The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series is back in action after a brief off week with a return to the road course at Watkins Glen on Friday (5 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

A slew of Cup Series regulars will be in Friday’s race, including RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher, who will make his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut this weekend, driving the No. 66 ThorSport Racing Ford. Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch will return to drive the No. 07 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain will be back in No. 44 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet. Christopher Bell will also fill in for Stewart Friesen in the No. 52 Halmar Friesen Racing Toyota as Friesen recovers from injuries sustained from a Super DIRTcar Series race.

Connor Zilisch will kick off his triple-duty weekend with the No. 45 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet after the team announced that it would part ways with Kaden Honeycutt, effective immediately.

Brent Crews Motorsports will make its series debut this weekend at Watkins Glen with owner/driver Brent Crews behind the wheel of the newly formed No. 70 Toyota team. While William Sawalich returns to No. 1 Tricon Garage Toyota for his fifth start of 2025.

See the full entry list for the Mission 176 at The Glen:

 

The NASCAR Cup Series makes its way to Upstate New York for road-course racing on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

Forty cars mark the entry list for this week’s Go Bowling at The Glen. A notable addition to the starting grid will be up-and-comer Connor Zilisch, who will pilot the No. 87 Red Bull Chevrolet for Trackhouse Racing for the fourth time this season. The 19-year-old’s most recent appearance in the Cup Series came at EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta on June 28, earning his best career finish to date in 11th place. Zilisch made his Xfinity Series debut last fall at Watkins Glen and did so with a splash, winning the pole position and leading 45 of 90 laps to score the win. He is currently tied with JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier for the Xfinity Series points lead.

Additional part-time entries include Katherine Legge in the No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Chevrolet, J.J. Yeley in the No. 44 NY Yacing Team Chevrolet and Josh Bilicki in the No. 66 Garage 66 Ford.

MORE: How to watch NASCAR on USA Network

RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher is the defending winner at The Glen and enters 23 points above the provisional elimination line in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs standings with just three races remaining in the regular season.

See the full entry list for Sunday’s race:

The NASCAR Xfinity Series transitions from short-track racing at Iowa Speedway to road-course competition at Watkins Glen International, with the Mission 200 at The Glen on Saturday (3 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series 

Connor Zilisch returns to the site of his debut and first Xfinity Series victory, driving the No. 88 once again for JR Motorsports and seeking his sixth triumph of the 2025 season.

Austin Hill returns to wheel the No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet after a one-race suspension was levied following an on-track incident at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Full-time Cup Series regular Michael McDowell, meanwhile, will race in Xfinity competition for the first time since 2016 as pilot of the No. 11 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. Cup full-timer Shane van Gisbergen will additionally race in the event, driving the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet.

View the full entry list for Saturday’s event:

Niece Motorsports announced Monday that Kaden Honeycutt has been released as the driver of its No. 45 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, saying that the driver had signed with a different team and manufacturer for 2026.

In a statement, the Al Niece-owned organization indicated that Xfinity Series regular Connor Zilisch will drive the No. 45 Chevy in Friday’s Truck Series race at Watkins Glen International (5 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The team also said that Bayley Currey will pick up driving duties in the No. 45 entry for the final eight Truck Series races of the season.

RELATED: Craftsman Truck Series standings | Weekend schedule: Watkins Glen

The dismissal is a jarring personnel move considering Honeycutt’s stature in the Craftsman Truck Series standings with just two races left in the regular season. The 22-year-old driver ranks sixth in the points, and he holds ninth place in the provisional playoff picture — 73 points above the elimination line and in prime position to secure one of the series’ 10 postseason berths.

Honeycutt released his own statement later Monday, expressing his appreciation to the Niece team for their time together and saying that he intended to keep his bid for playoff eligibility alive.

“I would like to thank Niece Motorsports, specifically Al Niece, Cody Efaw and Phil Gould, as well as Josh Morris with DQS and Jason Wilson with Precision Vehicle Logistics, for the opportunity to drive the No. 45 Chevrolet in 2025,” Honeycutt’s statement read. “My plan is to continue to contend for race wins and position myself to make the playoffs this season. I look forward to sharing my plans for the remainder of 2025 and beyond in the near future.”

In its statement, Niece did not specify Honeycutt’s destination for next season, but said that “making this change allows our team the opportunity to begin building for next year.”

Honeycutt had recorded two top-five finishes and nine top-10 results this season. He had also made starts for Niece Motorsports in partial Truck Series campaigns the last two years.

