This weekend, NASCAR’s three national series — the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series — head to Tennessee for their annual visit to Nashville Superspeedway. Bookmark this page for everything you need throughout race weekend, including qualifying orders, practice speeds, race results and more.
See where your favorite NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series drivers will pit this weekend at Nashville Superspeedway.
NASCAR Cup Series
NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway on Sunday (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Sports Illustrated Resorts 250 at Nashville Superspeedway on Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
LEBANON, Tenn. – Corey Heim has dreamt of being a full-time driver in the NASCAR Cup Series since he was a child.
On Saturday at Nashville Superspeedway, Heim’s dream came true.
23XI Racing announced Heim will drive the team’s No. 35 Toyota in 2027, joining the Cup ranks on a full-time basis next season after a part-time campaign in 2026.
A development driver for 23XI since 2024, Heim has been touted as one of the sport’s top prospects for years, collecting a record 12 wins in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series last season en route to the 2025 championship. In total, Heim has earned 25 Truck victories since 2022, fifth-most all-time. After 11 Cup starts for 23XI across the past three seasons, including four this year with eight more slated in the No. 67 Toyota, Heim has officially been granted a promotion to NASCAR’s top level.
“It means the world to me,” Heim said Saturday. “I’ve been a part of 23XI Racing for a couple years now on part-time basis, and I firmly believe that as a driver, you just have to be around the right people to succeed. I’ve been driving in NASCAR the last three or four years, and even in the trucks, I felt like I was with the right people and we did the right things, and it’s so important to have the right group around you to succeed. I’ve only started (11) races at 23XI Racing, but I really feel like that is my home, and these people treat me very well.”
Team co-owner Denny Hamlin has been keen to see Heim develop, trying to place his young driver in as many Cup races as possible ahead of his first full-time opportunity. In those 11 Cup starts, Heim has a best finish of sixth, which came last fall at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Hamlin, a 61-time winner in the Cup Series, believes Heim can be a true contender in the Cup Series. Now, he’s providing Heim an opportunity to prove it.
“Generational drivers only come by every now and then, and I firmly believe that we have one here,” Hamlin said. “So I’m really excited about what he’s going to bring our team and the performance that he’s going to bring, and obviously his work ethic is very, very good, and looking forward to working with him in the future.”
Saturday suffices as dream becoming reality for Heim, but with a hint of extra meaning. Heim grew up as a Denny Hamlin fan – with photos to prove it, his father Ray confirmed during Saturday’s press conference.
“2015, I was standing on the grid of the Coke 600 next to (Denny’s pit) box with my Hamlin gear on,” Heim said. “Just a really cool full-circle thing for me to be driving for him. Obviously he didn’t have team back then, so I never like had an aspiration to drive for Denny just because it didn’t exist at that point. But just looking back on it, you just can’t make this stuff up.”
There will be a learning curve for Heim as he devotes himself to the full Cup schedule in 2027, a 38-week grind that tests even the most veteran drivers each season. Heim is set for just 12 Cup starts in 2026 alongside a handful of Craftsman Truck Series appearances. He admits that was a thought he contemplated before the season began, but he said that concern has dwindled throughout the season.
Heim has been testing for Toyota in its wheelforce car, collecting single-car data in six test sessions this season in addition to part-time Truck Series competition and late-model racing.
“It may not be as valuable as straight-up Cup starts by any means, but it just keeps me in the seat and keeps me prepared,” Heim said. “So I’ve got a really solid schedule regardless of only my 12 Cup starts this year. And it also gives me a little bit of opportunity to debrief a little longer on the race. Guys that are rookies this year or last year, I’ve kind of wondered, I’m like, dang, you guys had a fast turnaround to think about what just happened.
“I mean, you’re drinking through a fire hose, as far as all these new things that are happening in the race, and you have like two days or maybe a day to kind of debrief and soak it all in until you have to start preparing for the next one. So this every-two-to-three-week Cup race schedule for me has given me a chance to kind of just think about what just happened and then give me some extra time to prepare for the next one.”
Heim will join 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Regular Season Champion Tyler Reddick and 2025 Brickyard 400 winner Bubba Wallace as teammates in 2027. The duo of veterans have already been impressed by what Heim has brought to the table, and Reddick believes even more is ahead.
