WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Hendrick Motorsports drivers Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson have no hard feelings after multiple run-ins during last week’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Iowa Speedway.

The pair of former series champions made contact during a Lap 186 restart in the Iowa Corn 350, with Elliott entering Turn 1 three-wide middle and pushing Larson, the outside car, up the track. They found each other again on a re-fire 23 laps later, before Larson got doored by fellow dirt competitor Christopher Bell exiting Turn 4 at Lap 251.

That contact ultimately set off the building fuse for Larson, who’s generally even-keeled and collected over the radio. But initially, Larson believed he had been wronged.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

“How much [expletive] room do I have to leave people,” he said over the radio to his team at Iowa. “I’ve been trying to be good — a good teammate, I’m trying to be a good competitor and it hasn’t gotten me anywhere the last hour.”

Larson finished 28th last weekend, a race that marked a fifth finish of 13th or worse over the last eight races, dating back to mid-June in Mexico City. But after digesting each of the incidents, the 33-year-old said Iowa was no harm, no foul.

“Everybody’s making a big deal about Chase. I really wasn’t that mad at Chase, and too, after seeing the replays and stuff, I was less frustrated,” Larson explained Saturday at Watkins Glen International. “I move on from things quickly. I don’t really even think that there was a need for a conversation. I’ve ran into him way more, so no, I’m all good and moved on from it.”

“It wasn’t what I thought it was from the seat. I was less frustrated with him than I was others. It was just everything kind of compiled and I was trying to keep my cool and then I just exploded.”

On the other side of the coin, in typical Elliott fashion, the No. 9 driver wasn’t aware of Larson’s comments during the Iowa race. He admitted, however, that Larson might not have been put in the best spot during the two incidents but didn’t feel that it warranted any further conversation.

Elliott finished 14th at Iowa, keeping his streak alive of 23 consecutive top-20 finishes to open the 2025 season.

“I didn’t know there was any issue, honestly,” Elliott said on Saturday. “I just feel like we were going for the same gap at the same time. I didn’t think any of that was intentional, either way. So yeah, I haven’t felt the need [to talk]. If we need to talk, we will, I’m sure. But we haven’t had any issues.”

Heading into Sunday’s 90-lapper at Watkins Glen International (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), Elliott and Larson share common ground along with fellow HMS teammate William Byron. The trio remains in pursuit of the Regular Season Championship, which pays out an additional 15 playoff points to the series leader after Daytona International Speedway in two weeks.

With his Iowa victory, Byron regained the lead by 18 markers over Elliott, with Larson waiting in the wings at just minus-45. The three are also responsible for five of the last six wins at Watkins Glen, dating back to Elliott’s first career win in 2018.

Back in 2022, Elliott and Larson were locked into a fierce battle on a restart with five laps to go. Larson locked his tires entering the 90-degree Turn 1 and ran Elliott wide, forcing him to lift and settle for fourth as the No. 5 team scored its second consecutive WGI victory.

There’s certainly no ill will dating back three years, but with its August date on the Cup Series schedule, the wild card could produce major postseason implications with just three regular-season races remaining. But according to Elliott, it’ll stay business as usual for all three HMS drivers in the mix for the regular season crown.

chase elliott and kyle larson at watkins glen in 2022
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

“Generally speaking, I feel like the communication and things that go on behind closed doors are all very open and honest, and good relationships around the campus,” Elliott said, referring to the next three events. “I don’t think there’s really any need for us to change our procedures or how we go about things throughout the week. We just handle things indoors and internally and feel like that’s the best way to go about it and we’ll keep doing it.”

Elliott’s 170 laps led at Watkins Glen are second only to Kyle Busch (249) among active drivers, but he’s finished 19th or worse in each of the last two Upstate New York races — including a Stage 2 fuel miscalculation in 2023.

For Larson, his six road-course victories are tied for fourth all time, but the left- and right-hand turns haven’t treated him kindly in 2025 with an average finish of 29th — third worst among full-time drivers. He’s going to need a turnaround at The Glen to stay in contention for the Regular Season Championship.

“Some good finishes, good stage points these next few weeks would be really important. We’re definitely not out of it,” said Larson, who will head to Iowa after qualifying to race for his fourth Knoxville Nationals title. “You’ve seen big swings kind of happen in points for Next Gen racing, just how crazy the races get. Watkins Glen has been a track that we were good at the previous two years before last year, Richmond’s kind of a hit-or-miss track for us, and then Daytona, anything can happen.

“We’re definitely not out of it.”

