TALLADEGA, Ala. – Miss Alabama looked on, tiara and sash in place as she blended in amongst Joe Gibbs Racing’s celebrants, as the call went out in Talladega Superspeedway’s crowded Victory Lane. “Technical difficulties!” an emcee announced with a deprecating self-jab as attendants initially struggled to hoist the outsized horseshoe wreath of carnations around race winner Chase Briscoe’s neck.

The difficulty, however technical, was one of few glitches for Briscoe and company on a day when so much went so right.

The team and driver who had struggled so mightily on superspeedways finally cashed in at the most opportune moment, propelling Briscoe and the No. 19 team to a rousing YellaWood 500 victory and providing both with a shot at the NASCAR Cup Series championship in two weeks at Phoenix Raceway. It also produced a moment of team harmony for Toyota, which freight-trained its way to place five of the top eight finishers Sunday, making amends for two recent bouts of teammate turmoil that had threatened to disrupt its playoff goals.

RELATED: Cup Series Playoffs standings | Talladega race results

The triumph was also a major moment of validation, for Briscoe in the latest stop on his Cup Series journey and for the team that brought him in.

“Yeah, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel like we were capable of doing it,” said Briscoe, in his first year with JGR after the breakup of his previous home at Stewart-Haas Racing. “That’s why I said even what I said at the beginning of the year: If I don’t go win, I’m never going to get hired again because the expectation is you have to go to JGR and win. If you can’t win in a JGR car, why would anybody hire you for another team? Glad that I’ve been able to I feel like prove my worth.

“To be in the Championship 4 is a huge accomplishment itself. We want to win the championship. But to be one of those elite guys is a pretty special feeling.”

The sense of fulfillment was shared by JGR’s No. 19 team, which went winless last year in Martin Truex Jr.’s final Cup Series campaign. Truex was notably 0-for-40 for his career at both Daytona and Talladega, and Briscoe’s superspeedway track record wasn’t exceptional, either — 0-for-9 at Talladega before Sunday’s breakthrough.

The burden of both dry spells weighed on No. 19 crew chief James Small, who felt some of the same make-or-break preseason pressures that Briscoe did. Enjoying their third win together this season offered Small some relief.

“I never lost belief in myself or my team,” Small said. “I always had the support of everybody back at JGR. I knew if we had this opportunity, it was going to take a little bit, but we were going to be a force to be reckoned with. I think you’ve seen that since Kansas (and) Charlotte. We’re consistently, in my opinion, the best team in the series. We scored more points than anybody, more poles, had the most points in the playoffs here. Now we’re going to Phoenix.”

Chase Briscoe celebrates in Victory Lane at Talladega Superspeedway
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Chris Gabehart, Joe Gibbs Racing’s sage competition director, said that the organization had faith in Briscoe’s abilities but that the team’s resurgence doesn’t end with the driver and crew chief. Before the season, JGR brought in another Stewart-Haas transfer in J.D. Frye to serve as the No. 19 car chief, then bolstered the team’s engineering staff around them.

Things didn’t click right away during Briscoe’s adjustment period after four seasons with the Stewart-Haas group, but even then, Gabehart had his hunches about how the No. 19 group might respond.

“I knew that team had the makeup of a real dangerous combination,” Gabehart told NASCAR.com. “They were all motivated, all knew kind of their careers were on the line. Let’s be real, and they’re all super-hungry to perform, and super-smart and a huge foundation underneath of them. So I honestly knew back in January — and you can ask any one of them, I told them — that this had all the makings of the real Cinderella story. I think safe to say, going to the final four, here they are.”

The cohesiveness didn’t end there. JGR specifically and Toyota generally have endured two high-profile instances of team discord during these playoffs. The first came in the Round of 12, when an agitated Denny Hamlin shoved aside teammate Ty Gibbs at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, setting off a lively dispute over how drivers outside of the playoff picture should race against the postseason-eligible. A variation of that debate flared one week later at Kansas Speedway, where Hamlin’s fender-scrubbing overtake of Toyota mate and 23XI Racing employee Bubba Wallace allowed Chevrolet’s Chase Elliott to scoot through for a demoralizing win.

