Daytona dazzled us with another epic finish that saw Ryan Blaney triumph in a four-wide thriller at the line to earn his second win of the 2025.

With the regular season now in the rearview mirror and full attention on the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, several drivers carry some strong momentum into the final 10 races, while a few are on the back foot with limited chances to right the ship before the year comes to a close.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 3rd

Finished: 6th

What happened: The 2021 titleholder continues to make steady progress on drafting tracks. Larson not only claimed Stage 1 by a slim margin over polesitter Blaney, but followed it up with a 10th place in Stage 2, and he spent the majority of the race setting the pace as leader.

What’s next: Larson shakes off the summer slump he’s had the second half of the regular season and carries momentum into the Round of 16 as the No. 1 seed. Plus, tracks like Darlington and Bristol shape up well for him to find Victory Lane again.

Kyle Larson drives at Daytona.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

2. Justin Haley, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 37th

Finished: 3rd

What happened: Haley was 0.036 seconds from snatching a playoff bid. The Spire driver charged from deep in the field and quickly established himself as a frontrunner, netting an average running position of 12.9, finishing fifth in Stage 1, along with two laps led. His podium finish also marks his first top five on an oval since September 2022.

What’s next: While Haley won’t join the 16-driver playoff field, this run does give the No. 7 crew some much-needed momentum to finish out the season where they sit 30th in points. Plus, with how much verve Haley showed on the high banks, he can be in the mix for a spoiler win at Talladega.

Justin Haley drives at Daytona.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

3. Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota

Started: 26th

Finished: 5th

What happened: What a story it could’ve been to see the iconic No. 43 in Victory Lane at Daytona, alas, Jones had to settle for a fifth-place effort. The finish marks Jones’ third top five of the season, matching his results from Texas and EchoPark Speedway in a year where Legacy Motor Club continues to make positive strides.

What’s next: The two-time Southern 500 winner has now doubled his top-10 finishes from a season ago. Momentum is building, and Jones heads into the final 10-race stretch with confidence on his side.

Erik Jones drives at Daytona.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

MORE: Playoffs Grid Challenge presented by Goodyear

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Started: 6th

Finished: 25th

What happened: Coming to a drafting track, you expect Hamlin to run up front, but that wasn’t the case at Daytona, with an average running position of 23.5. Hamlin was collected in the big wreck on Lap 27, then had a tire go down early in the final stage that ruined his evening.

What’s next: Hamlin entered Daytona tied on playoff points with William Byron at the top of the provisional playoff table; he now leaves Florida as the third seed. Luckily, tracks like Darlington and Bristol suit him well as he chases that elusive first title.

Denny Hamlin drives at Daytona.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2. Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota

Started: 22nd

Finished: 37th

What happened: Wallace charged up front quickly in Stage 1. However, that same Lap 27 wreck ended his night early and hopes of adding more points to his playoff charge, marking it as his seventh DNF of 2025 — tied for the most.

What’s next: He now heads to “The Lady in Black” next weekend, sitting ninth in the playoff standings and will need to find some pace to stay there after back-to-back weeks outside the top 25. The first round of tracks also isn’t favorable, with a mixed bag of results at Darlington, Gateway and Bristol in his Cup career.

Bubba Wallace wrecks at Daytona.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

3. Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Started: 14th

Finished: 33rd

What happened: Busch needed to win at the “World Center of Racing” to advance into the playoffs and had the speed to do it. Unfortunately, “Rowdy” was also involved in the Lap 27 multicar wreck, which sent him behind the wall during the first half and effectively foiled his race.

What’s next: The two-time Cup champion is still on his career-longest winless streak, which is now 83 races. The best he can do now is play spoiler. With a runner-up finish at Darlington last year, a 2023 win at Gateway (his last win) and a long history of success at Bristol, those tracks set up some opportunity.

Kyle Busch wrecks at Daytona.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

With Ryan Blaney winning his second race of the 2025 season, Tyler Reddick and Alex Bowman clinched the final two spots in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs in Saturday’s regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway.

Both of their spots came with adversity, knowing a new winner could potentially knock either driver out of the postseason.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Reddick went around at Lap 18 after contact with Zane Smith and nosed into the inside wall. His No. 45 23XI Racing team made repairs, keeping the Toyota driver on the lead lap for the ensuing restart.

Just four laps later, a big crash down the frontstretch claimed Alex Bowman, who entered Saturday’s race 60 points above the elimination line. The Hendrick Motorsports team attempted to fix the battered Chevrolet in the DVP (damaged vehicle policy) area before series officials determined the No. 48 couldn’t return to the track. Bowman’s DNF locked Reddick into the playoffs.