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Ryan Blaney claimed his second Busch Light Pole Award of the season Saturday afternoon at Watkins Glen International. It’s the 15th of his career and the second ever on a road course.

For the first time in his NASCAR Cup Series career, he’ll lead the field to green in Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

It was a dramatic effort for the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford Mustang, knocking the reigning road course master in Trackhouse Racing’s Shane van Gisbergen from the top spot on the speed chart by a slight .33-seconds, with a lap of 122.568 mph around the historic 2.45-mile road course in scenic Upstate New York.

It was a markedly different day for the 31-year-old North Carolinian Blaney a year ago, suffering a disappointing showing when a poor qualifying effort left him in a vulnerable position and ultimately being eliminated from the race on the opening lap.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

He acknowledged that beating the road racing ace van Gisbergen on Sunday will be another story.

“Ninety laps is going to be a little harder to beat him tomorrow, but gotta start somewhere,” the 2023 Cup Series champion said with a smile. “It’s more neat for me because we had an absolutely abysmal weekend here last year. …

“We’ve worked really hard on where we need to get better here, where I need to do a better job, how can we improve our race cars. So it was like a big dual effort. Just proud of their dedication to get better at this place and improving the car from last year, and I tried to work on a lot of things. I consider myself a pretty average road-course racer and I’ve worked really hard on trying to get better, where can I improve my driving skills and styles and compete a little bit more at these places, and it’s neat when that all comes together.

“I try to take these things one day at a time. Tomorrow is a whole different task, but it’s nice to have done our job really well today and now about focusing on trying to make 90 good laps tomorrow.’’

It is the 150th Cup Series pole for Team Penske, making the storied organization only the fourth team in series history to eclipse that mark.

Blaney and van Gisbergen – who has three road-course wins on the season – will lead the field to the green flag, followed by Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase Briscoe, van Gisbergen’s Trackhouse teammate Ross Chastain and Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch, who for much of the qualifying session looked to have had a front row start.

“That’s not bad,’’ said a smiling Busch, who won from pole position at Watkins Glen in 2008.

MORE: Practice results | Weekend schedule

“Great job by everyone on this Chevrolet,’’ he added. “Feels good to have a good solid effort like that right now.’’

Defending Watkins Glen race winner Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher will roll off 12th in the No. 17 RFK Ford. He holds the 16th and final points position among the 16 drivers currently aiming for the playoffs with three regular-season races remaining. His teammate Ryan Preece sits just 23 points behind him in the standings and will start 17th.

Their team co-owner, Brad Keselowski, who also needs a victory in one of the remaining three regular-season races, will start 16th. Keselowski has back-up drivers on standby for the next three weeks as his wife Paige is due to give birth to their fourth child. Road-course ace Joey Hand is at Watkins Glen.

Championship points leader William Byron – the 2023 Watkins Glen winner – will roll off 10th. His teammate Chase Elliott, a two-time Watkins Glen winner who is 18 points behind Byron with three regular-season races remaining, will start 20th.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – The Coca-Cola 600 seems like an eternity ago.

That long, steamy, spring night stands as the highlight of Ross Chastain’s 2025 season, scoring his first crown jewel victory — and already fading from memory.

In the two-and-a-half months since running 600 miles at Charlotte Motor Speedway, it has been Shane van Gisbergen leading the way for Trackhouse Racing, winning all three road course races that have been completed before Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen at Watkins Glen International (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Meanwhile, Chastain dropped six spots in the regular-season championship standings over the last 10 races with a pair of top-10 finishes.

“The high spot of the 600 is an incredible feat of what we were able to do that whole weekend,” Chastain said on Saturday at Watkins Glen. “Be fast on Saturday — I know we crashed, but I will take some speed if it is at some risk, and it just hasn’t been that way. There has been some risk, but we’ve been slow. Not much different than before the 600.”

Over that 10-race stretch, the No. 1 Chevrolet has a best effort of sixth at Michigan International Speedway. His other top 10 was a 10th-place finish at the Chicago Street Course. Half of the 10 races have had results of 24th or worse, all of which have come in the last seven races.

The overarching problem for the No. 1 team in 2025 has been showing competitive pace off the hauler. Through the first 23 races of the season leading into Watkins Glen, Chastain had an average starting position of 22.3, ranking 26th of full-time drivers. He does lead the way for Trackhouse drivers, with Shane van Gisbergen and Daniel Suárez more than a full position behind on average, however, and put the car in the second row on Saturday with a fourth-place qualifying effort.

WATKINS GLEN: Weekend race hub | Full projected results

Through May, Chastain made a living by getting respectable finishes despite woes in qualifying. Seven of his nine top-10 finishes in 2025 came in the opening 13 races of the season.