Sunday, those fractures seemed to heal. Hendrick Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson and William Byron controlled the overtime restart for Chevrolet, and they were lined up nose-to-tail for the final lap with their own Championship 4 fates in the balance. Larson’s No. 5 Chevy ran out of fuel with half a lap remaining, and a three-car power move by Wallace, Briscoe and Gibbs consumed whatever hopes Byron had left.

MORE: Hendrick’s hopes unravel in OT | At-track photos: Talladega

Gibbs stayed glued to Briscoe’s back bumper the rest of the way, giving his teammate a crucial aerodynamic push that withstood any remaining challenges.

“Ty was the whole reason I won the race,” Briscoe said. “He was extremely committed to me from the get-go. Really did a good job of keeping me up tight to Bubba so I could keep pushing him along. When I made a move, Ty went with me. Was selfless in the fact that he’s going for his first win, could have easily tried to make a move, did something different. He pushed me to the win. An incredible team effort.”

Gabehart also took note.

“Maybe unsung by some, but not by me,” Gabehart told NASCAR.com, with a nod to Gibbs’ dedication. “I realized that the thing I’m so proud of is we had so many Toyotas up there at the end. And you know, when you get that many of them up there, if one drops the ball, the other one can pick it up. In this case, Ty knew what his mission was, Chase was aggressive, and we were able to pull it out. But that really is a testament to Toyota and JGR, 23XI, Legacy Motor Club. It doesn’t happen by accident. There’s a lot of work and effort that goes into this each and every weekend, and especially at speedway races. I’m just proud that we could finally get a speedway win for Toyota.”

The outcome meant that half of the Championship 4 field for the Phoenix finale is now set, and that Hamlin — Joe Gibbs Racing’s most senior driver, 20 years in — and Briscoe — a Year 1 JGR newbie — will be among that quartet. The organization has a chance to add a third driver to that group, with Christopher Bell vying for a title shot in Sunday’s Xfinity 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, HBO Max), the Round of 8’s finale at Martinsville Speedway.

Phoenix already holds fond memories for Briscoe, who scored his first Cup Series victory at the 1-mile oval in the spring of 2022. In the most recent season finale there, Briscoe was brought to tears when his Stewart-Haas Racing team bid farewell in the organization’s final race. Two weeks ago, media obligations brought him back to the Arizona track, where he stood on the front straightaway and took a moment to reflect.

“I hadn’t done that since I won there,” Briscoe said. “I kind of thought how that day felt, winning my first Cup race. I didn’t think about it for a second. Next time you stand here, you might be a champion.”

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Playoffs will go short-track racing this weekend for the penultimate race of the 2025 campaign at Martinsville Speedway on Friday (6 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

The race marks the last shot for playoff drivers to cement their spot in the Championship 4 at Phoenix Raceway, Corey Heim is the only driver with a punched ticket to the title fight by virtue of his Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval victory.

Brenden “Butterbean” Queen will make his second career Truck start this weekend, piloting the No. 07 Spire Motor Motorsports Chevrolet. Queen made his Truck Series debut in the Spire machine at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in July, finishing 16th.

HOW TO WATCH: NASCAR on FOX, FS1, more

See the full entry list for the event:

The NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs Round of 8 continues at Martinsville Speedway in Saturday’s IAA and Richi Bros. 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

Following Austin Hill’s playoff-spoiler win at Talladega Superspeedway, JR Motorsports teammates Connor Zilisch and defending series champion Justin Allgaier puched their tickets to Phoenix on points, leaving two spots open for a Championship 4 berth. Jesse Love (plus-40) and Carson Kvapil (plus-11) hold the final provisional positions above the cutline. Sammy Smith (minus-11), Brandon Jones (minus-20), Sam Mayer (minus-22) and Sheldon Creed (minus-41) will look to advoid playoff elimination at Martinsville.

