SONOMA, Calif. – Dominant in defense of last year’s victory in the Toyota/Save Mart 350, Martin Truex Jr. held off Kyle Busch, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, to win Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series event at Sonoma Raceway.

With three-lap fresher tires after the final set of green-flag pit stops at the 2.52-mile road course — which for the first time since 1997 featured use of the carousel connecting Turns 4 and 7 — Busch closed an 8.269-second gap to slightly more than a second over the last 24 laps.

But the driver of the No. 18 Toyota could get no closer, given that Truex’s No. 19 Camry had better drive off the corners at the 12-turn course and was able to keep Busch at bay. Truex led three times for 59 of the 90 laps, including the final 24.

RELATED: Official race results
SHOP: Truex gear

“I just dug down deep and tried to be smooth and hit my marks,” said Truex, who won for the fourth time this season — all in the last eight races — the third time at Sonoma (including two straight, and with three different car owners) and the 23rd time in his career. “Luckily I began with a big enough gap where I could get away and not feel too much pressure.

“It was definitely a battle going on, as far as the race there at the end for us on tires. It felt terrible the last 20 laps. The last 10 it just felt like it was on ice — just no grip anywhere. I’m really proud of all these guys and everyone on this team and everyone back at JGR.

“What a season we’ve turned this into. This is great, man, unbelievable. Hopefully, we can keep it going.”

Joe Gibbs Racing has won 10 of the first 16 races this season. Truex, who moved from now-defunct Furniture Row Racing to JGR this year, has now posted at least four victories in four straight seasons, including the current one.

And with Matt DiBenedetto running a career-best fourth and Stage 2 winner Denny Hamlin driving from 26th to fifth in the final stage of the race after pitting during the second break, Toyota placed four drivers in the top five. The only interloper was third-place Ryan Blaney in a Team Penske Ford.

With four laps left, Busch had trimmed Truex’s advantage to 1.542 seconds, but Truex ultimately expanded the edge to 1.861 seconds at the finish.

WATCH: Busch ‘pumped’ with second

“Yeah, any time I had to lean on the left rear, I just didn’t have the drive that I needed,” Busch said. “Actually tried to hold on to it, trying to save it. I knew that was going to be our problem — that had been our problem all day long. You get closer, you’re like, ‘OK, I can get him, I better go, pounce on him fast, so then he doesn’t have the time to pick up the pace.’

“But it didn’t work. He was obviously saving a lot. I knew he was going to be saving a lot, have enough to be able to most likely hold us off. I was right. I still tried everything I could to get there and ran real hard. … Sucks to finish second to a teammate, but it’s good for the company. Overall Martin is really, really good here. I’m just pumped that I actually ran good here.”

Kevin Harvick and Ryan Newman claimed the sixth and seventh spots. Erik Jones, who started from the rear of the field after his team made repairs to the left rear quarter of his car post-qualifying, was eighth in the fourth JGR Toyota.

Aric Almirola and polesitter Kyle Larson completed the top 10. The winner of three straight poles at Sonoma, Larson posted his best finish at the road course.

The race ran caution-free, except for the two stage breaks. Front-row starter William Byron grabbed the lead from Larson on the first lap and won the stage wire-to-wire, but he lost track position while pitting under caution during the stage break and finished 19th.

Chase Elliott’s hopes for a Sonoma Raceway victory hit a final-stage snag Sunday as his Hendrick Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet lost power and went behind the wall for diagnosis.

Elliott had led three laps and was scored in third place behind race leader Martin Truex Jr. on Lap 60 of the 90-lap race, when he reported “blew up, blew up” as he coasted down pit road. His No. 9 crew raised the hood and performed some cursory checks before pushing the car to the garage, out of the race for good.

RELATED: Full race results

“I don’t know. I don’t think I missed any shifts or anything,” Elliott told his team on the radio, saying that the car had not shown any abnormal signs before its mechanical issue. Bill Elliott, his Hall of Fame father, was on spotter duty for the team this weekend and reported that the car had misfired on the final time past his location.

