Trackhouse Racing announced Sept. 23 that Randall Burnett will join the organization in 2026 as crew chief for Connor Zilisch, who will begin his full-time NASCAR Cup Series career next season.
Burnett will make the move from his role as crew chief for Kyle Busch’s No. 8 Chevrolet at Richard Childress Racing, which brought him on during the 2017 season. He has six wins in each the Cup Series and Xfinity Series.
With Burnett moving on from Busch after the 2025 season, RCR announced Oct. 1 that crew chief Andy Street will sit atop the box for the No. 8 team for the remainder of the year. Burnett will remain in a support role with the organization until the season concludes.
The personnel hire by the Justin Marks-founded team locks in another component to what will be Zilisch’s first full season in NASCAR’s top division. Trackhouse formally announced the 19-year-old’s heavily anticipated leap to the Cup Series last month, indicating that the crew-chief pairing, Zilisch’s car number and other personnel alignments would take shape in the coming weeks.
Burnett had previous stops at Chip Ganassi Racing and what’s now called Hyak Motorsports, first as an engineer and later as a crew chief. He spent roughly two and a half seasons with Childress’ Xfinity Series program, winning six races and the championship with Tyler Reddick in 2019.
Burnett and Reddick made the jump to the Cup Series together in 2020. The veteran crew chief remained with RCR’s No. 8 team when Busch replaced Reddick in 2023, and Burnett has three Cup wins with each driver.
Zilisch has been a dominating force in his rookie Xfinity season, winning nine times this year with JR Motorsports. The surge has rocketed Zilisch to the top of the Xfinity Series Playoffs standings, and he has won seven of the last nine events on the circuit.
The NASCAR Xfinity Series heads to the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval for the final race in the Round of 12 as the competitors vying for the 2025 crown will be cut down to eight. Teams will hit the track for practice on Saturday at 11:30 a.m. ET with qualifying to follow at 12:40 p.m. ET on The CW app.
Saturday’s qualifying session will consist of one round, split into two 20-minute groups. The qualifying order below is determined via metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).
The race will occur later Saturday at 5 p.m. ET (The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Chase Briscoe lined up a 10-foot birdie putt a few weeks ago at Rolling Hills Country Club in Monroe, North Carolina, southeast of Charlotte. As he crouched down to study the contour of the grass between his ball and the hole, Noah Gragson, his close friend, former teammate and source of nonstop amusement on the course, helped him choose his line.
“If you hit that dot right there,” Gragson said, marking with confidence a dot with the butt of his putter. “It’s going in.”
“That one?” Briscoe asked.
“No, that one.”
Briscoe flinched when he missed the putt by an inch.
“Did you hit the dot?” I asked.
“No,” Gragson said. “He wasn’t even close.”
“If I would have,” Briscoe said, “I would have made it.”
It sounds simple, right? Hit a ball to a spot just a few feet away, bask in the accompanying glory. What could go wrong?
I mean, besides everything. If it were easy, anyone could do it, and nobody would want to. Briscoe, driver of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 Toyota in the NASCAR Cup Series, and Gragson, who pilots the No. 4 Front Row Motorsports Ford, can make a 3,400-pound race car do whatever they want. A 1.62-ounce dimpled white orb, not so much. And that drives them a little crazy.
Nothing generates more fake misery than golf. You can play absolutely terribly, be teeth-grindingly angry at yourself for hours on end, be half-tempted to throw your clubs into the pond, vow 37 times to never play this fool sport again, and yet when someone asks how your day was, you’ll say awesome and proclaim that a bad day on the golf course is better than a good day at work.
The better you get at golf, the more miserable it makes you, because your expectations go up faster than your ability to reach them. Racing is like that, too: Once you win, not winning is way more annoying. You’ve proved you can do it, so why can’t you do it all the time?
Golf might be more insufferable for NASCAR drivers than “normal” people because they are uncommonly gifted, uncommonly competitive and uncommonly successful. The sport humbles them because on the track, they are indisputably world-class athletes, the best of the best of the best, and on the course, they are decidedly not.