Thirty-nine cars are entered for Saturday’s race, but only 38 cars can lineup for the starting grid, meaning one team will miss the show after qualifying.

MORE: How to watch NASCAR on The CW

View the full entry list for the event:

While the chaos of Talladega Superspeedway might be in the rearview mirror, there is no letting up for the Cup Series Playoffs field, with the Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway acting as the Round of 8 finale on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

Following Chase Briscoe’s Talladega victory, two Cup Series drivers have punched their tickets to the Championship 4, with Denny Hamlin the other after winning the Round of 8 opener at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. As far as the remaining positions go, Christopher Bell (plus-37) and Kyle Larson (plus-36) currently sit above the playoff cutline, while William Byron (minus-36), Joey Logano (minus-38), Ryan Blaney (minus-47) and Chase Elliott (minus-62) face postseason elimination should their fortunes not flip in their favor at the Virginia short track.

Casey Mears will once again pilot the No. 66 Garage 66 Ford. The 47-year-old California native has competed in three Cup races this season, including an 18th-place result at Talladega last weekend. Sunday will mark his 600th NASCAR start, as he eyes his 500th Cup race next season.

HOW TO WATCH: NASCAR on NBC, Peacock | Driver Cams on HBO Max

View the full entry list for the event:

With one race remaining on the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule, Austin Beers holds a 14-point advantage over Justin Bonsignore in the championship standings.

Beers has enjoyed the best Modified Tour season of his young career. None of his finishes have been outside the top 10, with the consistency also yielding him two victories and 11 top fives.

Trailing Beers in the point standings is the four-time Modified Tour champion in Bonsignore, who remains within striking distance of tying Tony Hirschman with his fifth title. Although he only possesses one win to his name in 2025, Bonsignore has shown plenty of speed all year with eight top fives to go along with four poles.

ENTRY LIST: Mods finale at Martinsville

There are 30 cars on the entry list for Thursday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FloRacing). This means Beers needs to finish eighth or better to earn the Modified Tour championship regardless of what Bonsignore does.

If Beers finishes ninth or worse, the door opens for Bonsignore to claim the title. Should a scenario play out in which Beers and Bonsignore end up tied in the point standings with neither obtaining an additional victory, Beers would be the beneficiary of the tiebreaker with his two wins compared to Bonsignore’s lone triumph.

Justin Bonsignore and Austin Beers
(Photo: Rob Branning/NASCAR)

The tiebreaker shifts to Bonsignore’s favor should he win Thursday and earn maximum points with Beers finishing ninth. Bonsignore gets this distinction since he has two runner-up showings this year, all while Beers only has one.

A driver can earn maximum points on the Modified Tour by winning the race and securing the appropriate bonus points; one for winning the pole, one for leading a lap and another for leading the most laps. Wins automatically grant three additional points, bringing the maximum total to 49 points.

Regarding Martinsville, Bonsignore holds the advantage over Beers with a championship-clinching victory in last year’s race and a runner-up to Ryan Preece in 2023. Beers’ best finish at Martinsville is fourth, which he obtained during 2024 Modified Tour finale.

Below is a complete breakdown of the championship points scenarios between Austin Beers and Justin Bonsignore going into the Modified Tour season finale on Thursday evening.

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship points scenarios for Martinsville

NWMT championship scenarios

The battle for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship has reached its crescendo as Austin Beers and Justin Bonsignore settle the battle for the series championship during Thursday evening’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

Beers enters Thursday’s race with a 14-point advantage in the standings and needs only to finish eighth or better to claim the series championship regardless of what Bonsignore does. Bonsignore, however, is the defending winner at Martinsville and could turn the tide in his favor if Beers stumbles at the 0.526-mile oval.

Thursday’s event marks the 40th trip to Martinsville for the modern Modified Tour. Drivers to score wins there include Mike Stefanik, Mike Ewanitsko, Jeff Fuller, Reggie Ruggiero, Charlie Jarzombek, Tom Baldwin, Brett Bodine, Ryan Preece, Ted Christopher, Tony Hirschman, Donny Lia, Mike McLaughlin, Bobby Santos III and Bonsignore, among others.

