggests improvement — a second-place finish in April and consistent performance on superspeedways this year should keep his stress levels manageable. As long as he can stay out of any “Big Ones.”
Christopher Bell — Twenty points above the cutline sounds comfortable until you examine Bell’s Talladega struggles. His 20.9 average finish there is his worst at any active track, with only three top 10s in 11 starts. Two finishes of 35th or worse in his last three Talladega races — both accident DNFs — reveal the volatility that could have Bell and the No. 20 team sweating, despite his points buffer.
Chase Briscoe — Similar to his JGR teammate, a 15-point advantage feels less secure given Briscoe’s limited Talladega success. Only two top 10s in nine starts, with a best finish of fourth, creates uncertainty. However, his 20 laps led in April in his first race there with his new team (more than his previous eight starts combined) hints at improving superspeedway race craft and better overall equipment that could ease some concerns.
High-stress territory
Joey Logano — The 24-point deficit becomes alarming when paired with Logano’s recent Talladega futility, despite three wins there in his career. Only one top-10 finish in his last 12 races at the Alabama track, with nine finishes of 19th or worse in his last 10 attempts, suggests Sunday could be a difficult day for the three-time and defending champion. His 24.8 average points per race at Talladega in the Next Gen era ranks in the bottom half of the playoff field as well.
Sweatin’ bullets
Ryan Blaney — The 2023 champion faces a storm of pressure after another snafu at Las Vegas. His 31-point deficit is quite beefy, compounded by his recent catastrophic Talladega results. The cruel irony? Blaney has three career Talladega wins, proving he knows how to conquer the track, but recent struggles (32.0 average finish in his last three races vs. 1.67 in his previous three before that) suggest dominance is often fleeting at drafting tracks, and stretches of turmoil spare no one. The fact that everybody knows he can pull this off and many will expect him to only adds to the intensity.
The beauty — and terror — of Talladega lies in its ability to render these stress levels meaningless within a single turn. But as teams prepare for Sunday, the combination of points pressure and track history creates a fascinating psychological landscape where confidence and panic often depend more on past performance than current standings — and can be shaken up at any moment.
Kyle Petty still believes William Byron will make the Championship 4 at Phoenix Raceway despite being an “innocent victim” in a Las Vegas Motor Speedway accident.
4. History suggests playoff drivers not spared from Talladega turmoil
NASCAR’s most volatile track has plenty of instances of biting playoff drivers to the point of sending them south of the bubble. See the most points lost to the cutline at the Talladega playoff race from 2017-24. (Credit: Racing Insights)
Season
Driver
Lost
2021
William Byron
-40
2018
Brad Keselowski
-39
2021
Alex Bowman
-39
2019
Alex Bowman
-35
2021
Kyle Larson
-35
2018
Alex Bowman
-34
2018
Ryan Blaney
-32
2017
Jamie McMurray
-30
5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage
NASCAR is assessing what transpired in the wreck between William Byron and Ty Dillon at Las Vegas Motor Speedway but has no plans to tweak any pit stop procedures.
Byron was running second when he collided with Dillon, who made a sharp left turn toward the pits while running 35th. Byron, who said he had no indication Dillon was pitting, finished 36th and fell 15 points below the playoff cutline after winning the regular-season championship in Cup.
“It’s not great from our perspective, and we want to avoid that,” NASCAR managing director of communications Mike Forde said during the latest episode of the “Hauler Talk” podcast. “So, our next step is really some more information gathering. We’re not going to make a formal investigation out of it, but Brad Moran, the NASCAR managing director of the Cup Series, is going to talk to the crew chief of the No. 10 and the crew chief of the No. 24 to see what happened and what didn’t happen.
“I think a lot of it might have been what didn’t happen, more importantly. And if there are any ways that we can tighten up that process, I think we’re all ears. We’re open to it. Obviously, we don’t want to overreact.”
After an apparent miscommunication between the spotters for Byron and Dillon, it’s expected there will be a discussion among spotters about the hand signals they use to convey pit stop information that is relayed to their drivers. Forde said NASCAR likely wouldn’t get involved in how spotters communicate with each other.
While drivers often wave to cars behind them before pitting, Dillon gave no signal to Byron.
Forde said there are no rules governing the driver protocols for indicating a pit stop under green.
“If that’s something that we feel that we need to do, I guess we could,” Forde said. “I just don’t see that as something that we’d want to add a rule and asking someone to take their hand off the wheel as a rule. There seems to be a lot of unintended consequences if we try to make a rule out of that.
“There seems to be a little bit of blame that you could be spread around from all parts. I think that’s what Brad wants to find out. We don’t want to come down super hard on anyone, but if there’s something that we can learn to make it better in the future, I think that’s what our goal here is.
Other topics covered by Forde during the 37th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:
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.
Plagued by a race-ending tire going down in the Las Vegas Motor Speedway Round of 8 opener, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney finds himself in a position he would rather not be in entering the midpoint of the penultimate round of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.
And just like “Macho Man” Randy Savage delivered masterclass promos on his opponents throughout the glory days of professional wrestling, the No. 12 Ford driver is ready to prove that, despite the odds, the cream rises to the top.
“Yeah, Mr. Savage. I don’t think there is a person before or after him that could cut promos quite like that guy,” Blaney said during a Wednesday media availability. “If I’m sitting at home and I’m bored, maybe I’ve had a couple drinks, I will go watch Randy Savage interviews, just because I think it was amazing what was going through that man’s head.
“But yeah, that’s like my favorite one. He keeps pulling out the creamer, and yeah, ‘unjustifiably in a position I’d rather not be in, but the cream will rise to the top,’ and I hope that is what we can use for this weekend. So yeah, I thought that was a perfect comparison to my situation. So thank you, Mr. Savage.”
Despite being in that position, the No. 12 team isn’t quite in full panic mode entering the final two races before the Championship 4 is solidified. Blaney is staring down two of his best tracks — Talladega Superspeedway and Martinsville Speedway — and is far from thinking it is a must-win scenario.
“We still got two races left, and I don’t personally think that we are in a must-win quite yet,” Blaney said. “You know, Talladega, you never know what can happen. You could go have a massive points day, be short of the win, but maybe a couple other guys don’t have as good a points day, and you go into Martinsville, maybe in a spot where you could maybe point your way in if you go have another good day short of winning. So our prep is really no different. It’s, how do we try to be efficient through the stages and gather up all the stage points, you know?”
Blaney will try to be the cream of the crop this weekend as he enters eighth in the playoff standings, dead last and 31 points below the cutline, as the Cup Series heads for a superspeedway showdown at Talladega in Sunday’s Yellawood 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).