So why do they subject themselves to such frustration? The maddening challenge to command the ball draws Briscoe and Gragson (and every other driver who plays) to golf. They play because their competitive natures drive them to improve, and in golf, it’s really hard to do so, and thus more rewarding when they do, even if the only reward of getting better is deeper knowledge of how bad they still are.
They play because of the joy they find in the striving.
And they play because they laugh a lot on the course.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media
Long drives, fast drives, and what they have in common
Golf is seemingly everywhere in NASCAR lately. Austin Dillon AND his dad both got holes in one in the same round last week, and Instagram posts about that seemingly impossible accomplishment generated thousands of likes. NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers Connor Zilisch, Daniel Dye and Jesse Love have a YouTube channel devoted to the sport. And during the week of the final race of the first playoff round, Hendrick Motorsports set up a putt-putt course in their office and made Instagram videos of their four drivers playing it while wearing their fire suits.
This is a continuation of a decades-long trend. 23XI, the team co-founded by Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan, owes its existence to conversations between the two on golf courses. Hall of Famer Dale Jarrett was a scratch golfer during his driving days and remains one of the best golfers in the industry, if not the best. In 2005, Jarrett, Elliott Sadler, Jamie McMurray, Michael Waltrip and Rusty Wallace competed in a made-for-TV event on The Golf Channel.
Even though they’ve been paired up for decades, NASCAR and golf still seem like an unlikely match. Golf smells like freshly cut heaven, is quiet and peaceful and played on an endless green expanse. Fans get shushed for talking above a whisper. NASCAR smells like oil and rubber (also heaven), is loud and harrowing and played on a narrow asphalt strip. Fans yell themselves hoarse, and still nobody hears a dang thing anybody says.
NASCAR drivers make uncountable thousands of split-second decisions in a race, and just about any of them could lead to serious injury or a torn-up race car or both. Golfers make “only” dozens of decisions in a round, have plenty of time to ponder them, and the worst possible consequence is a ball in the drink.
But dig below the surface, and the two sports have a lot in common.
In both sports, you need to be able to think ahead to be in the right position at the right time. If you want a great Turn 3, you set that up with a great back straightaway, which you set up with a great exit off Turn 2. In the same way, if you want to make a short birdie putt, you set that up with a great approach, which you set up with a great tee shot.
Both sports reward your ability (and punish your inability) to concentrate for a long time; a bad 18th hole can wreck a good round just like a bad final run can wreck a good race.
Josh Wise, a former driver (and former golfer) who helps drivers maximize their performance as owner of Wise Optimization, puts his drivers in athletic/competitive scenarios across a wide range of activities, from paddleboarding to yoga to pickleball, because doing so teases out traits that otherwise might go unnoticed.
Drivers golf for the same reason (though not, by any means, ONLY that reason). “If I had to pick something as a performance advisor (for drivers to learn from golf),” Wise said, “it would, hands down, be the ability to quiet the mind for a critical moment.”
Now, having said all that, nobody grabs their clubs and heads to the course with even the faintest notion that what happens there matters at all in the race car.
The value of golf for drivers is simpler … and more complicated … than that. They play not because it will improve their performance on the track but because playing brings them joy.
And that makes them better race car drivers.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media
“‘Dude, I hate this Chase Briscoe guy.’ And now we’re best of friends.”
Golfing with Gragson and Briscoe was like golfing inside a buddy movie. They encouraged and teased each other in equal measure.
I split my time between their carts. When I rode with Briscoe, Gragson would be on the green while we were still lining up our shots in the fairway.
Gragson parked the cart a couple of times within a foot of the ball, the nose just in front of it. Not in the way, but close enough that I could see the cart when I looked down at my ball. I couldn’t swing with the cart right there. It distracted me too much.
He parked like that at his ball, too, only Gragson wasn’t distracted at all. I guess if you drive 180-plus mph inches from speeding race cars on all sides for three hours every Sunday, hitting a golf ball a foot from a parked golf cart on a sunny Thursday afternoon is no big deal.
You can tell a lot about friends by how they react when the other hits a good shot. Briscoe muscled a shot straight down the middle, long and high and true, and Gragson bellowed loud enough for us to hear him half a fairway away. “When my boy Chase hits a bomb, I’m going to scream,” he said.
A few holes later, Gragson striped his drive down the center.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media
Briscoe hit next.