RELATED: Go deeper with the 16 playoff drivers

From that point on, all Bowman could do was wait. Several other winless drivers competed for the Daytona victory in the closing laps, including Daniel Suárez, Justin Haley and Cole Custer, but Blaney held the trio off in a four-wide finish to cement Bowman’s spot in the 10-race battle for the Bill France Cup.

Including Blaney, fourteen drivers secured playoff spots with wins earlier in the season. They are: Denny Hamlin (4 wins), Shane van Gisbergen (4 wins), Kyle Larson (3 wins), Christopher Bell (3 wins), William Byron (2 wins), Blaney (2 wins), Chase Briscoe, Bubba Wallace, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Josh Berry and Austin Dillon.

MORE: Playoffs Grid Challenge presented by Goodyear | Printable Cup Series Playoffs bracket

See the standings heading into next Sunday’s Cup Series Playoffs opener at Darlington Raceway (6 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). The bottom four drivers will be eliminated after the first three races.

PositionDriverPoints+/-
1Kyle Larson2032+26
2William Byron2032+26
3Denny Hamlin2029+23
4Ryan Blaney2026+20
5Christopher Bell2023+17
6Shane van Gisbergen2022+16
7Chase Elliott2013+7
8Chase Briscoe2010+4
9Bubba Wallace2008+2
10Austin Cindric2008+2
11Ross Chastain2007+1
12Joey Logano2007+1
ELIMINATION LINE
13Josh Berry2006-1
14Tyler Reddick2006-1
15Austin Dillon2005-2
16Alex Bowman2002-5

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Not that a rescue mission was top of mind for Ryan Blaney, but his dramatic victory in Saturday night’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway saved Alex Bowman from playoff oblivion.

Blaney rocketed forward from 12th in the running order with three laps left in the final NASCAR Cup Series regular-season race and crossed the finish line 0.031 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Suárez.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Justin Haley was 0.036 seconds behind Blaney in a three-wide photo finish for second place, with Cole Custer, who led the next-to-last lap, 0.049 seconds back in fourth.

A victory by Suárez, Haley or Custer would have eliminated Bowman from the playoffs. Instead, the driver of the No.48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet earned the 16th and final postseason berth on points.

Blaney’s second win of the season, his second at Daytona and 15th of his career, vaulted the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford into second place in the regular-season standings, earning him a bonus of 10 playoff points.

The victory was the first for a Ford driver since Blaney triumphed on June 1 at Nashville Superspeedway.

RELATED: Go deeper with the 16 playoff drivers

“What a wild last couple laps, honestly,” Blaney said. “I was with Cole, I kind of asked him on the restart, if you go to the top, I’m going with you. We kind of just waited and waited, and then the opportunity came, and he made a good move to get to the top, and we were able to really get good shoves.

“A couple good guys behind us, and then it kind of cleared the way for us when the 7 (Haley) and 41 (Custer) got racing, and I was able to clear on the top and just barely hold out for the win.”

In fact, Blaney got the opportunity he needed when Custer moved off the top lane to block Haley’s strong run. At that point, Blaney had enough momentum to carry him to the finish line with roughly a half-car-length to spare.

In a race that featured 44 lead changes among 19 drivers, Blaney and teammate Joey Logano each led 27 laps. Logano spent much of the final stage out front before spinning in front of Erik Jones with 11 laps left.

SHOP: Cup winner gear

Jones finished fifth, followed by Stage 1 winner Kyle Larson, Chris Buescher, Ty Gibbs, Josh Berry and Chase Elliott. Ross Chastain won the second stage before finishing 15th.

For Bowman, a window of opportunity in the early going opened and shut in short order. On Lap 18, Todd Gilliland lost control of the middle lane and took the Toyota of Tyler Reddick with him.

Reddick nosed into the inside wall and was able to continue after repairs, but the accident gave Bowman hope of overcoming his 29-point deficit to the 23XI driver and locking into the playoffs.

That hope was short-lived. On Lap 27, Bowman was collected in a 12-car pileup on the frontstretch triggered by chain reaction contact between Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Joey Logano and Kyle Busch.

“Everything was happening pretty quick there,” Wallace said. “The hit from the 5 (Larson) shoved me down there, and it was like I got shoved up by the 22 (Logano), and the 12 (Blaney) moved up. He was trying to just move up and take the lane. But, oh well. I hate it. 20th or 22nd to the lead in a short amount of time…

“All in all, we’re locked in (the playoffs), and we’ll get focused for Darlington.”

The wreck knocked Bowman out of the race. Busch’s last hope for the postseason also ended in the garage, as did that of formidable superspeedway racer Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

“It was all very out of our control,” said Bowman, who had to watch the rest of the race from the sidelines and hope no new winner would oust him from the playoffs. “I hate that we tanked so bad the first run.

“The bottom lane just fell apart behind us. We had to overcome that, but we had gotten back to the back side of the top 10. Unfortunately, it just didn’t work out.”