“We lost oil pressure but there is no oil leaking, so it must have been a belt, I guess,” Elliott said later. “And obviously when that happens, you’re not getting oil so things are going to not work when they’re not being loosened up and have oil to work with. I’ve been with Hendrick Motorsports for a number of years now running their engines, and I think this is the second time we ever broke one. So, I’ll take those odds all day long.”

Eight laps after Elliott pulled off the track, the team informed primary spotter Eddie D’Hondt that the No. 9 was done for the day in the Toyota/Save Mart 350. Elliott had finished in the top 10 in the past two Sonoma races, but was 37th Sunday, losing ground in the standings as a result.

Elliott has virtually clinched a spot in the 16-driver playoff field with his victory in April at Talladega Superspeedway.

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give you the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | How to find NBCSN

Monday, June 24
5 p.m., NASCAR America Monday, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, June 25
2:30 p.m., Glory Road: Modified Mastery (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
5 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
8:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

Wednesday, June 26
5 p.m., NASCAR America: “Motormouths,” NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
noon: NASCAR Coast to Coast

Thursday, June 27
5 p.m., NASCAR America: “The Motorsports Hour,” NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR K&N Series: Carneros 200, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

On MRN
1 p.m.:MRN Classic Races

Friday, June 28
2 p.m., NASCAR Decades — The 1980s (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Decades — The 1990s (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Decades — The 1990s (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
4 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series First Practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
5 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Qualifying, FS2/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
7 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Final Practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
8 p.m, NASCAR Presents: Davey Lives On (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
8:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1/FOX Sports App
9 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Camping World 225, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN:
9 p.m., NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Camping World 225

Saturday, June 29
10 a.m., NASCAR Decades — The 1990s (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Decades — The 1990s (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
11 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series First Practice at Chicagoland Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN 2)
noon, NASCAR Xfinity Series Qualifying at Chicagoland Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
1 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Final Practice at Chicagoland Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN 2)
3 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Countdown to Green-Chicagoland, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3:30 p.m. NASCAR Xfinity Series Camping World 300, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN 2)
6 p.m. NASCAR Xfinity Series Camping World 300 Post-Race Show, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6:30 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Qualifying at Chicagoland Speedway, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN App)

On MRN:
11 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series First Practice
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Final Practice
3 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Camping World 300
6:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Qualifying

Sunday, June 30
8:30 a.m. NASCAR Xfinity Series Camping World 300 (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
11 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Final Practice at Chicagoland Speedway (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1/FOX Sports App
noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Qualifying at Chicagoland Speedway (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
1 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
2:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Countdown to Green — Chicagoland, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Camping World 400, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN 1,4,5)
6 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Camping World 400 Post-Race Show NBCSN/NBC Sports App

On MRN:
2 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Camping World 400

Denny Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart’s decision to play for stage points paid off with a stage win in Stage 2 of the Toyota/Save Mart 350. This is Hamlin’s second stage win of the season.

With three laps to go, Martin Truex Jr. led the first three cars of himself, Chase Elliott and Kyle Busch to pit road for service ahead of the end of the stage and Hamlin took over the lead. Those three drivers did earn some stage points, though, as they cycled out in the top 10 at the end of the stage.

RELATED: Stage 2 results

Clint Bowyer made an unscheduled pit stop at Lap 28 for a loose wheel that brought him down pit road out of the top seven.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 10
2 Brad Keselowski Team Penske 9
3 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports 8
4 Joey Logano Team Penske 7
5 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing 6
6 Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing 5
7 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing 4
8 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports 3
9 Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing 2
10 Bubba Wallace Richard Petty Motorsports 1

Stage 1 recap

William Byron took the lead early on the opening lap and didn’t look back to win the opening stage of Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway. Byron led all 20 circuits to score his first stage win of 2019.

Denny Hamlin took second, while Joey Logano came in third, but reported an electrical issue late in the run. Polesitter Kyle Larson and Aric Almirola completed the top five.