“How’d you do?” Gragson asked.
“Flew 70 yards past you,” Briscoe said.
He was only exaggerating by about 40. “Noah’s the king of (trash)-talking,” Briscoe says. “So, it’s fun when you can give it back to him.”
Their friendship almost ended before it started. On the first lap of the first NASCAR national series race they ever ran together — the Craftsman Truck Series race in 2017 at Daytona International Speedway — Briscoe tried to bump draft Gragson and wrecked him instead.
“I didn’t know what I was doing,” Briscoe says.
“Neither did I,” Gragson replies.
Briscoe dumped Gragson accidentally again in a race shortly thereafter. I asked Gragson’s reaction to those encounters as we walked off a green. “‘Dude, I hate this Chase Briscoe guy,'” he said. “And now we’re best of friends.”
And unlikely friends at that. Gragson is a single, strutting Las Vegas native who, as an up-and-coming star in the Xfinity Series, threw punches, traded barbs and was so excited to win that he threw up the contents of his stomach right there on the track.
Briscoe, on the other hand, is Indiana wholesome through and through, the married father of three who exudes earnestness. By his own unsolicited admission, nothing about his pre-NASCAR career foretells the success he has had. But hope is a powerful thing: Even with his modest resume, he moved to Charlotte, slept on Christopher Bell’s couch and did menial jobs in the sport to chase his chance.
And when he caught it, he excelled, progressing to Cup in 2021. This year, his first driving for Joe Gibbs Racing, he is in the championship hunt for the first time. He has won twice and set career highs in every category. Through 31 races, he’s led 808 laps — that’s 283 more than in the rest of his career combined.
Their friendship sprouted when they became teammates at Stewart-Haas Racing in 2024 and blossomed on the golf course. Briscoe leans on his friendship with Gragson to escape the pressure of being a big-time athlete with a big-time team and big-time responsibilities at home as the father of three young children. He relishes the chance to have adult conversations.
And Gragson plays funcle to Briscoe’s three small children. He delights in buying obnoxiously loud gifts that kids love and parents hate. His latest offering, he told me as Chase chipped out of earshot, is a deejay game he can’t wait for Chase and Marissa (Chase’s wife) to loathe. Gragson fully expects payback when he has kids.
We cut our round short at 16 holes so they both could get to the tee-ball practice of Briscoe’s 4-year-old.
“PARTY HOLE!” he said on one green and demanded we all line up putts and hit them at the same time. “Three … two … one!”
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media
They hit everything but the pace car
Drivers play a sport for a living and play other sports for fun. Sometimes they are dangerous. Tony Stewart broke his back in a dune buggy crash. Denny Hamlin has torn both of his ACLs playing basketball. Chase Elliott fractured his tibia while snowboarding.
Whenever something like that happens, team owners, sponsors and fans debate what activities drivers should participate in. Perhaps golf is a popular hobby among drivers because nobody ever gets hurt doing it. …
Except, of course, for Jimmie Johnson, a seven-time champion, Hall of Famer and team owner. Fresh off his first championship in 2006, he showed up for preseason events in 2007 with his arm in a cast. He told the media he fell off a golf cart. That was true. What he didn’t say is that he was on top of it, not inside of it, when he fell.
Johnson and other NASCAR drivers play the sport for the camaraderie, for the fun, for the laughs, and to get away from the constant pressure to perform so they can forget, for a few hours, that their livelihood rises and falls with their ability to always, always, always push their car right up to the edge and stay there for hours on end without blinking or flinching or making any mistakes, ever.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media
The stress of that is suffocating.
And then they go play golf and get nearly as wound up on the course as they do at the race track.
Golf is both a relief from and source of stress. Johnson plays more now that he’s an owner than he did as a driver. No word on whether he rides inside the cart these days. Asked by a golf reporter this summer which is more stressful, protecting a lead on the last lap at Daytona or standing over a 10-foot putt on the 18th with his personal best score on the line, Johnson said, “without question, 10-foot putt.”
There’s an old saying that a good goal is always just out of your reach, and while that’s true in golf, it’s also annoying as hell when coming up short means SPLASH! As Hamlin, who helped run a now-defunct golf league among drivers and industry insiders, once said: “We try to pull off shots that pros make, and we get pissed off when we don’t get it done.”