Tickets to Thursday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 are available here. Below is everything you need to know about the final race of the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Martinsville Speedway
The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour field prior to the 2024 Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway

Dis 17 743631 Coca Cola 250 V6gb 4presAustin Beers and Justin Bonsignore have a lot on the line in Thursday’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season finale at Martinsville Speedway.

Both drivers have a chance to leave the track as the 2025 Modified Tour champion, but each has an opportunity to earn a unique distinction should he manage to secure the title.

Should Beers capture the championship, not only would be his first and the first for the KLM Motorsports team owned by Mike Murphy, be he also would become the youngest champion in Modified Tour history.

The record currently belongs to Ryan Preece, who won his championship when he was 22 years, 11 months and 25 days old.

Bonsignore has the chance to further cement his legacy should he capture his fifth Modified Tour championship. In the history of the modern series, only three drivers have won five or more championships. They are Mike Stefanik (seven), Doug Coby (six) and Tony Hirschman (five).

Beers enters the weekend with a 14-point advantage on Bonsignore in the fight for the series championship and needs only to finish eighth or better to clinch the title no matter what Bonsignore does. Beers has three previous Modified Tour starts and has finished eighth or better in two of them. Bonsignore has made five starts at Martinsville and has finished third or better in all but one.

While most of the focus will be on Beers and Bonsignore Thursday night, there are several other notable drivers scheduled to compete in the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200. They include 2000 NASCAR Cup Series champion Bobby Labonte, who will make his second Modified Tour start of the season aboard the No. 38 for Sadler-Stanley Racing.

Also returning to the series is Ryan Newman, who will make his fifth start of the season at Martinsville. He’ll once again pilot the No. 4 Mystic Missile entry for Tim Connolly.

Luke Baldwin returns to the series in the family No. 7 fresh off a big win over the weekend at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

Other notable entrants include Jake Lutz, Carson Loftin, Jeremy Gerstner, Eric Goodale, Andy Seuss, Mike Christopher Jr., Conner Jones, Luke Fleming, Danny Bohn and Teddy Hodgdon as well series regulars like Craig Lutz, Patrick Emerling, Matt Hirschman, Stephen Kopcik, Trevor Catalano, Tommy Catalano and Tyler Rypkema.

The full entry list for Thursday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 is available here.

Justin Bonsignore
Justin Bonsignore (51) leads the 2024 Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

Race Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200
Date Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025
Track Martinsville Speedway
Layout 0.526-mile oval
Location Martinsville, Virginia
Start time 7:30 p.m. ET
Laps 200
Posted Awards $137,154
Tickets Here
How to Watch FloRacing

SCHEDULE: Thursday, Oct. 23: Practice from 12:35 – 1:05 p.m. ET … Final Practice from 1:45 – 2:15 p.m. ET … Hoosier Tire Pole Award qualifying at 3:30 p.m. ET … Start of the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at 7:30 p.m. ET (200 Laps / 105.20 Miles)

QUALIFYING: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 is limited to 32 starters including Provisional Positions.

TIRE ALLOTMENT: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. Maximum of nine (9) tires may be used for the race, not including Emergency Change Tires. Teams will declare to NASCAR Officials at the conclusion of practice the tires they will use during the race. The tire change rule is two (2) tires per stop.

For the first time in the Cup Series Playoffs, Talladega Superspeedway hosted the midpoint in the Round of 8 — and it did not disappoint. From the green flag to the checkered flag, intensity to solidify Championship 4 position was on display all 500 miles, and the postseason picture took a big shift on the final lap for a handful of drivers.

Only two races remain in the Cup Series season, but to determine the Championship 4, a short-track affair lies ahead at Martinsville Speedway next Sunday (2 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Before that, let’s see the fates of our remaining playoff drivers after a Talladega thriller.