RELATED: Stage 1 results

Strategy was the name of the game late in the stage as several cars in the top 10 — Chase Elliott, Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch and Ryan Blaney — pitted to position themselves better for later in the race and eschewed stage points in the opening stanza.

Finish Driver Team Points
1 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports 10
2 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing 9
3 Joey Logano Team Penske 8
4 Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing 7
5 Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing 6
6 Chris Buescher JTG Daugherty Racing 5
7 Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports 4
8 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing 3
9 Paul Menard Wood Brothers Racing 2
10 Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports 1

SONOMA, Calif. – From headlining a sold-out Madison Square Garden and the Staples Center to the Sydney Opera House in Australia, stand-up comedian and actor Gabriel Iglesias does everything “big.”

So, of course, he’s up to the task – “OH, yeah,” he said – of the pressure and responsibility that comes along with driving the pace car for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway.

PHOTOS: Scenes from Sonoma | Full schedule for Sonoma

In fact, he was a little bummed there are rules in place that keep him from putting the pedal to the metal and really letting loose before drivers take the green flag on the 12-turn, 2.52-mile road course.

“They told me that I was only going to be able to go 40 mph and I was like, ‘Really? That’s it? I can do that in my bus,’ ” Iglesias told NASCAR.com Sunday morning. “But when you’re out there and you’re driving and you’re hitting those turns, that’s when you feel it. It’s different when you’ve got a freakin’ bunch of cars behind you, too.”

Iglesias — known by his fans as “Fluffy” —  is the star and executive producer of the recently worldwide-premiered, multi-cam comedy series for Netflix, Mr. Iglesias, where he plays a good-natured public high school teacher who works at his alma mater. The series’ 10 half-hour episodes premiered this weekend to an “incredible response,” he said.

It’s not the native Californian’s first taste of NASCAR – he’s been to Auto Club Speedway and was on hand for the closest Daytona 500 finish in NASCAR history in 2016 ­– and it’s clear it won’t be his last.

RELATED: Closest Daytona 500 finishes in history | Buy 2020 Daytona 500 tickets

“Daytona was my first real NASCAR experience, and that’s a hell of a way to lose your NASCARd,” he said. “I remember that that race was stupid close, within inches. I remember how excited people got and I thought it was always that close. We were in the infield and I noticed it’s its own little community with where all the RVs and buses are at then a little bit down the way there’s some of the smaller RVs and cars and you keep going down and it’s tent city. … That was the first time I ever played cornhole and the first time I ate alligator.

“I’m a big fan of wrestling and I’m just a fan in general of events and this is right there in the vein of wrestling for me but it’s a little bit more … like, you can’t just walk into a wrestling locker room and talk to wrestlers while they’re lacing up their boots or oiling themselves up or doing some pushups, whereas here, fans are literally walking up to the cars while they’re revving them and putting gas in them and I’m like … this is very, very hands-on and I think people really appreciate that. … The fans appreciate that so much, because there’s so many events that happen that they can go to, but they’ll never get as close as they can get here.”

Not only is the NASCAR at-track experience a one-of-a-kind animal of its own volition, but there are also some parallels with the long road on the rise to stand-up comedy stardom, especially at his level.

Teams and drivers have to scratch and claw for every inch and every opportunity on the way up for years upon years – a hunger that can never cease even once a talent hits the upper echelon.

“(Comedy) is a hard grind, and some never get there,” Iglesias said. “I think it’s just one of those things where you have to constantly evolve and stay consistent. Any time you let off the gas, no pun intended, that’s when you’re going to run into problems. That’s why I tell people when they ask me, ‘When are you going to take a vacation?’ and I say ‘I don’t, because there’s somebody coming up right behind me and I’m always fighting for my spot.’ ”

That’s why Iglesias never plans to take his foot off the gas — not only behind the wheel of the pace car but with his comedy career, too.