Niece Motorsports said that Phil Gould will remain crew chief for the No. 45 team, indicating that no other personnel changes had occurred.

Honeycutt is a multiple-time winner in CARS Tour competition, claiming the Pro Late Model championship last season for the first time. He also scored a prestigious Super Late Model triumph in the Snowball Derby last December.

With the substitution, Zilisch will run triple duty this weekend at Watkins Glen. In six career Truck Series starts (all coming in 2024), Zilisch has logged one top-five finish. Currey, meanwhile, has tallied eight Truck Series starts this season in the No. 44 Niece Chevrolet, logging one top five and three top-10 finishes.

A historic venue awaits a historic NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race Wednesday when Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park hosts the 750th race in series history with the running of the Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com. (7:45 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

In addition to being the 750th race in series history, the race will also serve as the 157th Modified Tour event held at Thompson since the creation of the modern series in 1985.

Through the years, some of the best the Modified Tour has to offer have scored victories at Thompson. Leading that list is Mike Stefanik, who won a record 15 times in Modified Tour competition at the track. Other notable winners at Thompson include Justin Bonsignore, who has won there 14 times, as well as Ted Christopher, Jeff Fuller, Rick Fuller, Tony Hirschman, Ron Silk, Doug Coby, Steve Park, Reggie Ruggiero, Mike McLaughlin, Richie Evans and Bobby Santos III, among others.

Tickets for the Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com are available trackside. Below is everything you need to know about the 10th race of the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park
Action from the IceBreaker 150 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park earlier this season. (Photo: Rob Branning/NASCAR)

Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park

Seven races remain on the 2025 Modified Tour schedule, and the battle for the series championship is coming into focus.

Austin Beers holds a four-point advantage on reigning Modified Tour champion Justin Bonsignore going into Wednesday’s race at Thompson, a place where Bonsignore has enjoyed ample success over the last decade.

Bonsignore has won 14 times at Thompson, whereas Beers has never been to the track’s Victory Lane. In eight previous Thompson starts, Beers’ best finish is fourth on three occasions. The ball is distinctly in Bonsignore’s court this week, but Beers should not be counted out based on his consistency throughout the first nine races of the year.

Wednesday’s race also serves as Round 2 of the FloRacing Connecticut Challenge, a three-race miniseries exclusive to new teams competing in all three Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park events. Matt Swanson’s team owner Gary Casella, based on Swanson’s ninth-place finish at Thompson in April, leads the FloRacing Connecticut Challenge standings entering Wednesday’s race.

Other eligible FloRacing Connecticut Challenge competitors include Teddy Hodgdon, Eric Berndt, Jake Johnson, Max Zachem, Brian Sones and Dylan Slepian.

Ron Silk, who enters Wednesday’s race as the most recent Modified Tour winner at Monadnock Speedway, is also the most recent winner at Thompson following his victory in the Icebreaker 150 in April. He’s won at Thompson eight times during his career, second among active drivers.

Patrick Emerling, who led more laps than anyone during the doubleheader at Monadnock Speedway a few weeks ago, is the defending winner of the Thompson 150 and will look to get his championship run back on track Wednesday. Other notable entrants include Matt Hirschman, Jon McKennedy, Luke Baldwin, Jake Lutz, Tommy and Trevor Catalano, Stephen Kopcik and Chase Dowling, among others.

The complete entry list for Wednesday’s Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com is available here.

Luke Baldwin
Luke Baldwin during practice for the IceBreaker 150 for the Whelen Modified Tour at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on April 16, 2025 in Thompson, Connecticut. (Photo: Rob Branning/NASCAR)

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

Races Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com
Date Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025
Track Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park
Layout 0.625-mile asphalt oval
Location Thompson, Connecticut
Start time 7:45 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Posted Awards $116,053
Tickets Trackside
How To Watch FloRacing

SCHEDULE: Wednesday, Aug. 6: Practice from 3:40 – 4:10 p.m. … Final practice from 4:20 to 4:50 p.m. ET … Qualifying at 6:20 p.m. ET … Start of the Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com at 7:45 p.m. ET.

QUALIFYING: Two consecutive qualifying laps. (EIRI) Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com is limited to 30 starters including Provisional Positions.