“I’m not quite sure how he does it different, but he does go about it in a different way,” Reddick said of Heim’s racing style. “And the more that I’m around him, I get to understand that. I feel like some of his strengths are stronger than mine, and going forward, it’ll be nice to work with him and hopefully I can learn from him. And obviously, as a teammate, you want to help the other teammates you have and help him learn as he figures it out too.”
“He’ll be competitive for sure,” Wallace added. “He’ll be a lot of fun. I’m excited for him. He’s come to me for a lot of questions and advice over the last couple years that we’ve worked together. It’s been really good.”
With Heim’s entry comes an exit for Riley Herbst, who has driven the No. 35 Toyota for 23XI since the start of the 2025 campaign. And while Reddick and Wallace are happy to see Heim enter the fold, Wallace expressed his appreciation for the departing Herbst.
“Riley Herbst is one of the best, genuine dudes to ever be around,” Wallace said. “One of the most humble kids ever and I’ve always enjoyed our conversations together and our times spent together. So I’d be remiss if I didn’t say I’m pulling for him in every aspect and his future endeavors, wherever that may be and wherever he may end up.”
Heim returns to Cup Series competition at Nashville in the Cracker Barrel 400 on Sunday evening (7 ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
LEBANON, Tenn. – Layne Riggs was not going to be denied at Nashville Superspeedway.
But both Rajah Caruth and Riggs’ Front Row Motorsports teammate Chandler Smith made the No. 34 truck earn it in the closing laps of the Craftsman Truck Series Allegiance 200.
After racing NASCAR’s equivalent of a perfect game through the opening two stages, Riggs plummeted to 16th in the running order with an ill-handling truck early in the final stage. It was Caruth who was in position to capitalize late in the event.
On fresher tires, Riggs restarted 10th with 15 laps remaining and drove to third in quick order, a distant 3.5 seconds behind Caruth’s No. 7 truck with less than 10 laps remaining. With three laps remaining, though, Riggs overtook Smith for the runner-up spot and immediately was in the catbird seat.
Caruth weaved back and forth down the backstretch with two laps remaining, attempting to break Riggs’ draft. The newer tires proved beneficial, however, as Riggs dove deep into Turn 3, getting to the outside of Caruth through Turns 3 and 4 as the duo traded paint.
“It was super bold looking back,” Riggs said of his pass on Caruth. “I didn’t lift until I got to his outside, and I was like, ‘I’ll just figure the exit out later.’”
With a push from Smith, Riggs escaped with the lead and quickly put nearly a half-second on Caruth to win consecutive races for the second time in his Truck Series career.
“I blacked out those last 10 or 15 laps just to get to the front,” Riggs said in his post-race press conference. “Those guys gave me such a good truck in the first two stages; they gave me a shot at the end to win it back and claw back to the front. I knew I couldn’t leave here without that guitar.”
Caruth was largely powerless to prevent the winning pass.
“The tire advantage was super strong,” Caruth told reporters after the race. “I gave up my right side and thought I ran him high enough, but he had a lot of grip and stayed there. He had me hooked and I said, ‘Man, I can’t turn myself to take us both out.’
“I was hoping I could run it in there and slide up, but he was nose up and I wasn’t going to take a guy running for points out of the race, and these 7 guys are running for [the owner’s championship]. I took my losses and came home second.”
The only way Caruth could have kept the lead was by putting himself in a position that likely would have ended in a crash. That’s something he wasn’t willing to do with Spire Motorsports chasing a title.
“You tell yourself in these situations that you want to come show up and win and come home with nothing but the trophy,” he stated. “But these guys are racing for owners’ points. I didn’t get all the way there in [Turns] 3 and 4 to shut it off, and I was like, ‘I can’t take them out of a finish.’
“They were teammates, obviously, so they weren’t going to give each other much of a battle. I had a lot of fun and definitely things I could have done better at the end.”
Smith had a front-row seat for the Riggs and Caruth battle. The Daytona winner from February was hoping to be in position should the two leaders tangle.
“Once [Riggs] got to [Caruth], I was trying to position myself if they have an incident on the frontstretch to try to capitalize to where I could possibly get the win myself,” Smith stated. “I was able to push the 34 out and let him get clear to the lead. Happy for those guys and happy for our 38 team as well.”
By sweeping all three stages and recording the Xfinity Fastest Lap, Riggs became the second driver in the series this season to score a maximum 76-point day. He leaped Kaden Honeycutt to take the regular-season championship lead.