What did work out was Blaney’s victory, which kept Bowman’s championship aspirations alive. He joins Hendrick teammates William Byron (the Regular Season Champion), Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott in the playoffs.

MORE: Playoffs Grid Challenge presented by Goodyear

With the field of 16 drivers set, the 10-race playoffs will begin Sunday, Aug. 31, at Darlington Raceway in the Cook Out Southern 500 (6 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

NOTE: Inspection in the Cup Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Blaney as the winner and solidifying the playoff field. No cars will return to the NASCAR R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina.

Daytona calamity reared its head late in Stage 1 Saturday night as a multicar incident broke out entering the tri-oval on Lap 27.

Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace and Kyle Busch collided together racing three-wide tight down the frontstretch after a push from the No. 5 Chevrolet of Kyle Larson knocked Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota to the left, turning him into the No. 22 Ford and No. 8 Chevrolet.

Twelve cars were involved in the wreck, most notably Alex Bowman, who entered the regular-season finale as the last driver in the playoffs at 60 points above the elimination line entering the race. Denny Hamlin, Austin Cindric, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Noah Gragson were also among those involved.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Bowman and Tyler Reddick entered the 160-lap event as the two drivers above the elimination line without a victory. Reddick was caught up in a two-car tango off Turn 4 at Lap 18 with Todd Gilliland that caused front-end damage to the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota.

Bowman started in the second spot, but lost significant momentum early on in the low groove and had faded to 30th place by Lap 6. He had worked the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet back up to 10th at the time of the incident.

“I mean, honestly, I don’t think any of us expected the bottom lane to fall apart like it did in the beginning of the race and us to lose all our track position. That was pretty surprising,” Bowman said. “Just couldn’t get going, and we chipped away at getting our track position back and got up — I don’t know where we were, 10th or backside of the top 10, somewhere around there — right when we crashed. When they crashed in front of us, there wasn’t anything we could have done different to get through that all.

“I mean, I hate it for everybody at Hendrick Motorsports. They work really hard. The last 10 or 11 weeks has been really fun to be a part of. We’ve been really strong, and that’s been cool.”

Reddick continued in the race on the lead lap, but Bowman’s night came to an end shortly after his No. 48 crew assessed the damage in the Cup Series garage.

Wallace, who led a lap early and clinched a playoff spot last month at Indianapolis, was among those sidelined by the crash damage with 133 laps still to go.

“Got up to the lead fairly quick, so I thought we were playing all of our cards right,” Wallace said. “But just in the blink of an eye, which is what happens here at Daytona, it can be all taken away from you. It is what it is. We’ll re-rack, take Sunday off and go focus on Darlington.”

The crash forced an eight-minute, 30-second red flag for clean-up.

With Ryan Blaney winning the regular-season finale, it solidifies the 16-driver Cup Series Playoff field, which includes Reddick, who took the checkered flag in 21st place, and Bowman, who was credited with a 36th-place finish.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — In conjunction with Saturday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Raceway (7:30 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock), iRacing Studios and NASCAR unveiled the cover for the highly anticipated “NASCAR 25” racing game, which will launch on Oct. 14.

Gracing the cover are NASCAR Cup Series stars William Byron (2024 and 2025 Daytona 500 champion), Christopher Bell (2025 All-Star Race winner) and Ryan Blaney (2023 Cup champion).

RELATED: Visit “NASCAR 25” website

The official game of NASCAR features all four national touring series: ARCA Menards, NASCAR Craftsman Truck, NASCAR Xfinity and NASCAR Cup. Platforms that support the game are PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, XJS and PC via stream.

Game-play modes include Career Mode, Quick Race, Championship Season and 40-player Multiplayer.

Pre-orders for NASCAR 25 will open in mid-September.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Trackhouse Racing announced Saturday that Connor Zilisch will drive full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2026, the latest move in his rapid rise up the stock-car racing ladder.

Zilisch replaces Daniel Suárez, who will leave Trackhouse at year’s end after five seasons driving the team’s No. 99 Chevrolet. The organization and driver announced July 1 that they had mutually reached an agreement to part company, creating a high-profile vacancy in Trackhouse’s three-car fleet alongside Cup teammates Ross Chastain and Shane van Gisbergen. 

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | JR Motorsports hits win No. 100

Zilisch appears poised to fill that void ever since signing with Trackhouse as part of the organization’s driver development program in January 2024. Since then, the 19-year-old phenom has won eight times in 27 starts in the NASCAR Xfinity Series while driving for JR Motorsports. That stretch includes wins in five of the last six races, highlighted by Zilisch’s triumph at Indianapolis Motor Speedway to seal JRM’s 100th victory and capped by Friday’s victory at Daytona International Speedway with Parker Kligerman driving in relief.