And they get pissed off when they blow easy shots, too. Gragson chipped his ball back and forth halfway across creation, and Briscoe stifled a laugh because there’s nothing funnier than your friend being pissed off at golf.
Briscoe: “How many clubs have you broken?”
Gragson: “Three.”
He meant in his life, not that sun-drenched September day.
“It’s the only sport I know of where you can put countless hours in,” Briscoe said, “and still suck at it.”
I filled my notebook with quotes like that from both. And after playing with them, I can say, um, how to put it, sometimes they proved those quotes accurate … and often they didn’t.
They both have the great hand-eye coordination you would expect from professional race-car drivers. They both have smooth, easy swings befitting a lifetime of playing sports. Fluidity, balance, weight-shifting — all crucial for golf, all ever-present in their swings.
This is a small sample size, but I suspect overall their decision-making leans toward going for it rather than laying up, which I say because they are race car drivers AND because before Briscoe tried to squeeze a shot between two trees, he turned to me and said it would either turn out awesome or smack the tree and come right back at him. (It slithered through.)
They have the tools to score low; they just need to learn to use them consistently. The only thing keeping them from becoming good golfers is playing more.
And doing so would only show them how much better they could still get.
The NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs conclude the Round of 12 with a road-course bout at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval this weekend. Qualifying will occur on Saturday at 3:10 p.m. ET on truTV.
Saturday’s qualifying session will consist of one round, split into two 20-minute groups. The groups below are determined via a metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).
The race itself will be on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).
For the first time, the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series heads to the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval. In preparation for Friday’s Round of 8 opener (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), teams will receive 50 minutes of practice earlier in the day at 11:05 a.m. ET on FS2. Qualifying is scheduled for 12:10 p.m. ET, also airing on FS2.
NASCAR officials fined Cup Series driver Carson Hocevar $50,000 on Wednesday for a behavioral penalty during last Sunday’s race at Kansas Speedway.
Hocevar’s No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet spun to a halt on the backstretch on the 260th of 273 laps in the Hollywood Casino 400, flattening multiple tires. After safety personnel had arrived at the crash scene, officials indicated that Hocevar revved and spun his tires in an attempt to rejoin the field while those safety workers attended to his car.
As a result of the violation of Sections 4.4.B&D: NASCAR Member Conduct in the NASCAR Rule Book, competition officials issued a $50,000 fine.
Hocevar was running 13th at the time of the incident, which was his second mishap of the day. He finished 29th in the 37-car field, four laps down.
Additionally, NASCAR officials penalized the No. 48 Big Machine Racing team for a lug-nut infraction after Saturday’s Xfinity Series race. Nick Sanchez drove the car to an eighth-place finish in the Kansas Lottery 300, but one lug was found to be unsecured in a post-race check. Officials fined the team $5,000.
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Tyler Reddick emerged from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series event at Kansas Speedway with a rugged rally to seventh place, snapping a three-race drought without a top-10 finish. But the visit also left him with a significant points deficit and a virtual must-win scenario for Sunday’s elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s ever-difficult road-course-slash-oval layout.
“It’s tough,” Reddick said post-race. “Yeah, obviously there’s only one thing we can do at Charlotte, and that’s what we’ll be focused on.”
The 23XI Racing driver’s postseason plight and on-track performance, though, were secondary to more critical personal concerns. Reddick’s wife, Alexa, shared Sunday that 4-month-old son, Rookie, was in a cardiovascular intensive care unit at Leavine Children’s Hospital with signs of heart failure.
“It’s difficult. It’s not what you want for your kids,” Reddick said. “You know, as a father, it’s … my first son Beau’s hit his head, you know, bruised himself up, cut himself up, but yeah, what my son Rookie’s going through is serious. So yeah, a tricky situation, and just more than anything, just ready to get on a plane and go home.”
Measures were taken post-race to expedite Reddick’s return to North Carolina. The 29-year-old driver said that some consideration was given to potentially skipping the event to be with his family before ultimately deciding to race on.
“I wouldn’t say it was off the table, depending on how things were going,” Reddick said, “but thankfully he’s doing well enough to where me and my wife were on the same page about staying.”