Trackhouse team owner Justin Marks knows the No. 1 team can flip the switch, however. It’s the same team that made a Championship 4 run during the inaugural season with the Next Gen chassis in 2022, and Chastain has won at least one race all four years he’s been paired with the young race team.

“I mean, the pace in the race, I think, has been pretty good,” Marks stated on Saturday. “I think we’re able to make lemonade out of lemons a lot more often than not. I think that for us, we do have to get better on Saturdays. We absolutely have to get better on Saturdays if the No. 1 team is going to have an opportunity to deep run into the playoffs, because if you qualify 28th, it’s just so hard to pull yourself out of that. So that’s where the focus is.”

Should the No. 1 car unload faster more frequently, Marks believes the No. 1 team can be a dangerous out in the playoffs.

“If we can get those Saturdays to be better, if we can get the No. 1 team off the hauler faster in practice, better qualifying, better pit selections, and better position for strategy, then we’ll see what that group is capable of,” Marks added. “My hope is that we’ll get there. There’s certainly as much fight in that team as there’s ever been.”

The primary focus for Chastain during the race is to take what the No. 1 car will allot him. He pointed out a wreck late at Dover Motor Speedway as an example where he overstepped, trying to score one additional point. The following week at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Michael McDowell mistimed the entry of Turn 3 and tagged Chastain. It was the first time he had consecutive DNFs since 2018 while driving for Premium Motorsports.

Chastain is living by the adage of, “to finish first, first you must finish.”

And he’ll look to build upon last year’s stellar fourth-place finish from the pole on Sunday at The Glen.

THORNBURG, Va. — Tonight, Dominion Raceway’s 4/10-mile oval will come alive for the Little Speedsters Foam Fest, a high-octane NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series event headlined by the Truckin Thunder America Racer Late Models.

With gates opening at 5 p.m. ET and a kids foam party kicking off the festivities, the green flag will drop at 7 p.m. ET, setting the stage for a showdown featuring 17-year-old Chase Johnson, the current NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national points leader, and Conner Weddell, ranked seventh nationally.

The Truckin Thunder America Racer Late Model division, a cornerstone of Dominion’s racing program, showcases affordable yet fiercely competitive racing with its 405-horsepower crate motor machines. Johnson, a third-generation racer from Mechanicsville, Virginia, has dominated the 2025 season, amassing 13 feature wins in his No. 57 “Digger.” His precision and fearless driving make him a fan favorite and a formidable force.

“It’s all about staying focused and keeping the car consistent,” Johnson said. “The competition here is tough, and every lap will be a fight to stay out front.”

Conner Weddell, a Rookie of the Year contender, is poised to challenge in his No. 8 machine. With three wins and 11 top fives, Weddell’s steady climb in the national standings adds intrigue to the America Racer field.

“Chase is setting the bar high, but we’re learning every race,” Weddell said. “Dominion’s fast pace make every move critical.”

Tonight’s race promises another chapter in their rivalry with both drivers vying for crucial points as the season nears its final stretch.

Joining the Late Models will be the Dominion Stocks and UCARs, two divisions that embody the grassroots spirit of short-track racing. The Dominion Stocks, featuring V-8 powered stock cars, will deliver door-to-door action with veteran drivers like Mike Lowe, Gary Burke & Todd Ruggles alongside newcomers like Stephen Newman or Stuart Walsh looking to take his first trip to Victory Lane piloting a car for fellow Dominion Stock driver Tommy Smith.

The Kelly Heating & Cooling UCARs, designed for affordability and accessibility, will bring out a mix of veterans and newcomers, with drivers like Michael Frayser expected to lead the charge.

“The UCARs are where you learn the ropes,” Frayser said after a recent win. “It’s raw, real racing, and Dominion’s fans love it.”

Both divisions will add to the night’s electric atmosphere, with tight racing and bold passes set to keep the grandstands buzzing. Also this year, for the first time, Dominion sees a female driver in the top three in points for the UCARS. Wendi Kelly has put a consistent season together and is poised for a podium finish.

“Im out here having fun, and I’ve really learned a lot this year,” she said.

The Little Speedsters Foam Fest isn’t just about racing; it’s a family affair. Kids 15 and under will enjoy free grandstand admission, a season-long initiative made possible by many community partners like Fun Land of Fredericksburg and supported by First Choice Garage Doors, Storms Tax Service, Obsidian Eyewear, Josh Mattera Hauling, Barry Moore with Alcova Mortgage, Pembelton Forrest Products and Gateway Home Improvements.