LEBANON, Tenn. — Layne Riggs set the pace early in Friday night’s rain-delayed NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Nashville Superspeedway, then rallied to a dramatic final-lap pass when it mattered most to claim the track’s iconic “Victory Guitar” trophy in the Allegiance 200.
Riggs, who started sixth on the race’s eighth and final restart with 16 laps to go, passed the defending race winner Rajah Caruth coming off Turn 2 on the last lap after getting a strong push forward from his Front Row Motorsports teammate Chandler Smith to hold the front position and take his second consecutive — and third — win of the 2026 season in the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford.
After leading all of the opening 90 laps and claiming victories in both Stage 1 and Stage 2 of the race, Riggs restarted the final stage from the fifth row, losing positions after the competition’s varying pit strategies. His move forward afterward, however, was an exhilarating ending to a long night.
Ultimately, the 23-year-old North Carolina native and second-generation NASCAR driver took the checkered flag by a slight 0.468 seconds over Caruth, who drove the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet originally intended to be raced by Kyle Busch, who passed away at the age of 41 from sepsis last Thursday.
It was an emotional win for Riggs, who dedicated the victory to Busch and an equally emotional outing for Caruth, who honored Busch with his own outstanding run toward the trophy, too.
“Not till I passed him and cleared him,” Riggs said of feeling confident in his dramatic comeback and energized by his triumph at a track where his father Scott Riggs won the series’ inaugural Truck race back in 2001 and two other O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races (2002-03).
“That’s how you win a NASCAR Truck race there, boys and girls. I hope I put on a show for you. I didn’t want to fall back, but I don’t know what happened with that set of tires. It was literally undrivable.
“[Crew chief] Dylan [Capello] made the right adjustments there, got me the tires, got me the motivation and drove to the front,” he said of a late race pit stop gamble for an adjustment and new tires with 32 laps remaining.
“So proud of the awesome finish there with the 38 truck (Smith), he gave me the push for the win and good racing there with Chandler tonight,’’ he added of his teammate, who finished third.
Caruth, who led 44 laps, was second only to Riggs’ effort, looked to become only the second driver in history to earn back-to-back wins on the 1.33-mile Nashville concrete oval, and certainly the talented and well-liked young driver had the emotional support of millions of NASCAR fans who would have loved to see Busch’s truck return to Victory Lane.
“I was trying to make this thing as wide as possible,’’ Caruth said of trying to hold off Riggs, whose car was on fresher tires. “But that was a great call by Brian. We were strong, but starting at the back because of qualifying [being rained out] kind of impacted our night. We got the car really strong there and probably some things I could have done better.
“Glad to give these guys a good result. … really wanted to get that one obviously for everybody that was at KBM [Kyle Busch Motorsports], especially KB’s family. Close. I just didn’t close it out.’’
“Wanted to get a trophy tonight. So close. But proud of the effort and the team.’’
Cup Series regular Ross Chastain finished fourth in the Niece Motorsports Chevrolet, followed by Tyler Ankrum in the No. 18 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevy.
Stewart Friesen, Grant Enfinger, 2024 Nashville winner Christian Eckes, Gio Ruggiero and Daniel Dye rounded out the top 10.
With his victory and a rare laps-down finish for Tricon Garage’s Kaden Honeycutt, Riggs took over the championship lead by 37 points over Honeycutt.
The Craftsman Truck Series returns to action next Saturday at the Michigan International Speedway 2-mile oval with the DQS Solutions & Staffing 250 at 1:30 p.m. ET (FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Stewart Friesen is the defending race winner.
NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Craftsman Truck Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Riggs as the race winner.
Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Nashville Superspeedway has been delayed due to inclement weather.
The Allegiance 200 was originally scheduled for an 8 p.m. ET green flag (FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at the 1.33-mile concrete Tennessee track.
Earlier in the day, Front Row Motorsports driver Layne Riggs topped the charts in practice at 164.034 mph. Over half of the trucks entered had turned a qualifying lap before rain halted the remainder of the session. As a result, Riggs will lead the field to green in his No. 34 Ford.
Toni Breidinger and Jonathan Shafer were the two drivers who failed to qualify, with the starting lineup set per the NASCAR Rule Book.