WINNER

Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. It was a split-second decision by Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Ty Gibbs to get off the gas and drop behind the No. 19 driver in Turn 3 on the final lap to push Briscoe to his third victory of 2025. It’s Briscoe’s first Championship 4 berth in his fifth Cup season, and he’s a past winner at Phoenix (spring 2022).

Two JGR drivers are going to race for the Bill France Cup in the Arizona desert, as Denny Hamlin won a week prior at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It’s the first time JGR has put multiple cars in the Championship 4 since 2021.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

WHO’S HOT?

Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Bell is the only playoff driver, minus Briscoe, to snag positive momentum going to Martinsville. While not the biggest superspeedway aficionado, the Norman, Oklahoma native placed eighth Sunday afternoon to go to plus-37 above the cutline. The caveat to that is he’s only one point above Kyle Larson, who is the last driver into the provisional Championship 4, and Martinsville is known to produce walk-off winners. Last year, Bell was eliminated at Martinsville on the final lap due to a safety violation.

WHO’S NOT?

Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford. This was the one. If it was going to be a bid to go for championship No. 4 in the Cup Series, Logano needed to get the job done Sunday. While in a perfect spot with teammate Ryan Blaney up front, the pack scrambled into a three- and four-wide fray in the closing laps, washing out the bottom lane as the Nos. 12 and 22 faded to the back of the field. When the checkered flag waved, Logano was 16th. Now, it’s win-or-go-home at Martinsville. Logano has finished in the top 10 in every Martinsville race since the fall of 2019, but his last win at the short track came in 2018.

William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. The 2025 regular-season champion was in a spot for a top 10 in the tri-oval, but squirrely, aggressive pushes to the start/finish line ultimately spun Byron around, making 500-plus miles all for naught. Byron parachuted to a 25th-place result and all of a sudden, a disastrous Round of 8 so far now sees him 36 points below his teammate Larson at the cutline. It’s now a virtual must-win for the No. 24 team at Martinsville.

Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. Trying to grab stage points in the opening 60 laps, Elliott was involved in a multicar incident as Noah Gragson and AJ Allmendinger crashed from the lead. As the two drivers came down the track, along with 2024 Talladega fall winner Ricky Stenhouse Jr., the No. 9 driver had nowhere to go and was hit by Austin Cindric and Daniel Suárez trying to get to the apron of Turns 3 and 4. Elliott collected a mere point with a 40th-place result and will be in a must-win situation entering Martinsville for the Round of 8 elimination race.

BUBBLE WATCH

RANKDRIVER+/-
1Chase BriscoeADV
2Denny HamlinADV
3Christopher Bell+37
4Kyle Larson+36
CUTLINE
5William Byron-36
6Joey Logano-38
7Ryan Blaney-47
8Chase Elliott-62

QUOTABLE

“It’s pretty apparent the second we lost control of the race. I’m only driving one car, so I couldn’t really control the race. The car behind me was saving gas, that didn’t help us and killed the whole bottom lane. Cars were pulling in front of us, and we were just getting demoted from the first two cars in line to the back of the line. We just can’t be saving gas at the end of the race. Ryan [Blaney] was not, but I was frustrated. You just get demoted in the lane as cars move to the front. You’re helpless. You’re sitting there just driving in circles, knowing the right thing to do, and just can’t do it. I drive one car.” — Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford, on how he and Blaney fell out of the lead late at Talladega.

NEXT RACE

It’s time to set the Championship 4 as Martinsville hosts the penultimate race of the 2025 season next Sunday. Blaney enters as the two-time defending winner of the event. Elliott walked off at the Virginia short track in 2020, which resulted in his lone series championship. Four of the last five winners in the Martinsville playoff race have been won by drivers beneath the cutline.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Advancement to the Championship 4 was on the table for Team Penske at Talladega Superspeedway. Now, the team’s title hopes are on life support. 

The bulk of Sunday’s YellaWood 500 at Talladega Superspeedway couldn’t have played out any better for Ford’s powerhouse organization, but it all went awry in the closing laps.   