The first 50 kids through the gates will receive a NASCARkids.com cup, and young fans can participate in the “Color Your Helmet” contest for added fun. The foam party, a highlight for the younger crowd, requires a signed waiver at registration, with towels recommended and a strict no-running policy in the grandstands.

Dominion’s 118 Bar and Grill will keep fans fueled with food, drinks and sweet treats, while Whosyourdriver.org, the raceway’s official Safe Driving partner, will remind attendees to plan a safe ride home.

“Any track, any race, any time, always ask: Who’s your driver?” — The campaign emphasizes, reinforcing the importance of responsible choices after a night at the races.

Nestled just off exit 118 of I-95, Dominion Raceway has become a hub for NASCAR’s grassroots racing, drawing drivers and fans from across the region. The 2025 season has been a showcase of talent, community and high-speed thrills. With the national points chase heating up, every race at Dominion carries added weight for drivers like Johnson and Weddell, who are not only battling for track supremacy but also for a shot at NASCAR’s national spotlight.

The season is far from over, with a packed schedule of marquee events still to come. Fans can look forward to Date Night at the Races, a romantic evening with high-speed flair; the Craig Murto Memorial First Responders Night, honoring local heroes; the Flying VA Classic featuring SMART Modifieds; Carnival Night at the Races, blending family fun with racing action; Super Hero Night, where fans and drivers will celebrate in costume; and Track or Treat, a Halloween-themed finale. Each event will deliver the heart pounding excitement and community spirit that define Dominion Raceway.

The NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series head north to Watkins Glen International for a tripleheader weekend of road-course racing. Bookmark this page and come back often for your race-week essentials — from links to qualifying order, average practice speeds, results and more.

RELATED: Full weekend schedule | TV listings

NASCAR Cup Series

Race day: Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on USA Network. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Seven sets (five new race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying). Teams will also have one set for practice and six sets of wet-weather tires, if needed. 

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Race day: Saturday at 3 p.m. ET on The CW. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Six sets (three new race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying). Teams will also have two sets for practice and four sets of wet-weather tires, if needed. 

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

Race day: Friday at 5 p.m. ET on FS1. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Five sets (three race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying). Teams will also have one set for practice and four sets of wet-weather tires, if needed. 

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — As cautions bred cautions during the closing laps of Friday’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Watkins Glen International, Corey Heim motored through late-race chaos to retake the lead and win his series-best sixth race of the 2025 season.

But it didn’t come without a veteran challenge in the closing moments of the 81-lapper, a race extended with three overtimes. McAnally-Hilgemann Racing’s Daniel Hemric used a little strategy — and some instinct — to wheel his No. 19 Chevrolet to runner-up at the 2.45-mile facility, earning his best finish since Texas Motor Speedway in May.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

In a race when Hemric thought he didn’t have his best stuff, he described the finish as ‘twofold,’ still nearly knocking off the championship favorite in the waning moments at The Glen.

“I don’t think we had the best truck, but also, I think I had enough advantage to be equal with him at the end,” Hemric explained post-race. “Right now, it’s one that got away, but hindsight being 20/20, I mean, we came a long way from where we were sitting about 10 laps into Stage 1. Sometimes you just got to count your blessings.”

Knowing Hemric was struggling in the early moments of Friday’s race, the penultimate event of the regular season, crew chief Kevin Bellicourt made a bold call. Hemric, along with two playoff hopefuls in Ben Rhodes and Gio Ruggiero, stayed out during a Lap 11 caution, a call that helped ultimately put the No. 19 in contention down the stretch. He restarted out front and finished eighth in the opening stage.

Hemric later pitted in Stage 2, and similarly, got track position later in the second segment to bank more points after a Jack Wood caution shaped up a one-lap dash to the stage break. But heading through the esses, Hemric briefly lost fuel pressure — an issue that plagued several trucks through the afternoon — and dropped back to 14th at the green-checkered flag.

Still, the original strategy put the No. 19 team in prime position for the final stage.

“These guys were having fuel issues as we got lower on fuel — not crazy low on fuel — but lower,” Hemric said. “We were having issues before we were getting as low as we thought, and we tried to just buy some insurance. So we were, I think, one of the first ones. Like me and the 17 [Ruggiero] were the first ones to pit, and ultimately, that was the deciding factor. Gives us a shot at the end.

“Just hats off to Kevin Bellicourt, man. He just made a great call [to head to] pit road right then and there, and that ultimately set us in a position where we had options for the rest of the day.”