Though the news had been widely reported for weeks, Zilisch grew emotional when presented with the magnitude of the moment, with his family joining him in the Daytona media center.

“It’s cool. I knew the whole world knew already, but still to be able to say it and have my name next to the word ‘Cup Series’ is really cool,” Zilisch said. “So, I wasn’t going to try and hide from it, but it’s just a day that I’ve been dreaming of for a long time and I’m not going to let that kind of the idea that everybody already knows take away from the moment.”

Team founder Justin Marks indicated that Zilisch’s car number, crew chief and crew lineup would be announced in the coming weeks, but noted that Red Bell and WeatherTech would continue to be anchor partners with his program. Zilisch has used No. 87 in his three Cup Series starts this season with Trackhouse.

Zilisch ranks second in the Xfinity Series standings, just three points behind JRM teammate Justin Allgaier as the battle for the Regular Season Championship heads to its final two races. Zilisch is on the mend from a broken collarbone, suffered in a hard fall in Victory Lane after winning Watkins Glen two weeks ago. He started Friday night’s Xfinity event, yielding to Kligerman in a Lap 13 caution period.

Zilisch has excelled at each turn of his racing career, from karting to Mazda MX-5 and Trans-Am competition. His first appearance in IMSA’s Rolex 24 at Daytona endurance race yielded a victory in the LMP2 class.

The teenager’s move into stock cars also brought success, with wins in CARS Tour late models and the ARCA Menards Series before he reached the NASCAR national-series ranks last year. Zilisch participated in partial Xfinity and Craftsman Truck series schedules in 2024, winning poles on both circuits and rolling to victory in his Xfinity debut at Watkins Glen International last September.

Marks has called Zilisch a “rare talent,” noting how quickly the teenager has been able to adapt to different motorsports disciplines. He also lauded his potential to be a multi-time champion at the sport’s highest level.

“I think it’s what everybody sees. It’s the level of maturity, the approach, the ability to deliver in big moments,” Marks said. “When I get asked, which is sort of weird, but I get asked sometimes by young people, ‘What can I do to get noticed or to get an opportunity in racing?’ And I tell them it’s just you have to just win. You have to just have the ability to get it done when you got a fast race car and when you have a winning opportunity you’ve got to be able to close the deal. Connor’s done it. Just every car he’s gotten in, he’s figured out a way to win.

“I think another one is the rate of adaptability. This sport won’t wait on somebody to figure things out. It’s such a fast-paced sport. You have to be able to get in a car, understand it right away, find its limits right away, and go deliver right away.”

Zilisch’s road-racing background has provided him with an edge in his wins at The Glen, Circuit of The Americas and Sonoma Raceway, but he has also been a quick study while performing on ovals, prevailing at Pocono, Dover and Indy consecutively. JR Motorsports co-owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. said after his Brickyard triumph that Zilisch has the potential for “incredible, Hall of Fame-worthy things” in his career, hinting that a Cup Series move was imminent. He also said he’s buying into the ever-building buzz around Zilisch, comparing his prodigious rise to that of some of the sport’s all-time greats.

“I mean, the only thing I think it’s close to is probably Jeff Gordon or Jimmie Johnson,” Earnhardt said, making a nod toward his former teammates — both multiple-time Cup Series champions. “So he might be even more of a comet … he might be even more rare than that, because I don’t know, man, if you all get a chance to spend time around him, you’ll realize how mature he is, and I think there’s probably a lot of parents in the room that would be amazed at his level of maturity.”

Zilisch’s beyond-his-years composure will be tested in NASCAR’s top division next season, when his first full Cup Series campaign starts here in the Daytona 500 on Feb. 15. His first effort in the “Great American Race” will provide a “welcome to the show” moment, but Zilisch says the journey to saying he’s made it in the sport is just beginning.

“I still haven’t made it to where I want to be, right? This is the start,” Zilisch said. “I wanted to get to this point and give myself the opportunity to win championships at the highest level, but I wouldn’t say I’ve made it. But I’ve made it farther than a lot. So, that’s something to be proud of. And, yeah, it’s going to be grueling. The Cup Series is no joke, and that jump from Saturday to Sunday is bigger than probably any other sport in our country. So yeah, I’m excited for the challenge and looking forward to just going out and learning and every Sunday giving my best effort and seeing where I stack up.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Ram’s planned return to NASCAR competition now has its first affiliated team: Kaulig Racing.

The multiyear partnership was announced Saturday at the Daytona Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram dealership, just hours before the Cup Series’ Coke Zero Sugar 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock) at Daytona International Speedway. When the circuit returns to the 2.5-mile track in February for NASCAR’s season openers, the Matt Kaulig-owned team will be part of the Craftsman Truck Series grid for the first time, boldly announcing that five Kaulig trucks will be carrying the Ram banner.