Four cars will start from the rear in Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 for various reasons: the No. 41 of Daniel Suarez, the No. 20 of Erik Jones, the No. 15 of Ross Chastain and the No. 51 JJ Yeley.

RELATED: Sonoma starting lineup

Suarez’s No. 41, which was slated to start fifth, had an engine change that necessitated the move.

Jones, who suffered a flat left rear tire during qualifying and was starting 32nd, had an unapproved adjustment made on his No. 20 Toyota.

Chastain, who won Saturday’s Gander Outdoors Truck Series race at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway, had a driver change after Kyle Weatherman qualified the No. 15 for him in Sonoma.

Yeley’s No. 51 was slated to start 36th, but will start at the rear for unapproved adjustments.

CONCORD, N.C. (June 23, 2019) – Amid ongoing preparations to become “ROVAL™-ready” for the second running of the historic Bank of America ROVAL™ 400 on Sept. 27-29, Charlotte Motor Speedway officials on Sunday announced groundbreaking changes to the 2.28-mile road course oval’s backstretch chicane.

An expanded configuration of the challenging chicane will create additional passing opportunities and more side-by-side action — increasing the drama and raising the stakes throughout all 17 turns of the revolutionary course that will conclude the first round of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoffs. The chicane’s original layout was 32 feet wide at its widest point, while the new version will be 54 feet at its widest point and will feature additional runoff areas which were unavailable in its first iteration.

Speedway operations staff, who execute the oval-to-ROVAL™ switch, moved back parts of the inside wall near oval Turn 3 to accommodate more on-track space for the updated chicane.

RELATED: Buy tickets for the Bank of America ROVAL 400

Charlotte New Chicane Inset 2
Rendering courtesy of Charlotte Motor Speedway

“The Bank of America ROVAL™ 400 is all about excitement and creating memorable moments for our fans,” said Marcus Smith, the president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports, Inc. “Having our backstretch chicane upgraded will give drivers an additional opportunity to go for a season-making or season-breaking pass like we saw on the frontstretch chicane last year. Every turn matters on the ROVAL™.”

The new turns will require heavier braking and a sharper entry, but a wider radius promises to provide drivers with the ideal mix of risk-taking opportunities and a slightly increased margin for error on exit — if the driver’s entry is correct. The track distance and turn count will not be affected by the new layout, which featured input from NASCAR drivers Kyle Larson, Ryan Blaney and Justin Allgaier, as well as former Formula 1 racers Alex Wurz and Max Papis.

Construction on the chicane began this week and is expected to conclude in early August.

In addition to the restructured backstretch chicane, speedway officials also announced an increase in race distance for the Sept. 28 NASCAR Xfinity Series race. The 200-kilometer, 55-lap event will become the 250-kilometer, 67-lap Drive for the Cure 250 presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina. In a Sunday press conference, the track revealed the stages for that race would be 20-20-27.

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) heads to Sonoma Raceway for the first road course race of the 2019 season. In an added twist, this will be the first time since 1997 that the series races on the full 2.52-mile layout, which includes the “Carousel” section, instead of the 1.99 mile layout used the past two decades.

Sonoma is a very technical road course, much slower than its longtime counterpart on the Cup schedule, Watkins Glen.

An important note: Do not overvalue overall road course performance when betting this race. All of my top performing statistical models show that overall road course performance is not a significant predictive factor.

Instead, track history at Sonoma far outweighs performance across all the road courses (including the Charlotte Roval which was run for the first time in last year’s playoffs). Other top factors in my models include both short and long-run speed in practice, and year-to-date performance across all races.

One other major factor that is not predictive of finishing position or winning: starting position. Since 2005, eight of the 14 winners have started 10th or worse, including two drivers winning despite starting in the 30s.

On the flip side, only two drivers have won from the front row (both starting second), and only four drivers starting inside the top five have won. If books overreact to qualifying, this is an opportunity to jump on some value from elite drivers staring mid-pack, or fade subpar Sonoma drivers starting toward the front.