Reddick started 12th in the Hollywood Casino 400, and pit-road miscues in each of the first two portions of the race hindered him from making incremental gains on his points gap at the stage breaks. On Lap 60 of 273, Reddick made an additional stop because of a right-rear tire that wasn’t fully fastened, a move that left him 24th at the end of the first stage. During the Stage 1 intermission, he took evasive action to avoid a car leaving its pit stall for the second consecutive week. Missing his own stall to miss hitting fellow Toyota driver Christopher Bell left him 28th for the restart, and Reddick was only able to claw back to 14th when the second batch of stage points were paid out.
Reddick was eventually able to battle into contention as the final stage progressed, but nine of the remaining 12 playoff drivers collected points with top-10 finishes at the stage breaks. Five of those drivers made double-digit additions to their points hauls, while Reddick received none — eventually leaving him 29 points below the elimination line ahead of Sunday’s Charlotte Roval race (3 p.m. ET, USA, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).
“It was a rebound, for sure. Just the tough thing about it, just didn’t get any stage points today and I think we were definitely good enough to do that,” Reddick said. “So yeah, when that happens, you lose ground and that’s what happened to us today.”
Reddick still had the opportunity to convert with a victory once a series of late-race yellow flags flew, all following a rally into the top 10 and eventually the top five. A mix-up on lane choice before the first overtime left race-leading 23XI teammate Bubba Wallace without an aerodynamic push, though the No. 45 team remedied that oversight for the final clinching restart.
Reddick said he had a shot at the checkered flag, but that his efforts needed help.
“It was going to have to play out a very specific way,” Reddick said. “I feel like I was about as good as what was ahead of me. You work hard to get that track position, and we were still climbing back up before those cautions at the end.”
Chase Elliott muscled his way to a second 2025 victory on Sunday at Kansas Speedway, clinching a NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 8 bid in the process. With his Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson a near-lock to advance to the Round of 8, No. 5 will likely be joining him — but which one will be riding the wave of momentum?
NASCAR.com’s Pat DeCola ranks the 2025 Cup Series Playoffs contenders after the Hollywood Casino 400 Presented by ESPN Bet at Kansas Speedway and before Sunday’s Bank of America ROVAL 400 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).
Analysis: Elliott led just 24 laps in a race dominated by Denny Hamlin, but — as alluded to in last week’s Turning Point — Toyota gave an inch, and Hendrick Motorsports took a mile, led by No. 9’s bruising final lap at Kansas as he rode to the win. He now gets to race pressure-free at one of his best tracks, looking to cement the mojo he and the No. 9 group are building together in the quest for title No. 2.
Analysis: Blaney led exactly one Kansas lap, and that may have been the highlight for all of Team Penske, which walked out of the Midwest with a trio of sub-20 finishes among its three playoff drivers. Thankfully, one of them (Blaney) is already locked in to the Round of 8, but with one teetering on the edge (Joey Logano) and the other in must-win territory (Austin Cindric), it’s extremely unlikely all three will advance.
Analysis: Hamlin certainly would’ve preferred to have won that battle at the line at Kansas, but, big picture, walking into the Charlotte Roval cutoff race with a plus-48 to the bubble is still close to about as best-case-scenario as one can hope for, short of a prior victory. There’s no slowing down the series’ elder statesman, and Sunday marks as good a time as any for him to corral his second career top 10 at the Roval, but he may not even need to.
Analysis: Seeing Larson lead just a single lap in a race at which he was the heavy favorite — and his teammate went on to win — isn’t quite as heartening a weekend in the Heartland the No. 5 team was hoping for, but as good as Hamlin’s points position is, Larson’s is even better at plus-54. It would be an all-time collapse for Larson to miss the Round of 8, particularly at a track he enters as the defending winner, so look for a refocused No. 5 team to lock in and be ready for the Round of 8 in two weeks.
Analysis: Don’t let the dip fool you — Bell had a strong Kansas showing, running third and leading his second-most laps in a race since a Phoenix win in March. The 2022 Roval winner is getting hot once again and could find his way to a second win there after turning in a P2 on NASCAR’s home court last fall.