RELATED: NASCAR releases 2026 schedule | 2026 Truck Series schedule

“I know Ram doesn’t do anything small, as you can see by the dealerships and everything else, and I know at Kaulig Racing, we don’t do anything small,” Matt Kaulig said at Saturday’s presentation, where a No. 10 Ram truck with Kaulig branding was unveiled. “So when we’re going into the truck series, we’re not going to kind of silently come in or just kind of tiptoe our way in. We’re doing it big.”

Ram announced on June 8 its intent to return to NASCAR, unveiling a Ram 1500 concept race truck at Michigan International Speedway. Ram CEO Tim Kuniskis said in the days leading up to the unveil that his company was “looking for a date to the prom right now.” The first dance will go to Kaulig, which will expand its operations into a third NASCAR national series alongside its multicar efforts in both the Cup and O’Reilly Auto Parts Series.

Ram and Kaulig officials indicated that the rest of the team structure, driver lineup and other launch plans will be announced in the coming months. Kaulig team president Chris Rice said that the team will keep its operations in Welcome, North Carolina, but that the organization was seeking more properties in the area to aid the expansion effort.

Rice acknowledged that the timeline to be race-ready with a five-truck fleet between now and the Feb. 13 Craftsman Truck Series opener was an ambitious one, joking that job applications to support expansion would be taken on the spot in the back of the dealership. He also admitted that the rapid growth in a short span could present challenges to the team’s bid to be competitive right away.

“All we can say is we’re going to sit here and give you all that we can give you,” Rice said. “We’re going to show you, and we’re going to do the best we can. Are we going to fail at times? Absolutely, are we going to have people talk about us at times how bad we did? Absolutely, we’ve made some decisions that people have laughed at, but I can tell you what we’re going to do. We’re going to do it different, and it’s going to be a lot of fun doing it.”

A general view of a Ram race truck.
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

Nate Buelow — SVP of Brand Marketing for Stellantis North America, Ram’s parent company — indicated that for now, the automaker was exclusively partnered with Kaulig Racing as the “anchor team for our entire endeavor.” Buelow said that signing additional partner teams was a part of the manufacturer’s plans, but that Kaulig would be the centerpiece of Ram’s initial thrust.

“We’ve leaned very heavily into their expertise as we’ve been getting our plans together to re-enter back into it,” Buelow said. “We want to make sure that that is a solid, sustainable effort before we start looking at all the other places that we can go. We’re not opposed to any of those opportunities, but we’ve got a lot of work to do right now, so we want to focus in on that now and see where it grows.”

Ram’s June announcement came with a hint about the Stellantis group’s intentions to eventually return to racing in the Cup Series, potentially with Dodge branding. Dodge last competed in NASCAR’s top division as a factory effort in 2012, when Brad Keselowski won the championship in a Roger Penske-owned Charger.

Buelow said the timeline for that potential return is still unclear.

“I wish we could tell you today,” Buelow said. “I think we’ve got a lot of work to do to get these five trucks on track first, and then Cup is the next thing on our agenda to figure it out. How are we going to do it? What are we going to do? … I’d hate to commit to the timing with you, but it is a much bigger endeavor. With trucks being a spec chassis, we’ve got the body, we’re through aero and all that good stuff. Cup is just such a bigger endeavor, and a lot of work has to be done in developing an engine and all that.”

Whether Kaulig Racing is a part of that effort is undetermined. The organization — which began as a single-car Xfinity team in 2016 — has an existing partnership with Chevrolet for its Cup and Xfinity cars, and the team is headquartered near Chevy-loyal neighbors in Richard Childress Racing.

Matt Kaulig said that he’s viewing the Truck Series effort with Ram as a separate entity.

“We don’t really have a goal that way,” Kaulig said when asked about a Cup Series manufacturer shift. “I mean, we’re taking it as we’re Ram trucks, we’re running the Truck Series. I mean, we’re still Chevy with Xfinity and Cup. We’ve had great relationships there, great relationships with Richard Childress and RCR, and so we literally are keeping it separate and just viewing it that way. … Every team’s tied to a manufacturer right now, but over the years, people have switched manufacturers. So we don’t look at it as we’re switching manufacturers. We look at it as we’re going truck racing with Ram.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Delivering the winning push to Parker Kligerman at Daytona International Speedway carried special meaning for Justin Allgaier.

It wasn’t only because Kligerman had suddenly become a one-off teammate at JR Motorsports, jumping in as the relief driver for Connor Zilisch in the No. 88 Chevrolet.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

The winning moment also felt full circle for a pair of drivers who have had their differences in the Xfinity Series, notably in a September 2023 race at Texas Motor Speedway when Kilgerman and Allgaier collided while racing for the lead.