After Cody Ware brought out the caution with 21 laps in regulation for spinning on the apron in Turns 1 and 2, Ryan Blaney exited pit road with the lead. His Team Penske teammate and three-time and defending Cup Series champion Joey Logano slotted in second, choosing the inside lane behind the No. 12 car for the restart.  

MORE: Full race results | Briscoe wins, onto Champ 4

With Todd Gilliland, a satellite Penske teammate at Front Row Motorsports, lining up alongside for the restart, the dynamite duo were poised to control the race. With a shove from Kyle Larson, however, Gilliland dropped low to command the inside line. That began a bottleneck of lost track position for the Nos. 12 and 22 Fords.  

Former Penske driver Brad Keselowski was directly behind Logano on the inside line. The No. 6 car was in fuel-saving mode and couldn’t stay glued to the No. 22 car’s back bumper. The distance between the two cars enabled the top lane to control the race and drop down to the bottom. Before you could blink, Penske’s two cars dropped well outside the top 10.  

“The car behind me was saving gas – that doesn’t help,” a baffled Logano said after the checkered flag. “That kills the whole bottom lane. Cars are pulling down in front of us, and we keep getting demoted. The first two cars to third in line, fourth in line and the next thing you know, we’re all the way in the back. 

“We can’t be saving gas at the end of the race and expect to win, that’s the bottom line. Ryan is not. I wasn’t. It’s just frustrating to see us keep getting demoted in the lane as cars keep pulling down in front of you. You are helpless. You are sitting there driving in circles and know what the right thing to do is, and you can’t do it. I drive one car.” 

Blaney was just as frustrated as Logano. He wasn’t certain why Keselowski was soft on Logano’s bumper, but it ultimately cost the two remaining Ford drivers in the postseason considerably.  

“We got control of the race; me and Joey had control of it,” Blaney added. “What I could tell, [Keselowski] was super soft on Joey and then [Gilliland] got down in front of me, and [Keselowski] was still soft on Joey, and we could never go and just faded. I thought we did a great job of getting the spot that we were in, but it didn’t work out.”  

With a lap-and-a-half remaining, Chris Buescher got bumped by William Byron and clobbered the inside wall on the backstretch. The Penske crew chiefs of Jonathan Hassler and Paul Wolfe attempted a Hail Mary to pit for a splash of gas, knowing their fuel situation was bleak. Blaney restarted in 22nd ahead of the green-white-checkered finish, with Logano one spot behind in 23rd.  

While Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace and Chase Briscoe traded the lead in overtime, Logano gained seven positions to finish 16th. Blaney dropped a spot to 23rd. 

Both Penske teams are in must-win mode entering the Round of 8 elimination race at Martinsville Speedway next weekend. Logano is 38 points below the elimination line, while Blaney is 47 markers back. Blaney has, however, won the last two fall Martinsville races.  

“It’s simple in what to do,” Logano stated. “At this point, it’s all or nothing. Stage points aren’t going to matter; nothing is going to matter — we’re too far back. You just have to go win.”  

Even though Blaney has multiple victories at Martinsville, he knows that it doesn’t guarantee him a spot into this year’s Championship 4 via a victory. 

“So what, we’ve won there twice?” Blaney said. “It’s up and down, you never know what’s going to happen year after year. The people that have been saying, ‘Oh, Blaney is going to win Martinsville.’ It’s [expletive]. It’s hard. I don’t know what speed we’re going to have. It’s nice that we’ve won there a couple of times, but we’ve got to dig down deep for this one.”  

TALLADEGA, Ala. — The late-race situation was about as rosy as could be for Hendrick Motorsports teammates William Byron and Kyle Larson after running 500-plus miles at Talladega Superspeedway. The pair ran 1-2 in that order as Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs showdown lurched into overtime, and the two controlled the front row for the fateful final restart — Larson lined up high after lane choice, with Byron low.