The final stage ran caution free until 11 laps remained in regulation. But that’s when chaos reigned in the hazy Central New York air.

Hemric avoided several incidents as the laps ticked down — two of which involved teammate Connor Mosack — and saved enough fuel to pilot ahead to outside front row for the second overtime restart. Hemric missed on his opportunity to pounce, but a second consecutive caution in the bus stop set up a final chance for the veteran.

Heim again fired ahead to the lead, but he didn’t get far. Hemric stayed attached to the bumper of the No. 11 Toyota on the final lap and carried momentum into Turn 6, but diving to the inside, he couldn’t make it stick. The two darted toward Turn 7 nearly even with the checkered flag in sight, but Hemric had to file back in line and settle for second at The Glen.

“I learned something off the first [restart] and tried to apply it for the second one. I felt like it was better and I had a better chance at it,” Hemric explained. “I liked my chances and my leverage that I had into [Turn] 1. The 11 had to make a big block on me down the front straightaway and let me get to where I wanted to be in 1. I thought I had him where I wanted to be, but man, he just had a lot of potential starting in the esses, and it was all I could do not to drive into his door.

“I drove in to get close to him [in Turn 6 on the final lap], and he had a little bit of a wheel hop of brake lock and it let me get to his left side, and I thought we were gonna race it out through [Turn 7], and honestly, I just felt like I undervalued how much potential he still had left in his truck with as old as tires that he had and the amount of speed he carried on entry. He just cleared me and drove off to the checkered flag.”

corey heim takes checkered flag
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

As Heim tried to manipulate the overtime restarts, Hemric kept it as clean as possible racing for the win. The Tricon Garage driver admitted he found himself in an awkward position on the final re-fire in Turn 1 and respected that Hemric refused to use the bumper in the closing corners.

“I was in a really bad aero spot, and really got a lot of respect for him for not sticking it through there and not wiping me out because he certainly could have,” Heim said after the race. “Daniel’s always been a really clean racer and I enjoy racing around him. So props to him for that.

“To have a guy like that to race around and know that you can race hard with him and he’s not going to put yourself, put himself in a bad spot … I think that’s a really gratifying feeling as a racer and being around a guy that does it the right way, I think that’s really cool.”

Hemric, Heim and company wrap up the 2025 regular season on Friday with a trip to Richmond Raceway (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio),

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series championship leader Corey Heim scored his fourth consecutive road-course victory — the sixth of his career — in a dramatic triple overtime finish as nightfall approached in Friday’s Mission 176 at The Glen at the historic Watkins Glen International.

The 23-year-old Georgia native took the lead on a restart on the first overtime, then held position in his No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota with a pair of masterful restarts on the second and third overtime periods, ultimately holding off former Xfinity Series champion Daniel Hemric and rookie Gio Ruggiero by 0.202 seconds.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

It was Heim’s 17th series win, and he became the youngest driver in series history to claim that total. This was the second time this season he’s won from pole position.

The race on the 2.45-mile historic venue in Upstate New York was relatively calm and clean early on, with only a single extra caution in addition to the first two stage breaks. But a steady barrage of incidents forced six more caution periods and the three overtimes — the race only finishing within a couple of minutes of when NASCAR had pre-determined to call it official because of darkness.

Heim got the jump on the final overtime, but then slowed slightly and wiggled the front end of his Toyota in an effort to get the fuel pick-up. It did the trick, and he was able to go full throttle again, fending off Hemric in the No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Racing Chevy and 19-year-old Ruggiero in the No. 17 Tricon Garage Toyota.

“Just never give up,” said Heim, who led a race-high 44 laps but had to rally from 11th place on a Lap 43 restart. “I got behind in that last stage and was scratching and clawing, trying to get back through the field.

“I had my brakes pretty much go out on me completely on that long green-flag run, was beating them up trying to get back through the field — blew the bus stop chicane between turns four and five — and made a lot of mistakes myself. I’ve had a lot of them get away from us this year by cautions or whatever else, finally had one go our way.”

WATCH: Heim details chaotic run at The Glen | Hemric talks runner-up

For much of the final regularly scheduled laps, it looked like Cup Series regular Christopher Bell may pull off an emotional victory. The 2017 Truck Series champ was piloting the No. 52 Halmar Friesen Racing Toyota for the team’s owner-driver, Stewart Friesen, who suffered serious injuries in a dirt modified race crash a week ago.

Bell — gambling on a late-race gas-saving strategy — was leading with one lap to go in regulation Friday when a caution came out for a multitruck accident involving former series champion Ben Rhodes. But the multiple overtimes forced Bell to pit for fuel. His rally forward to a fourth-place finish was impressive.