“It’s cool because at the end of the day, Parker and I have actually probably had a better relationship since we don’t race together, but we’re a lot the same,” said Allgaier, who celebrated with Kilgerman in Victory Lane late Friday night at Daytona. “We came through some weird opportunities, we both kind of got stuck in a really weird bubble when we came into the sport, and we both had to fight really hard to stay in the sport. It sent us different directions, but at the same time, I think we both kind of had that little bit of a chip on our shoulder of how we got to where we were at.

“And we’ve talked a lot, and we’ve had a lot of good conversations. Tonight was different in the fact that JR Motorsports fire suit that he’s wearing, and the effort that I know that team’s put in. We’re all pushing hard to make our company finish one, two, three, four every week.”

It was a 1-2-3 finish for JR Motorsports as Zilisch was credited with the win ahead of Sammy Smith and Allgaier, with the 19-year-old Zilisch starting the race before Kligerman finished in his stead as Zilisch nursed a broken collarbone.

Kligerman thanked Allgaier several times for talking him through what it would be like to drive a JRM Chevy on a superspeedway.

“He played a very, very big role in getting this done as a teammate,” Kligerman said.

During a pre-race meeting, he tried to convince Allgaier he would return the favor if possible.

“I was like hey man you got a friend in me in pushing it, and I don’t think he really believed me,” Kligerman said. “I was like, ‘No, I truly mean it.’ Then we got late in Stage 3, and we were at the top, and I didn’t want to leave Justin hanging and so it kind of stuck us in second when we probably could have got the lead.”

The move earned an admonition from team co-owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the radio under an ensuing yellow.

“Dale said, ‘Why are you not taking the lead?’ I was like, ‘Well, I’m trying to be a good teammate here to keep (Allgaier) with me,’ but I think I knew that when we came down to it that he could be a really good teammate there, which he was,” Kligerman said.

No hard feelings after all for two drivers who actually were together at Team Penske more than 15 years ago when Kilgerman was beginning his NASCAR career.

Their paths have had parallel moments since then. Both had ill-fated attempts at Cup before returning to Xfinity. Last year, Allgaier won the championship while Kilgerman decided to end his full-time racing career to focus on being a TV analyst.

“I think what happened to us in the last two years was unfortunate because he was excited I was racing full time again,” Kilgerman said. “So we’ve definitely had our moments.

“I have a lot of respect for Justin Allgaier, and I could see the way he handles himself at this race team and why he’s such a good leader, why he’s been here so long and I also respect his talent and ability behind the wheel because you know that it takes serious talent to have longevity he has and have the wins he has and now the championship and everything he’s done. I think it was cool, though, for us to kind of be in that position, just knowing our past and how young we were when we first started at Penske and first met.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The record book will list Connor Zilisch as the winner of the Wawa 250 Powered by Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway.

But it was part-timer Parker Kligerman who did the heavy lifting in Friday night’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race, driving the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet to victory in relief of the 19-year-old prodigy.

With Zilisch determined to protect the collarbone he broke in a fall in Victory Lane two weeks ago at Watkins Glen, Kligerman got behind the wheel in a driver switch under caution on Lap 13.

From that point through an overtime that took the race to Lap 104, Kligerman drove a masterful race. His victory was welcome consolation for a heart-wrenching loss at Daytona in February, when Kligerman was first to the finish line in a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series event but suffered a disqualification for a ride-height infraction.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

Racing-Reference.info, the statistics bible of motor racing, will credit Zilisch with his seventh win of the season, tying Christopher Bell for most by a Sunoco rookie in series history, but it was Kligerman who performed the celebratory burnout on the frontstretch at the “World Center of Racing.”

“It’s different in every way, because I didn’t expect to get a call from (team owner) Dale (Earnhardt) Jr. on the day I was leaving for vacation, saying ‘Hey, man, would you come drive this thing?’” Kligerman said. “I hate the circumstances for Connor. He’s an amazing generational talent. I feel honored to have gotten the call to grace the seat that he’s been in, that Kyle Larson’s been in. … For me, it’s such a ‘me’ thing that this will not be on Racing Reference at all.”

After the overtime restart on Lap 103, Zilisch got a strong push from teammate and eventual third-place finisher Justin Allgaier. He controlled the final two circuits until a massive 13-car wreck in Turn 4 ended the race under caution.

With Sammy Smith running second, JR Motorsports enjoyed a 1-2-3 finish.

It was the second time this season Zilisch watched his car win a race. After a hard crash at Talladega in April, Zilisch sat out the subsequent race at Texas Motor Speedway, with Larson winning in the No. 88.

But on this Friday night, Zilisch ran from the pit box to the frontstretch to congratulate Kligerman. The drivers shared a delicate hug, with Kligerman mindful of Zilisch’s surgically repaired collarbone, which is still on the mend.