As part of NASCAR’s ongoing commitment to creating career pathways and expanding opportunities through NASCAR IMPACT, the league partnered with DraftKings to host the inaugural Veteran Tech Accelerator during the 2026 Coca-Cola 600 weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
The pilot program welcomed seven veterans transitioning to civilian life for an immersive, behind-the-scenes experience focused on motorsports technology, broadcast production and live event operations during one of NASCAR’s most iconic and patriotic race weekends.
The Veteran Tech Accelerator was created in collaboration with DraftKings SERVES, which reflects the company’s commitment to investing in people, strengthening local communities and providing support to people where it’s needed most.
“Through DraftKings SERVES, we are committed to supporting veterans by advancing long-term opportunity, career development and mentorship,” said Senior Vice President of Global Communications and Corporate Social Responsibility at DraftKings. “We’re proud to collaborate with NASCAR IMPACT on the Veteran Tech Accelerator to provide transitioning service members with firsthand exposure to careers in technology and sports entertainment while recognizing the leadership, adaptability, and technical expertise veterans bring to these industries.”
The multi-day experience began with a full-day visit to the NASCAR Research & Development Center and NASCAR Productions facilities in Concord, North Carolina, where participants connected directly with engineers, production personnel and competition leaders to learn more about careers across the sport.
Veterans participated in two specialized learning tracks — Competition Technology and Productions — allowing them to shadow professionals aligned with their backgrounds and career interests. Throughout the program, participants observed race-week operations, explored the technology powering NASCAR competition and gained firsthand insight into the collaboration required to execute a major sporting event.
“Seeing companies, especially NASCAR, get involved in Career Skills Programs to help veterans transition is great, and I do hope to see veterans in the future working at places like this,” said Melissa Mitchell, United States Army veteran and program participant.
The program also included networking opportunities with NASCAR leadership and members of NASCAR’s Veteran Employee Resource Group, providing participants with mentorship, career guidance and feedback focused around how to translate military experience into opportunities within sports and entertainment.
The program culminated with the Coca-Cola 600 on Sunday, May 24, where participants received exclusive garage access, observed team operations, attended a meet-and-greet with NASCAR Cup Series Driver Ty Dillon and experienced NASCAR’s premier Memorial Day Weekend event firsthand.
The initiative was developed with input from NASCAR employees who are military veterans currently working in competition technology and production roles, helping ensure the experience reflected authentic career journeys and meaningful mentorship opportunities.
Editor’s note: Keep tabs on this page for lineup advice following qualifying, including changes you should consider.
Fantasy Update: Toyota largely ruled practice at Nashville Superspeedway in preparation for Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400, holding four of the top-five spots on single-lap averages. With qualifying getting canceled due to rain, Toyota will have four of the opening six spots at the green flag. The biggest surprise was former Nashville winner Ross Chastain and the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing team, which led the way on 15-, 20- and 25-lap averages, as he slid into my 36 for 36 grid. Aside from that, the normal contenders are filled throughout my lineup.
My lineup: Denny Hamlin, Tyler Reddick, Christopher Bell, Ryan Blaney, Kyle Larson. Garage: Carson Hocevar.
The second half of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season begins Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Recent Nashville races have been unpredictable, with each of the last three years featuring drivers who seemingly popped out of the blue to score their first win of the season. Toyota has been dominant at intermediate venues in 2026, with Nashville fitting somewhere in the middle as a 1.33-mile hybrid intermediate.
Returning to Fastlane this year is my weekly NASCAR 36 for 36 pick, where you can come play along. It’s a season-long points battle introduced in 2024 where strategy is the primary emphasis. With 36 chartered cars and 36 races on the 2026 schedule, players can choose each car once for the duration of the season.
Driver:Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Selections remaining: 6 Comment: While Larson has just one Nashville win — a dominant outing in which he led 264 laps in the inaugural 2021 event — he is always at the front. The two-time Cup champion has never finished worse than eighth in all five starts. He leads the series with an average finish of 5.2 at Nashville.
Driver:Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford Selections remaining: 5 Comment: It was Blaney who played the field like a fiddle last year at Nashville, leading a race-high 139 laps en route to victory. The 2023 Cup champion has been feast or famine in “Music City,” with three finishes of sixth or better and a pair of finishes of 36th or worse due to accidents. But it’s very possible that the long-run speed of the No. 12 team pays dividends again this weekend.