“Just play the game,” No. 24 spotter Branden Lines told Byron as the regular-season champ’s Chevrolet got up to speed and inched ahead with the field barreling toward the white flag. Shortly thereafter, that dream 1-2 scenario unraveled.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Talladega

Both Hendrick Motorsports drivers faltered in the final circuit of Sunday’s YellaWood 500, watching their opportunity for a victory and an automatic championship-race berth evaporate. Larson bailed out of the pack with half a lap to go, his No. 5 Chevrolet stumbling with a dry fuel tank and leaving him with a 26th-place finish. That result was one spot below 25th-finishing Byron, who was overcome by a Toyota-led charge in the outside lane and later spun through the trioval as the low-lane shoving grew more intense.

The two now find themselves on opposite sides of the playoff bubble with one chance remaining to clinch a Championship 4 slot in next Sunday’s Round of 8 finale at Martinsville Speedway. Larson sits 36 points above the elimination line as the provisional final driver in; Byron is the first driver out as it stands, down by the same 36-point margin.

“Looks like we’ve got to win,” said Byron, who placed 36th after a crash in the previous week’s Round of 8 opener at Las Vegas. “It looks like all the guys below the cut have to win, so we’ve just got to go there and do that. So we’ve had two strong weeks but no results, and we’ve just got to go there and try to do the best we can.”

Byron’s hopes looked optimistic throughout the last two-lap dash, and they seemed to strengthen when he hooked up behind Larson’s No. 5 for the last stretch. Once Larson’s car stammered, he was left without a teammate to tandem with, and a Toyota train of Bubba Wallace, Ty Gibbs and eventual winner Chase Briscoe rocketed past him.

“We got linked together really good through (Turns) 1 and 2 and the bottom, I got clear for a minute, and then just couldn’t get linked for whatever reason off of four, and those guys were just pushing really hard on the outside lane and just pushed past us,” Byron said. “So I don’t know. The pushes just didn’t get timed up perfectly, and lost control there of the bottom lane, and then just seemed like the outside had more energy for some reason, and then the 5 ran out of gas, so that hurt us a little bit even more. I mean, overall, I think we gave it our best effort. We were tight there on fuel, so just trying to manage that, but it just didn’t work out, and then we got spun out there coming to the line.”

Larson was just behind Byron on the official rundown, but his hopes for contending expired a half-lap from the end. No. 5 crew chief Cliff Daniels said he knew the team’s final splash of fuel would leave Larson tight on making it to the end, but he still tried to encourage his driver that the tank would hold.

Kyle Larson, right, talks to crew chief Cliff Daniels on pit road at Talladega Superspeedway
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

“I mean, the numbers we had, we thought we were gonna run out literally at the checkered flag,” Daniels said. “So I would say that was basically a quarter-gallon from where we ran out on the back straightaway to making it back around. In a game of small margins, it was just a small margin that made the difference.”

Said Larson: “We obviously knew it was close, because we got the warning on whatever pump we were on under caution, and it sounded like we would be OK once I went to the other pump, even where I was under yellow, having to flip the switch. So yeah, he had a lot of confidence when he told me, so it gave me confidence. And yeah, it was just hammer down. I mean, there wasn’t really anything I could do otherwise, that last run there. Then I got another warning on the final pump that we have and was just hoping that it would make it to the finish, but it started sputtering shortly after that, so just got out of the way.”

Larson’s spot relative to the playoff bubble is a bit more hopeful, but he said that his chances of reaching his third Championship 4 in the last four years are teetering. Like him, all four drivers below the cutline — Byron, Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott — are past Martinsville winners. A victory next week by any of them would make the avenue to the Nov. 2 finale at Phoenix Raceway much more narrow.

“Honestly, it’s a great [place] to be that if nobody below wins, but you’ve got to assume one of them guys is going to win. They’re all really good there,” Larson said. “I mean, every single one of them has a win there. I believe, and multiples at that. So yeah, it’ll be a fight, I think, a point battle between me and Christopher. You know, you don’t want to be a four-spot guy, but yeah, we’ll see. Hopefully, we can go execute again, like we have been, and be up front.”