“It’s weird,” Zilisch said. “It was really weird the last time I did it, and I never thought I’d have to do it again. … But I love Parker. I’ve been a fan of Parker for a long time. He’s another one I’m OK watching win inside my race car.

“I’m glad that I got to start the race and get the points for my team.”

With a fifth-place finish in Stage 1 and a win in Stage 2, Allgaier regained the series lead from Zilisch and takes a four-point advantage to the Aug. 30 event at Portland International Raceway.

Deeper in the series standings, the fortunes of cousins Harrison Burton and Jeb Burton — both fighting for the final spot in the Xfinity Playoffs — changed radically during the race. On Lap 10, Harrison Burton’s No. 25 Ford spun after contact from Matt DiBenedetto’s Chevrolet. With no caution called, Harrison lost two laps getting to pit road, but he regained one circuit as the beneficiary under a caution for rain on Lap 12 and returned to the lead lap under caution for the first stage break at Lap 30.

Jeb Burton scored two points for his ninth-place finish in Stage 1, but his luck soon turned negative. On Lap 20, contact between Jeb’s No. 27 Chevrolet and Smith’s No. 8 Camaro ignited a six-car wreck, but Jeb recovered to run in the top 15 before an 11-car melee on Lap 97 collected both cousins.

Harrison finished 16th to Jeb’s 20th, giving Harrison a 36-point lead for the final playoff spot with two races left in the regular season.

Jesse Love finished fourth, followed by Sam Mayer, Brandon Jones, Dean Thompson, Garrett Smithley, Brennan Poole and Carson Kvapil.

Ryan Sieg led a race-high 19 laps but was wiped out in the Lap 97 accident and finished 31st, dropping 56 points below the current elimination line for the playoffs.

NOTE: Post-race technical inspection concluded without issue, confirming Zilisch as the race winner.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — With his teammates locked into the playoffs and his championship eligibility on the line at a track where drafting help often overrides everything, Alex Bowman remains a realist.

Even having the Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets of William Byron, Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson as potential wingmen, there will be no easy path into the playoffs Saturday night at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock).

“If it was that simple, every three-car or four-car team would get their guy in every year, and it never happens that way,” said Bowman, who is on the bubble of the 16-driver field entering the regular-season finale. “There’s a lot of different things that can happen and it’s a long race with a lot of things that are totally outside of your control. I don’t think our plan is any different. You’re going to see us pit together. That’s what we do every year. We’re going to work together when we can, and when we can’t, we won’t.

“I’d be shocked if at any point in the race you see three Hendrick Chevys lined up behind me, pushing. I don’t think this style of racing works that way or gives us a position to even do that anymore.”

MORE: Daytona’s starting lineup | Current Cup standings

Fuel-mileage strategies have turned Daytona into a peloton of nonstop position shuffling at the “World Center of Racing” — so running nose-to-tail with four cars for 400 miles is problematic at best.

“Yeah, it’s not that easy, and I don’t know if that’s the right tactic either,” said Byron, who will be unable to provide much early help because his No. 24 Chevrolet will serve a stop-and-go penalty at the green flag for failing inspection twice. “This thing’s very complicated. You just try to be conscious of that. It’s no secret. Everyone’s going to have some sort of playoff implication, so it’s going to be very strategic throughout the field on who’s helping who.”

Indeed, there will be myriad agendas that will muddle the simplicity of amassing an armada to march a car into Victory Lane (and the playoffs) in a “Three Musketeers”-style storyline. With apologies to author Alexandre Dumas, “all for one, and one for all” will have an entirely different meaning at Daytona.

Hendrick Motorsports drivers Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, William Byron and Alex Bowman pose at Daytona.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

“All for one” is the mantra for Hendrick and Joe Gibbs Racing. Each powerhouse has three of its four cars locked into the playoffs and can marshal its resources accordingly to focus on ensuring a full fleet of championship eligibility.

“One for all” is the unenviable spot for Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing, which has none of its three drivers locked in and only one available playoff spot to be claimed by Chris Buescher, Brad Keselowski or Ryan Preece. The same holds true for the trios at Spire Motorsports (Michael McDowell, Carson Hocevar and Justin Haley) and Front Row Motorsports (Todd Gilliland, Zane Smith and Noah Gragson).

And there are three more teams (Trackhouse Racing, 23XI Racing, Richard Childress Racing) with at least one driver in the playoffs and another trying to make it.

With 14 winners locked into the playoffs, only Bowman and Tyler Reddick can make the field on points — there are 20 drivers who can qualify only with a win.

While Byron has clinched the Regular Season Championship, there is still the opportunity for lots of movement throughout the points standings that will determine the distribution of playoff points.