Driver:Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Selections remaining: 4 Comment: As you can see, I’m running low on starts with Hamlin, but as he stated after winning the All-Star Race two weeks ago, anytime the series visits an oval, he expects to win. Hamlin has been snakebitten at Nashville, yet to score a win despite leading all drivers with 344 laps led and owning the best average running position at 4.98. He’s also scored stage points in all 10 Nashville stages.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images
DRIVERS TO AVOID
Driver:Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Selections remaining: 7 Comment: Briscoe should have speed this weekend, as Joe Gibbs Racing has led more than twice as many laps as the next-closest team through five Nashville races. Still, Briscoe has a best finish of 17th at Nashville, and his 26.8 average finish is his worst among all tracks, with three finishes of 31st or worse.
Driver:Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford Selections remaining: 7 Comment: Keselowski is a two-time Nashville winner in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, but that success has stalled on Sundays. He has a best finish of 11th in five starts at Nashville, which is his only oval without a top 10. An average finish of 22.2 is Keselowski’s worst among all Cup ovals.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images
SLEEPERS OF THE WEEK
Driver:Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Selections remaining: 7 Comment: Even after tangling with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. last year at Nashville, Hocevar found himself in contention for the win and finished runner-up. Spire’s stock rises weekly, and this is the type of track where Hocevar excels. He has an average finish of 9.0 here, best among all venues.
Driver:Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford Selections remaining: 10 Comment: Smith led a career-high 31 laps at the Coca-Cola 600 and had legitimate pace to contend up front. He finished second to Joey Logano in a five-overtime thriller here in 2024, and he ranks second among all drivers with an average finish of 7.5.
Matt Kelley | Getty Images
FEATURED MATCHUPS
Daniel Suárez vs. Zane Smith Pick: Smith Comment: Never has Suárez been higher in points through 13 races than he is in his first season with Spire. His 14.4 average finish at Nashville is also respectable. But Smith is leading the way for Front Row Motorsports most weeks and has shown flashes at intermediate venues.
Shane van Gisbergen vs. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Pick: Van Gisbergen Comment: Both drivers were strong last weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway, scoring stage points in all three stages. It was undoubtedly the best career oval performance from van Gisbergen. Nashville is a place where Trackhouse Racing tends to turn up the wick, with Ross Chastain winning in 2023.
Chase Elliott vs. Joey Logano Pick: Elliott Comment: Each driver has a Gibson guitar from winning at Nashville. Logano has a quartet of top 10s and showed potential on intermediates at Charlotte. I’m still favoring Elliott, however, given the week-to-week uncertainty around the No. 22 team.
Ryan Blaney vs. Ty Gibbs Pick: Blaney Comment: While Toyota has ruled intermediates in many key categories in 2026, Gibbs has yet to crack the top 10 in the final rundown through three Nashville attempts. Blaney is the defending winner of this event and consistently hovers around the top five here.
Pick: Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford Comment: When going out on a limb, you need to think of where underdogs excel. Nashville is arguably Smith’s best track on the circuit, despite only having a pair of starts. Through 13 races, Smith has averaged 18.8 points per race, so if he can top that, it’s a victory.
Championship points leader Justin Allgaier returns to Nashville as the defending winner of Saturday night’s Sports Illustrated Resorts 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The 2024 series champ has been so strong this season that his points lead (145 points) over second place, reigning series champion Jesse Love, is greater than the margin between Love and eighth place Carson Kvapil. And the veteran Allgaier, a two-time Nashville winner (2022 and 2025), is the only former winner in Saturday’s race.
On the other side of the experience metric, this will mark Hendrick Motorsports’ Corey Day’s second Nashville start. The talented 20-year-old Californian earned his career-first wins at Talladega Superspeedway and Dover Motor Speedway in just the last month.
Richard Childress Racing teammates Love and Austin Hill finished second and third last week at Charlotte, marking the first time they’ve both been in the top five in a race since February at Austin’s Circuit of The Americas road course.
Their teammate this weekend at RCR is popular YouTube personality and ARCA Menards Series regular Cleetus McFarland, who will make his second career series start and first race ever on the Nashville oval, driving the No. 33 RCR Chevrolet.
Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champ Larson will be competing Saturday night, driving the JR Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet. He’s already won two of his four previous O’Reilly Auto Parts Series starts — at Las Vegas and Texas — this season and has earned top-10 finishes in his last 10 starts in the series.