With that in mind, let’s look at the top futures bets for Sunday’s race, including some very surprising odds for the driver who sits atop my model.

Clint Bowyer +2500 to Win

First, I should note that at multiple sites across the industry, there are some egregious lines. This is one of them.

Bowyer is a former Sonoma winner, and the favorite to win the race according to my top two statistical models. One of the models looks at predicted average finish, and Bowyer leads that with a projected average finish of 6.0 over 10,000 simulations of incident-free races.

To show you how far ahead Bowyer comes, Kurt Busch is second with an average finish of 6.7. The other model only looks at probability to finish top three, and Bowyer again leads the field with a 59.4% chance in incident-free races.

Bowyer has a strong track history, with seven straight top-10 finishes if you remove his one race driving for the underfunded, and now-defunct HScott Motorsports. Six of those seven finishes were also in the top five. Bowyer paved the way in 10-lap speed in final practice, nearly 0.4 mph per lap quicker than second place.

Bowyer is at +1600 at DraftKings, and +650 at William Hill and +600 at Westgate. Bowyer is not being priced as the favorite, but he should be with the favorites at around +500 per my model.

I am betting him at anything above +2500, but will also probably throw in a +650 bet at William Hill (or hold out for +700) at a book where the lines aren’t out of whack.

Jimmie Johnson +340 to Win Group C

  • Brad Keselowski +190
  • Daniel Suarez +325
  • Ryan Blaney +330
  • Jimmie Johnson +340

According to my model, Keselowski and Johnson are neck-and-neck in regards to average finish, with Keselowski edging out Johnson with a projected average finish of 9.59 to 9.63 — a statistical tie. Blaney and Suarez come in significantly behind at 10.9 and 13.8 respectively.

So what does Johnson have going for him this weekend? He has raced at Sonoma 17 times, with 15 incident-free races under his belt. In each of those 15 races Johnson finished 17th or better. Notably, in the higher downforce era of the Gen-6 car, he’s finished ninth, sixth and seventh, while Keselowski has struggled to finishes of 21st, 22nd, and 19th. Keselowski has finished ahead of Johnson once in nine tries at Sonoma.

Looking at on-track activity this weekend, Johnson practiced fourth and 15th, while Keselowski was 19th in both sessions. Johnson did not make a 10-lap run, but Keselowski was seventh out of 19 drivers who ran at least 10 consecutive laps. Blaney and Suarez were 13th and 15th in that category. Only Blaney posted better single-lap times than Johnson, but not by much. Johnson’s far superior track history is a bigger factor.

Johnson should actually be the favorite in this group with Keselowski slightly favored over Blaney and Suarez in a clear fourth. I’d bet Johnson down to +250. My model shows it’s also a profitable long-term play to bet both Johnson and Blaney in this group at these prices and hope either one beats Keselowski.

Other Futures Bets

There are a bunch more futures bets that are very out of whack when compared to my model:

  • Martin Truex Jr. +640 to win. I’d bet this down to +450. Truex is a co-favorite per my model along with Bowyer.
  • Chris Buescher +75000 to win. Bet down to +15000.
  • Jimmie Johnson +4500 to win. Bet down to +3000.
  • Alex Bowman +5000 to win. Bet down to +2500.

Ross Chastain corralled a redemptive victory Saturday night in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, emerging from a late-race restart at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway in the final event of the Triple Truck Challenge.

Chastain’s Niece Motorsport No. 45 Chevrolet led 21 of the 160 laps in the CarShield 200, collecting an extra $50,000 payday to round out the three-race Triple Truck Challenge initiative — also known as “The Trip.” He held off the primary challenger Christian Eckes down the stretch, gaining track position from a fuel-only stop on his final trip to pit road.

Chastain’s second victory of the season was his first at the 1.25-mile Gateway track and the second of his Gander Trucks career. He was flagged as the winner last Sunday at Iowa Speedway, but he was disqualified and demoted to a last-place finish after his truck failed post-race inspection. Saturday at the Illinois track, Chastain’s truck was given the all-clear signal with no issues in inspection after the race.