And with so many drivers and teams pursuing so many divergent goals, it seems inevitable the conflicting agendas will produce the invariable chaos at the 2.5-mile track.

“It’s going to be a mess,” McDowell said. “We all know it and lived it and seen it. That’s why this race is so unpredictable, because the desperation is so high for everybody.”

There are some strange bedfellows among the various scenarios. Consider that if Bowman or Reddick wins, the other driver will lock into the playoffs.

“After the stages end, we might be each other’s best friends, so it is a really weird situation,” Bowman said.

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But the best way to navigate the frenzy is with the help of teammates.

“Yeah, I think that when it comes to this race in particular, you need each other,” McDowell said. “I think that the way you give yourself the best chance to run up front and have help when you need it is to have your help be your teammates.”

The emphasis at Hendrick will be helping Bowman — and not necessarily with a drafting push.

“Keeping Alex in mind is the main priority,” Larson said. “But the good thing with it is he can still make it on points, so if any Hendrick guys win, he’s good. So that makes it easy on all of us. But we’re not going to be selfish in that.”

The situation is different at JGR for Ty Gibbs, who can qualify for the playoffs only through a victory.

Teammate Christopher Bell, who is in the playoffs with Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe, said JGR’s drivers and crew chiefs had been mapping out strategies with Toyota engineers.

“We’ll have a powwow at some point to discuss what the game plan is to try and execute these speedway races and more so than just getting Ty into Victory Lane, just trying to perform better and finish better at these races,” Bell said. “We had a great Daytona 500. We had a lot of cars in contention to win, but it was a little bit unique with no green-flag pit stop. So that really eliminated the strategy. Whenever it comes to the strategy side, it’s no secret that we’ve been a little bit behind.

“We can blame it on numbers, but I don’t really think it’s numbers. I just think the Fords and the Chevrolets beat us, and it seems like they’ve got a hold on this style of racing, and we’re just behind right now.”

Bell said there were no overriding directives of deference to help put the No. 54 driven by team owner Joe Gibbs’ grandson in the playoffs.

“We all know that it’s a big deal, but Joe’s not sitting up here telling us that we need to get the 54 in at all costs,” Bell said. “Never once in my career has he told me that I need to sacrifice a win of the race for someone else. At the end of the day, it’s going to be the best man’s gonna come out on top, but we certainly want to give Ty an opportunity and by giving Ty an opportunity it should help us out, too.”

Kyle Busch and Austin Dillon lead at Daytona.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

There were also intense pre-race discussions at Trackhouse Racing, which is trying to help Daniel Suárez join Ross Chastain and Shane van Gisbergen in the playoffs.

As a rookie still learning to dodge the massive wrecks common at superspeedways, van Gisbergen said he would be judicious about helping Suárez at the expense of a risky situation.

“Obviously you want to be a good teammate, but we also don’t need to get involved in all the stuff,” van Gisbergen said. “There’s three three-car teams that are all in a must-win, and they’re going to be all teaming up, pushing hard, and Ross and I don’t need to get involved. But we also want another Trackhouse car in there. So yeah, it was an interesting and dynamic conversation, because we both want to help Daniel, but how we play it in, it’s going to be interesting.

“I’ll be pushing him if I get the chance. I’ll be really trying, but if you see it all turning to (crap), I’m going to be the first to bail as well. I don’t want to risk myself in the car for no reason, and especially if it’s in Stage 2. (Suárez) wants to be up there all the race, which is fine, and I’ll be there with him as long as I’m comfortable.”

The best team on drafting tracks actually has the least at stake Saturday night.

With Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Austin Cindric qualified for the playoffs, Team Penske will enter Daytona with little stress but some immense leverage to help its manufacturer add another car to the playoffs. Over the past three seasons, Penske cars have led 1,123 of 3,392 laps raced on drafting tracks — more than three times those led by any other team.

Ford drivers have led more than half the laps at Daytona since the advent of the Next Gen car, and Cindric said Penske drivers had been “highly encouraged” to help the Mustangs of RFK Racing, Front Row Motorsports and Rick Ware Racing.

“If one of those guys is in a position to win, that’s a huge deal to have more Fords in the playoffs,” Cindric said. “If I have a choice to push a Ford or a different manufacturer across the line, I’m pushing that Ford every time, no doubt.”

Even though he is in a playoff battle with teammates Buescher and Keselowski, Preece believes the speed of the RFK Fords can overcome the advantage of Hendrick and Gibbs having all of its cars qualified.

“Honestly, yeah, they have three cars that are locked in, but we’ve got three race teams that have extremely fast race cars that take control of these races,” Preece said. “So if you’re going to try and win this race, I guarantee you’re going to have to go through an RFK car to win. I feel like we’re in a strong position to get one of our cars in and good luck to the other ones that are going to have to get through us.”