An interesting note about Nashville … the Stage 2 winner has gone on to win the race four of the last five years.
Practice is at 2 p.m. on Saturday, followed immediately by Kennametal Pole Qualifying at 3:05 p.m. ET (The CW App). Joe Gibbs Racing’s William Sawalich is the defending pole winner.
At first glance, the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season has felt a little tough to pin down.
Spire Motorsports has become a weekly factor, with the latest evidence coming Sunday night in the organization’s first crown-jewel victory after Daniel Suárez’s impressive, emotional Coca-Cola 600 win. Tyler Reddick has piled up trophies at a historic pace. Former champions are hanging around the playoff cutline deeper into the season than they’d prefer. A few races have flipped late on strategy or restarts, while the standings entering the second half remain packed tightly enough to keep everything feeling unsettled.
Look a little closer, though, and the season starts making a lot more sense as we reach the halfway point of the 26-race regular season with Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The numbers through 13 races suggest this has quietly become one of the most efficiency-driven seasons of the Next Gen era — one where consistency, clean execution and organizational depth have carried more weight than raw speed alone.
Only 83 cautions have flown through the opening half of the regular season, the fewest through 13 races since 2012. Chevrolet has won four straight races … but Toyota drivers have led the most laps in nine of the first 13 events. Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney has felt like one of the fastest drivers in 2026, backed up by NASCAR Insights rankings in the top four in both speed and passing. But an absolutely woeful pit-road experience for the No. 12 team, ranked 32nd overall, has left him with one win — though it feels like it should be more — and it’s the lone victory for Ford.
That’s not randomness, but instead structure and execution. In a way, it’s always been the name of the game, but it feels heavier this year — avoid mistakes and capitalize on your speed, and you can expect a solid points day.
One small screw-up? Tough luck.
Long green-flag runs expose things: pit-road mistakes linger longer, balance matters more deeply into a run and recovery drives become harder to manufacture when races stay clean. (That honestly makes Blaney’s many comebacks this year even more impressive.) Over time, what we’ve seen this season is that the organizations capable of putting complete afternoons together keep resurfacing near the front, even if the finishing order itself still seems shaken up week to week.
No driver has embodied that better than Reddick.
The five wins naturally jump off the page, but the broader shape of the No. 45 team’s season may be even more impressive. Reddick has finished inside the top five in nine of the first 13 races and owns a staggering 5.54 average finish — the best by any driver through 13 races since Ernie Irvan in 1994. The No. 45 group has been exceptionally difficult to knock off rhythm. Bad days have rarely snowballed, and good days almost always turn into meaningful point hauls … and there have been a lot of good days. In a season — and revamped Chase format — where races are increasingly rewarding stability and execution above all, Reddick and 23XI Racing have become the clearest example of what operational control looks like right now.
And while Reddick sits at the center of the title talk entering the summer stretch, the bigger story may be how many organizations suddenly look capable of sustaining championship-level speed over the long haul.
For years, the Cup garage has largely revolved around a familiar axis: Hendrick Motorsports, Team Penske and Joe Gibbs Racing setting the pace for each respective manufacturer, while everyone else tried to close the gap.
Halfway through 2026, that picture feels a little less static.
For starters, look no further than the fact that the points leader for literally the entire season doesn’t drive for any of ’em.
David Jensen | Getty Images
But beyond that, Spire already owns as many wins this season as Hendrick and Gibbs each have, and it’s clear the team’s speed and shots at race wins are no longer isolated to a handful of tracks while hoping for a sprinkling of luck. Suárez enters Nashville 10th in points after delivering a trophy amid tears and rainfall Sunday night. Carson Hocevar has remained inside the top 10 in the standings despite still being unrefined and early in his Cup development curve, sealing the deal on Cup win No. 1 in memorable fashion at Talladega. Michael McDowell has begun steadying things after a rough stretch in the spring, and he’s the lynchpin leader in the team’s clubhouse, tying it all together with his veteran presence. The organization still has room to grow, certainly, but it also no longer feels like a fledgling team surviving on intermittent flashes or strategy days.