Analysis: Byron has led exactly five laps since a dominant win at Iowa Speedway to open August, a lack of speed that is starting to look increasingly concerning as we hit the playoff halfway point. He also hasn’t led any laps at the Roval since 2021, but could actually see a decent turnaround this weekend after turning in a pair of top threes there the past two seasons.
Analysis: All this guy does is turn in top fives, with Sunday’s 13th such result of the season matching his entire top-five output from the past three seasons combined. No laps led and a career average finish of 23.8 in his four Roval starts don’t scream “win” this weekend, especially with a certain New Zealander in the field, but it’s hard not to see how he significantly betters his prior output there on Sunday.
Analysis: No. 22 crew chief Paul Wolfe told NASCAR.com after Loudon that he didn’t “feel good about Kansas at all” and, as it turns out, his concerns were well-founded, as Logano finished outside the top 20 after the weekend started poorly with an issue in practice. He’s on the edge of missing the Round of 8 at the Roval for the second year in a row, but actually sneakily excels there (8.6 average finish) despite no wins to his credit.
Analysis: There just doesn’t seem to be anything resembling race-winning speed in the No. 1 car right now as Chastain has led double-digit laps on a non-drafting track just once this year (in March), but he’s still consistent enough to be collecting points (35 points in an 11th-place Kansas run). He isn’t in a must-win situation despite being below the bubble, but still, the Roval isn’t the road course Chastain would hope to hinge his championship hopes on, with just one top 10 in six tries for an overall 24.0 average finish.
Analysis: Reddick gave it his all at Kansas, a potential winning spot for the lone remaining winless playoff driver, but he had to settle for a thin, 30-point P7 after failing to lead a lap or collect crucial stage points. Though it hasn’t happened yet, the Roval could potentially produce a victory for the prolific road-course winner, with a sterling 7.8 average finish there in his starts. Otherwise, we could see our first 2024 Championship 4 driver knocked out.
Analysis: All that to only pick up a point in the standings is wild, but there’s no denying that Wallace took a tremendous leap forward this year and deserves to be in the championship conversation, even if the end of his 2025 playoffs comes at Charlotte. There’s no guarantee it does, however, as despite road courses historically being Wallace’s pain point, No. 23 owns a respectable 11.5 average finish there in his four starts with 23XI Racing.
Analysis: Cindric has just one top 10 since Pocono Raceway, exactly none of which have come in the playoffs. Unfortunately, that’s no way to win a title, and No. 2 essentially has to win the Roval in order to advance. Fortunately for him, the accomplished road racer could actually do it, netting a P4 at the track last year. With none of his five 2025 top 10s coming on road courses, however, it doesn’t appear likely to happen.
In the latest episode of his “Actions Detrimental” podcast on Monday, Denny Hamlin said he holds no regrets for chasing the victory in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs race at Kansas Speedway despite last-lap contact with his employee, Bubba Wallace.
The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver also serves as the team co-owner of 23XI Racing, for which Wallace drives the No. 23 Toyota. Hamlin charged into Turn 3 on the final lap of the Hollywood Casino 400 alongside Wallace, and both slid up the track, leaving Wallace in the wall and Hamlin slow enough to allow Chase Elliott to dart past both and score the win in NASCAR Overtime.
Hamlin admits he would do things differently had he known how tight his car was to Wallace’s, but he did not anticipate saying ‘sorry’ soon, either.
“If (listeners are) wanting an apology, they can turn it off now,” Hamlin said on his weekly Dirty Mo Media show, “because I’m racing for the win and I definitely won’t apologize for racing for the win.”
Hamlin reiterated his commitment as driver of the JGR No. 11 when he is behind the wheel, meaning his goal is to get that car into Victory Lane no matter who stands in its way.
“On Sunday, I am the driver. The person in the 11 car is the driver,” Hamlin said. “That’s where the disconnect, I think, comes from, is that people expect me to be a different person. They expect me to be the guy with the 23XI shirt on when I’m in the 11 car, and that’s just not possible. It’s not possible.