Tyler Ankrum, Xfinity Series regular Sammy Smith, Ty Majeski, Xfinity Series championship leader Connor Zilisch, Matt Mills and Layne Riggs rounded out the top 10.

Rhodes’ accident was indicative of an impactful day in deciding the championship field, with only one more regular-season race now remaining to set the 10-driver field. Friesen had claimed one of the automatic playoff berths, with a win at Michigan International earlier this season, but the serious injuries he suffered last week and missing Friday’s race have potentially opened an extra driver playoff position.

MORE: No. 52 truck team moves forward through Friesen’s injury

Before the green flag, Ty Majeski and Jake Garcia held a 16-point advantage over Rhodes for the 10th and final points transfer position.

Majeski finished seventh on Friday. Garcia was 15th, and the two-time series champ Rhodes ended up 26th despite claiming the win in Stage 2. Garcia now takes a slim 11-point advantage over Rhodes and 21 points over Ruggiero into the final regular-season race next Saturday night at Richmond.

Friesen can request a medical waiver, and if NASCAR grants it, he would remain in the playoffs — changing the playoff picture yet again.

MORE: Truck Series standings | Truck Series schedule

The Craftsman Truck Series moves to the Richmond Raceway three-quarter miler for next Friday’s regular-season finale, the eero 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Majeski is the defending race winner.

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Craftsman Truck Series garage concluded without issue, confirming Heim as the race winner.

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to reflect the results of Friday’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Watkins Glen International.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Stewart Friesen may not have been at Watkins Glen International Friday, but he was still helping his team from afar.

Sidelined after a savage dirt modified crash in Quebec on July 28 that left the 42-year-old with a shattered pelvis, compound fracture to his right leg, fractured C7 vertebra and fractured left hip, Friesen was texting with his Halmar Friesen Racing crew Friday as the team’s Nos. 52 and 62 Toyotas prepared for the group’s first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race without Friesen.

MORE: Truck Series standings | Watkins Glen photos

NASCAR Cup Series regular Christopher Bell filled in for Friesen at the 2.45-mile road course, piloting Friesen’s flagship No. 52 Toyota to a fourth-place finish in the Mission 176 at The Glen. Bell, the 2017 Truck Series champion, had previously discussed opportunities to drive a second HFR truck for the organization this season, but those discussions never came to fruition. With Friesen out, the timing aligned for Bell to climb behind the wheel, albeit in an unfortunate circumstance. Bell wanted to make Friesen and crew chief Jimmy Villeneuve proud Friday. A top-five effort surely did the job.

“I had a ton of fun, but I’m sure it looked very weird seeing that 52 truck out there without Stewart in it,” Bell said. “Just happy to give them a good run and get a good finish out of it. They told me at one time, checkers or wreckers. And I’m like, yeah, well, I want to make sure that I get it to the checkered flag and walked out of here with a fourth-place finish after all the chaos.”

Bell did his best to make Friesen proud in qualifying, coming up just 0.192 seconds short of Corey Heim’s pole-setting time. Villeneuve, who was Bell’s truck chief during their 2017 title run, also serves as the general manager of Halmar Friesen Racing and told NASCAR.com that Friesen was texting the team all afternoon.

“Stew is doing good, and I talked to him yesterday,” Villeneuve said. “He’s in good spirits. He’s been plugged in all day. Luckily, our sport is broader than just being at the race track. He is putting input, helping us adjust the truck and giving the driver feedback from what he has felt in the past. So we’re very lucky to have a guy like him still clicked in and helping us.

“He is a huge, huge factor of this race team and will be till he comes back, and then he’ll be a bigger factor because then he’s back in the seat.”

Christopher Bell climbs out of the No. 52 Halmar Friesen truck at Watkins Glen.
Zach Sturniolo | NASAR Digital Media

In an Aug. 5 press release, the team announced Kaden Honeycutt would replace Friesen “for the balance of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season,” starting next week at Richmond Raceway. However, Villeneuve pulled the reins back on those plans a tad on Friday afternoon.

“Kaden is going to fill in for Richmond, and then after that’s a little TBD to see where Stewart’s at and all that, and see where his health is at,” Villeneuve said.

Now that Friesen officially missed Friday’s race at Watkins Glen, he may apply for a waiver to remain playoff eligible, thanks to his June 7 win at Michigan International Speedway. Ready as needed, Honeycutt is eager to get the opportunity to work with the Halmar Friesen Racing team.

