MADISON, Ill. — Without spilling secrets, Austin Dillon knows Sunday’s Enjoy Illinois 300 at World Wide Technology Raceway (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) is important for the No. 3 team.
“Gateway is huge for us,” Dillon said bluntly on Saturday before practice. “I think that if we can execute like we did at Darlington, this is a place where it’s tougher to pass than Darlington, and maintaining track position is a bit easier because of that.”
In recent years, Dillon has excelled at shorter flat tracks. He played the role of playoff shocker at Richmond Raceway last month, winning the penultimate race of the regular season from 28th in the championship standings. It was his first top-five finish in over a year, which also came at Richmond.
RELATED: Gateway weekend schedule | Cup Series standings
Between mastering Richmond, leading a career-high 107 laps at the 0.75-mile oval and earning finishes of 10th and 12th, respectively, at Iowa Speedway and Phoenix Raceway, the No. 3 car has averaged 36.7 points at comparable tracks to Gateway in 2025. That ranks third in the series, trailing only William Byron (41.3) and Ryan Blaney (39), according to Racing Insights.
“I feel comfortable with whatever we’re doing with the cars and just confident,” Dillon said of recently flourishing on flatter track surfaces. “Giving good feedback, the guys are giving me good race cars and it’s probably a strong suit for us right now at RCR.”
Execution was the motto the No. 3 team adopted to begin the playoffs. Before kickstarting the postseason at Darlington Raceway, Dillon was emphatic that he could bust playoff grids and advance to the Round of 12. After placing 23rd in the Southern 500 and earning only 14 points, he trails the elimination line by eight points entering Gateway.
Confidence remains high for Dillon, though, as RCR cars have had recent success at Gateway. The No. 3 car finished sixth in 2024, and St. Louis is the host of Kyle Busch’s most recent victory, some 84 races ago, after leading 121 circuits from pole position.
“I feel like we should be above the cutline because of all the stuff that went down last week, and we didn’t,” Dillon stated. “Execution was the main word that I used at [Cup Series Playoff] Media Day. We executed partly, half of it. Getting through that race, we’re only eight away from the cutline, so it’s not insurmountable. I feel really good about these two races.
“You have to do a good job with strategy and different things. I think the past history of Kyle running really well here and winning the race. Last year, we had a fast car and were able to take advantage of that and finish sixth and score stage points. Some stage points would be good and a top 10 and I feel like we’re going into Bristol just above the cutline, and then we’ve got to go do the same thing there.”
Dillon was the caboose of the field, over three-tenths of a second slower than 35th-place AJ Allmendinger in practice. However, the No. 3 driver rebounded in qualifying and will roll off 15th for Sunday’s race.