“I didn’t want to take tires and then it was up to me to freakin’ hold ’em off,” Chastain said of the fuel-only stop that left him with worn tires for the final sprint. “I don’t know how, but oohhh, I’m going to take that money home and they’re not taking it from us this time.”

RELATED: Race results

Chastain changed his series eligibility earlier this month, declaring on June 4 that he would compete for Gander Trucks championship points after accruing Xfinity Series points from the start of the season. That left him with zero points halfway through the Gander Trucks’ 16-race regular season and meant that his win in the series’ event at Kansas in May did not count toward the series title race.

The victory checked one requirement for Chastain to qualify for playoff eligibility. The other is a jump into the top 20 in the series’ standings; Saturday’s result unofficially moved him to 26th in the standings.

“I can’t believe it, but I can, man,” said Phil Gould, Chastain’s crew chief. “This is tough bunch. This has been a tough, tough week for this team and everybody involved. To come back and battle back through that adversity, that’s pretty damn awesome.”

Todd Gilliland matched a career-best finish in second, his Kyle Busch Motorsports No. 4 Toyota just .704 seconds behind at the checkered flag. Stewart Friesen, Chandler Smith and Brett Moffitt, last week’s winner, completed the top five in the finishing order. Grant Enfinger swept both stages, leading 52 of the first 72 laps in the ThorSport No. 98 Ford before fading to a sixth-place result.

Myatt Snider took 10th place in a substitute role for the suspended Johnny Sauter in the ThorSport Racing No. 13 Ford. NASCAR competition officials banned Sauter for one race after the veteran rammed rival Austin Hill in last weekend’s event at Iowa Speedway. Snider’s fill-in start was just his third appearance in the Gander Trucks tour this season.

Eckes started from the pole position after inclement weather canceled qualifying. That forced officials to set the lineup according to team owner points, placing Eckes’ Kyle Busch Motorsports No. 51 Toyota in the first starting spot. Eckes led 57 laps, but finished 14th after a final-lap spinout.

The event was full of tributes to longtime Truck Series team owner and St. Louis native Mike Mittler, who died May 10 after a long bout with cancer. Mittler’s family members were invited to the event as pre-race dignitaries, and all race teams stood atop the pit wall on Lap 63 in recognition of Mittler’s long-running truck number.

The track renamed the prize for its annual Gander Trucks race the Mittler Memorial Trophy.

Ty Gibbs, the 16-year-old grandson of Coach Joe Gibbs, scored his first victory in the ARCA Menards Series on Saturday night, converting a last-lap pass on Sam Mayer to win at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway.

Gibbs’ No. 18 Toyota dove underneath Mayer’s No. 21 Chevrolet with a bold move entering the final corner before getting a clear path to the checkered flag for the Day to Day Coffee 150. Mayer bumped Gibbs’ car after the finish to express his unhappiness.

“He left the door open. It was fair game,” Gibbs told MavTV post-race. “I got bumped by him at Madison and got spun — or Salem — so it’s fair game, though. He left the door open. He had it won if he wouldn’t have left it wide open. I don’t know what he was doing, but we won the race.”

Gibbs rallied from a late-race pit stop that shuffled him back to eighth place in the running order for the final restart. He calmly picked his way through to contend for the lead before making his move on Mayer. Christian Eckes slipped by Mayer to grab second place at the finish.

“I wouldn’t really call it a pass,” said Mayer, who took third in his seventh ARCA start. “… You just move on honestly. You’ve just got to just look at video and see what you can do to fix the problem and get on the other side of things.”

Gibbs had netted three runner-up finishes before breaking through in his sixth appearance in the ARCA Menards Series. His grandfather was on hand, anxiously watching from atop the team hauler.

“You know you go to wins and everything for everybody, but when it’s your grandson or so, there’s no feeling like this, I’ll just put it that way,” Coach Gibbs said. “I was so uptight. The Cup races, I can kind of relax, but this, I get uptight.”