“The opportunity is definitely to go win races for sure, right?” Honeycutt told NASCAR.com.” That’s all that group wants to do, and win a title and Owner’s Championship. So that’s what I’m going to try to deliver for them. But the way it came about was in the worst way possible, with Stewart getting hurt. And that’s his priority is to get better first. And just the chance from Stewart and Mrs. (Jessica) Friesen and Chris Larsen (team co-owner and CEO of Halmar International) for even thinking about me to fill in the rest of the year for them and do a good job. I can’t thank them enough for even thinking of me.”

Honeycutt entered Friday’s race sixth in the driver standings and had been competing full-time for Niece Motorsports in its No. 45 Chevrolet. However, the team announced Aug. 4 it was parting ways with Honeycutt immediately due to a new deal Honeycutt signed for 2026 that will move him to a new team and manufacturer.

Cody Efaw, general manager of Niece Motorsports, told NASCAR.com Friday he viewed the rest of the 2025 season as a “lame-duck term” if Honeycutt remained with the team since he would lose access to much of Chevrolet’s and Josh Wise’s driver training programs.

“There’s a lot of information goes into that that he would get turned off to,” Efaw said. “Another large contributing factor too is the fact that Precision Vehicle Logistics (and) DQS Solutions and Staffing, they’re huge partners of ours. Their largest customer is General Motors. So I have a hard time continuing to have them partner and spend money because we funded and found money for Kaden to race ever since he’s been in Niece. So I have a hard time having them spend money towards a driver that’s going to help Toyota. That’s where he’s headed.

“And I like Kaden. Me and Kaden rode on a plane up here together and sat beside each other and talked, and we have no bad blood. But he’s going to be in meetings at Toyota, right? Even if he’s driving here, they’re going to be talking. They already have been. That’s how they got a deal done. So it’s not that I think he’d give information, but we’d have to shut all that off to protect ourselves. So therefore, I don’t think that running for a championship is — I don’t say it’s impossible, but this stuff’s so hard at that level.”

Kaden Honeycutt looks on before a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Honeycutt, who drove the No. 02 Young’s Motorsports Chevrolet at Watkins Glen and finished 34th due to mechanical issues, told NASCAR.com before Friday’s race that he was “definitely shocked” by the team’s decision to part ways so abruptly and that he didn’t consider this outcome when making his plans for the 2026 campaign. He informed the team of his plans so Niece could prepare to find someone to fill the seat in his absence. That absence, instead, was fairly instant. But Honeycutt confirmed all is good between him and his former team manager.

“We’re all good. We still talk,” Honeycutt said. “Like I said, I still love that crew over there. They did nothing but great things for me. They worked really hard for me, and they’re the first team that gave me a chance to run a full season and put me in the position where I’m at now. So yeah, definitely all good between both of us.”

In fact, Efaw said he was the one who reached out to Toyota Racing Development’s Slugger Labbe to initiate Honeycutt’s opportunity to get behind the wheel of the No. 52 truck in place of Friesen. Following Friday’s race, Honeycutt sits eighth in the regular-season driver standings.

Whether NASCAR officials grant Friesen a playoff waiver or not, the No. 52 Toyota will remain eligible for the owners’ championship in the Truck Series this season so long as it attempts each of the remaining races on the schedule. Honeycutt remains in position to contend for the drivers’ championship and would remain in that position so long as he attempts each race as well. At Niece, the No. 45 truck remains eligible for the owners’ title fight as well, with Connor Zilisch piloting the vehicle on Friday at Watkins Glen and Bayley Currey getting behind the wheel for the rest of the season.

“We’ve got Bayley in-house. (Honeycutt’s) got the 52. We still can run for an owner’s championship. That’s important to us,” Efaw said. “He can still run for a driver’s championship with a team that can run for an owner’s championship. In my eyes, everyone’s happy. Am I wrong? It don’t affect anyone’s finances. It ain’t brilliant; it’s just simple.”

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — On Friday at Watkins Glen International, Austin Hill walked back into the NASCAR Xfinity Series garage for the first time since officials suspended him for what they deemed an intentional wreck of Aric Almirola at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 26.

Hill, however, is holding his ground, maintaining that the contact with Almirola’s No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota was unintentional.

“I know that when I go to my grave way down the road that it wasn’t done on purpose,” Hill told NASCAR.com Friday afternoon. “So, I can at least take that with me.”