“My responsibilities as team owner come Monday through Saturday. Like, it is not up to me to get 23XI into the Round of 8, if that makes any sense. That’s not my responsibility. My responsibility is to get the 11 into the Round of 8. I’m the driver on Sunday of that 11. Joe (Gibbs) pays me a lot of money to make sure that that car wins a championship, or has a shot to. And I mean, could you imagine the outrage if I had just backed off and let him have it? Holy [expletive]. People would lose their minds. But instead, I think Bubba said it very accurately — we were going for the win. Both guys were going for the win.”
Hamlin, who made his Cup Series debut at Kansas in 2005, currently holds 59 career wins in NASCAR’s premier series and sits 11th behind Kevin Harvick. Wallace is eyeing a spot in the Round of 8 for the first time in his blossoming career and would have been guaranteed that spot by winning Sunday’s race. But chasing a milestone win after signing a two-year contract extension over the summer, the 44-year-old Hamlin is not willing to back down when staring a potential victory in the eyes.
“My mentality into the last corner was, I hope I win,” Hamlin said. “I’ve got 70 races left in my career. Three opportunities left to win a championship. I can win a championship as an owner for decades. The window is closing. Sixty is right in front of me at the track I got my very first start. Like, I want to be sympathetic and I am sympathetic and I hate it that the 23 is below the cut, but 23XI ran like dog-[expletive] at [expletive] New Hampshire and that’s why they’re below the cut. And I hate that for the drivers because unfortunately they had to drive that.”
Hamlin explained his goal entering Turn 3 was to side-draft Wallace and draw Wallace back, which ideally would have allowed Hamlin to drive to the bottom and clear Wallace entering the corner. Instead, Hamlin explained, Wallace side-drafted back and added an estimated 80% increase of rear downforce and Hamlin’s car couldn’t turn as well as he anticipated, sending both cars up the track.
“I think there’s only a couple ways to win it,” Hamlin said. “I run lower on corner entry, even though my angle is horrible, but I at least hit the bottom and create a gap between me and him; or I need to let off sooner, count on him missing the corner and then trying to get it back on the exit. That’s the only thing I feel like, if I could do it again, I’d like to try that. I’m not saying it would have been successful, but that’d be something that I will psychoanalyze of, here’s what I think I could have done better if I had known all these factors.”
As Hamlin alluded, Wallace now enters Round of 12 finale at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval 10th in the standings, 26 points beneath the cutline to advance into the Round of 8. A win for Wallace at Kansas would have locked his spot into the next round instead. Asked if their Sunday contact would make things awkward walking into 23xI Racing Monday, Hamlin understood if that answer was yes, especially after Hamlin’s second collision with a team car in as many weeks.
“I think that’s where feelings can get hurt is when you have expectations and those expectations aren’t met,” Hamlin said. “It’s why I lost my temper last weekend is that I had an expectation. I thought we knew that if you’re in the playoffs versus out, the rules are different. And so the actions didn’t meet my expectations. And so then I got hot. And so I think sure. If you think that I owe you this or that, your feelings are probably hurt today. But I can tell you, anybody that had the run that I had off of Turn 2 (and) got to the inside of the 23, any car that was on the race track was going to do that exact same thing.”
Wallace, who qualified for the playoffs by winning the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in July, has had a career year in some measures. The Brickyard marked his first crown-jewel victory and he’s led a career-high 368 laps in 2025, all with rookie crew chief Charles Denike calling the shots. Hamlin has taken notice of just how dramatic the No. 23 team’s rise from past years has been.
“Bubba’s turnaround over the last few years has just been — I can’t believe it, truthfully,” Hamlin said. “The maturity he has shown — he’s been the lead car at 23XI really the entire year. I think the 45 (Tyler Reddick) might have him on average finish because he doesn’t have as many DNFs, but the 23 has been the fastest freakin’ car we’ve got, and that’s something that just, I can’t believe it.
“Whether it’s Charles Denike and his setups or Bubba’s mentality, something changed over there that has made Bubba someone you’re going to have to contend with every single week. And you’re gonna have to contend with him this weekend, by the way. If you haven’t seen his road-course skills, they’ve dramatically improved. I couldn’t be more proud of that 23 team and what they’re doing week in, week out.”
Hamlin enters the Round of 12 finale fourth in the playoff standings, 48 points above the provisional cutline heading to the Charlotte Roval on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).