That’s a meaningful shift inside this garage, and it doesn’t extend to just that organization. RFK Racing has undergone a similar evolution, just with a little less noise around it — partly because it’s an organization with long-running championship aspirations, even after a decade-plus rebuild as the other powerhouses tightened their grip. Still, RFK drivers have compiled a 14.3 average finish through 13 races, which is their best at this stage of a season since 2012 — so, process complete, perhaps?
Either way, it’s all coming together. Chris Buescher is posting the best average finish of his Cup career through 13 races and Ryan Preece finished on the lead lap in every race until Charlotte. Team co-owner Brad Keselowski, meanwhile, keeps hovering near the top 10 in points despite still searching for a breakthrough finish, and he’s clearly as close as he’s been under the RFK banner.
Naturally, as fresh challengers establish themselves, the powers that be invite a little closer inspection. That doesn’t mean they should resort to panic, and we’ve seen them respond judiciously in recent years; any time one of the big-three teams has a slow spring, it often feels as if it’s closely followed by a dominant summer.
Hendrick still possesses arguably the highest collective ceiling in the series, and one of its sleeping titans — Chase Elliott — has awoken, off to his best start in years with a pair of wins, already matching his highest output since 2022. Kyle Larson has led 513 laps, second only to Denny Hamlin, and appears poised to pour on a few wins at some point (perhaps as soon as this weekend), and William Byron remains comfortably inside the playoff picture. Alex Bowman is likely out of the Chase picture, but you can almost count on him to snag a win at some point. If he’s held winless this year, it’d be the first time in Hendrick equipment that he’s failed to capture a victory two seasons in a row. Not likely.
Still, the week-to-week stranglehold Hendrick has often maintained over stretches of previous seasons — particularly in the spring — hasn’t felt quite as firm through the opening half of 2026. The Chevrolet powerhouse is still searching for its first pole through 13 races, and Larson’s speed, while elite, hasn’t yet translated into a victory … in more than a year. Byron has alternated between top-10 finishes and runs of 30th or worse over the last six races, and Elliott’s two worst finishes of the season have come in the last two events. The team is incredible, but not infallible.
But none of that removes Hendrick from the championship picture. Some of these trends generally apply to JGR, too, but even that team, despite some hiccups, still has three cars in the top eight in the standings and its lone 2025 Championship 4 driver picking up steam behind them — and, notably, still on the right side of the bubble. If anything, it speaks to the level of competition around them right now. The speed and resources are still there, but the margin for incomplete weekends just looks smaller than it did a year ago — and it’s ever-shrinking.
Team Penske has lived in a similar space. Blaney has quietly put together one of his most impressive seasons to date and sits third in points, which almost feels criminal — one could argue he’s been one of the most valuable drivers of the year, despite Reddick’s monumental win total. Joey Logano spent much of the spring digging out from uneven finishes before finally snapping a lengthy top-10 drought at Charlotte, but he shouldn’t lay down the shovel yet, and Austin Cindric dropped below the playoff cutline after his Charlotte DNF. If Blaney wasn’t carrying the speed that he is, the alarm bells would be ringing here. But this is Penske, and do we really think the three-time champ Logano and crew chief Paul Wolfe won’t figure it out?
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That dynamic around the cut line will become one of the defining stories of the second half, though, because my goodness, there will be some names left out of The Chase.
Cindric enters Nashville 15 points below the cutoff. Logano is 29 back. Ross Chastain, despite collecting three stage wins this season, remains 65 points outside and is no longer even the Trackhouse Racing driver in the strongest Chase position.
There is still enough calendar left for dramatic swings, and one win can rekindle an entire season (see: Suárez, Daniel). But halfway through the regular season, the deeper indicators increasingly favor teams that have thus far avoided major losses. That may become the defining on-track characteristic of 2026 and beyond, rather than the weekly volatility we saw under the previous playoff system.
The standings are still crowded enough to preserve uncertainty, and the summer schedule offers plenty of room for surprises. The sport’s established organizations still have too much speed and experience to fade quietly, but 13 races in, the season has already begun to reveal its shape — and it has taken on a different look than we’ve gotten accustomed to.
The organizations executing cleanly every week — 23XI Racing, RFK Racing, portions of Joe Gibbs Racing and an increasingly credible Spire Motorsports lineup — are no longer simply building momentum. They’re building insulation and a cushion of points.
And in a season where consistency has quietly become the garage’s most valuable currency, that may matter more than any single Sunday trophy.