RELATED: Watkins Glen schedule | At-track photos

With eight laps remaining at Indianapolis, Almirola packed air on Hill, moving the No. 21 Chevrolet up the race track. Hill made a stellar save and then turned left entering Turn 4. With the internal movement in the cockpit, in addition to slight contact from behind with Sheldon Creed, Hill connected with Almirola.

Following the incident, NASCAR officials held Hill for five laps for reckless driving. The Georgia native voiced his displeasure on the radio, for which he later apologized in a long chat with series director Eric Peterson. He also called Elton Sawyer, NASCAR’s senior vice president of competition.

“From my standpoint, it was a full racing incident, full racing deal,” Hill said. “I pleaded my case to NASCAR and everyone. I told [Peterson] everything that went down, showed him the SMT data, showed him that [Creed] and I were together before making contact with [Almirola].

“From my standpoint, it was fully unintentional. It wasn’t one of those lose your mind moments and turn to the left. I feel like I’m a smarter racer than that. If I was mad about him getting into the back of me, I would have waited until Turn 1 and shipped him like he shipped me in Turn 3. That would have been it. I would have moved him out of the groove and went on.”

In Hill’s mind, if he meant to wreck Almirola, he would have immediately owned up to it. He reflected back on an incident involving Cole Custer last spring at Charlotte Motor Speedway when the No. 00 Ford was turned into the inside wall after previous contact cut down Hill’s right-front tire. Hill had a conversation with then-series director Wayne Auton, admitting that he was guilty and that he would accept any penalties coming his way. Hill was fined $25,000 and docked 25 points for the incident.

To Hill, Indianapolis was another scenario entirely.

“This deal was a totally different deal,” Hill said. “I haven’t admitted to any of it, for one. I know for a fact that if I turned [Almirola] on purpose, I would have either said it on the radio or it would have come out by now that, ‘Yeah, I right-rear hooked the 19 on purpose because he made me mad.’ That just wasn’t the case.”

Throughout his career, Hill has made a name for himself as a hard-nosed racer who isn’t afraid to ruffle feathers. Though he was suspended for the first time in his career, Hill says it won’t change his competitive racing nature.

Over the last two weeks, Hill and Almirola have yet to speak. Hill would like to talk in person “because he needs to understand where I was coming from.”

“I’m not sure what kind of issue he possibly has with me, but in his shoes, he plays both sides, and I just don’t do that,” Hill said. “You get what you get with me, and you either like it or you don’t.”

The lone regret Hill has from Indianapolis is the way he conducted himself over the in-car radio. To Hill, one area he believes he can improve is managing his emotions.

“I told [NASCAR] I can’t go back and change it, all I can do is try to be a better person moving forward,” Hill said. “All of those conversations have been great. Conversations that I’ve had with my sponsors, partners have been good, but there are some things that they would like to see differently from me moving forward. I totally understand, and it’s something where I can put cussing on the radio on my shoulders and say that I need to do better and be a better person going forward.

“You don’t really know who is listening in, and when you’re in the heat of the moment, there could be a 10-year-old kid that looks up to you and is listening to you on the radio each week, and you go out and blast something like that on the radio. That’s not something that you should be doing.”

MORE: Xfinity Series standings | Xfinity Series schedule

As far as Hill knows, the No. 21 team has had his back, believing him when he says the contact was not intentional. They weren’t pleased, however, that 21 coveted playoff points were taken away. Naturally, advancing throughout the playoffs will be an uphill battle, entering as one of the final seeds. Hill was granted a playoff waiver earlier this week.

Hill added that throughout the race week, he can already see a difference in the way the No. 21 team is prepping for upcoming races. His peers call him “110” for always giving 110% on the race track, so as Hill noted, it’s been bumped to “120.”

The first goal for Hill will be Watkins Glen on Saturday (3 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), where he will aim to win a road-course race after four top-five finishes in the last five road-course events.

“The way that I’m trying to look at it on that side of things is, I feel like if I can’t overcome 21 points then I probably shouldn’t be the Xfinity Series champion this year,” Hill said. “I’m going to put those 21 points on my shoulders and have to dig deep when the playoffs start and either win a race or run inside the top three each and every race and hope that other guys have some issues.”

See where your favorite NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series drivers will pit this weekend at Watkins Glen International.

NASCAR Cup Series

Go Bowling at The Glen at Watkins Glen International on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports A[[).

RELATED: Watkins Glen weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on USA Network

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Mission 200 at The Glen at Watkins Glen International on Saturday (3 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: How to watch NASCAR on The CW

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

2025 Truck Series pit stall assignments for Watkins Glen.

Mission 176 at The Glen at Watkins Glen International on Friday (5 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: How to watch NASCAR on FS1