TIRE ALLOTMENT: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. Maximum of nine (9) tires may be used for the race, not including Emergency Change Tires. Teams will declare to NASCAR Officials at the conclusion of practice the tires they will use during the race. The tire change rule is two (2) tires per stop.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Danny Bohn won a race for the first time in more than a year Saturday night by winning what proved to be a 103-lap race in the FOX8 100 in the Brad’s Golf Cars Modified Series at Bowman Gray Stadium.

Bohn, the 2014 Modified champion who races part-time at Bowman Gray, picked up the checkered flag for the first time since June 1, 2024.

“We were struggling over here this year,” Bohn said. “We started off really good in the (CookOut) Clash (in February) and ran decent in teh 200 (season opener in April), and it’s just been, we’ve been off. We had to change the car, honestly. We’ve run the same thing over here for so long and it’s just not working anymore, so (we) spent a lot of time in the shop this week setting some things up, changing some things and came over here this morning and put some tires on.”

It was Bohn’s 19th career win, tying him with Don Smith and Chris Fleming for 31st place in the Modified Series.

“I thought we’d be better, but I didn’t know if we had enough to win,” Bohn said. “But the car was really good in the race.”

Bohn started 15th Saturday night after a full-field redraw after qualifying.

“We got a really good start point for the next, for the 150 (season finale, scheduled for Aug. 23) when we come back,” Bohn said. “It could be a little better, but definitely made huge gains on it this week. So, glad ot be back in Victory Lane.”

It didn’t take Bohn long to weave through a crowded field. He took the lead on lap 61 after sliding by the previous leader, Brandon Ward, who is also the points leader.

“I could up on (Ward),” Bohn said. “I didn’t know how hard he was running. I could run up on him and then I kind of wanted to save my stuff, so I backed off.”

Even with the cautions Bohn was able to maintain his lead.

“And then, I figured I’d wait for a restart and then we had a restart and he run over my left front. And then after that, i was kind of like, ‘Whatever.’ I get it, but it seems like anytime I’m by him he’s bouncing off me. So, after that I was going to win the race however I had to. You know, I moved him up. And I knew we had a little bit better of a car there and it paid off.””

Ward praised Bohn for the move to take the lead.

“We just got together on that restart there and Danny did exactly what I would’ve done,” Ward said. “He had a chance to get us back off the bottom, and I mean really that’s the race for the win right there even though it’s, you know, halfway or whatever or right around it. I would’ve done the same thing. We both have.

“We both race hard, I like racing with Danny. That’s a good team over there. All in all it’s a good night for us. He could get going on the restarts.”

The final caution of the night came on lap 96 and since there was less than five laps left of the scheduled 100, there was a single-file restart on lap 101, which was overtime.

“When we got within five to go I knew it’d be single-file from then on out,” Bohn said. “I was glad to see that, but anytime you can control the starts, you know, it’s an advantage. That’s why your leader starts the race and starts the restarts.”

Tim Brown finished third, followed by Mike Speeney, and Jason Myers.

“I really just didn’t want to see a caution,” Ward said. “I would’ve rather seen it go green and us to just race it out. But you predict what’s going to happen. You know, you’ll want the caution and won’t get one.”

Amber Lynn
Amber Lynn celebrates after winning a Sportsman feature Saturday night at Bowman Gray Stadium. (Photo: Erick Messer/Bowman Gray Stadium)

Amber Lynn made her return to Bowman Gray Stadium after missing the first three months of the season with a brain cyst, and not only did she race, she won the second 20-lap race in the Law Offices of John Barrow Sportsman Series.

Lynn had previously said she was retiring from racing, however, the injury healed and her doctor approved of her coming back to racing.

The last time Lynn won a race was June 8 of last year after winning what turned out to be a 116-lap race that went to overtime.

“It’s great to be here,” Lynn said. “It was really hard being at the Stadium every weekend and not being able to drive.

The field was inverted in the second race at 8 after the Madhouse Scramble following the first 20-lap race, and to come here in my first weekend back and win the second race, it means a lot to me. It means a lot to my family, and my sponsors, and my crew guys that have stuck with me for years and years.”

Lynn started third in the second race, behind pole-sitter Tommy Neal and Sterling Plemmons. Lynn took the lead after an early caution and led 16 of the 20 laps.

Chase Robertson finished runner-up, followed by Zack Ore, Mitch Gales, and Robbie Brewer.

Ore picked up the win in the first 20-lap race in the Law Offices of John Barrow Sportsman Series.

Austin Jones finished runner-up and Justin Taylor finished third.

“We had a rough last week,” Ore said. “I tried to race everybody as clean as I could. I got into Justin a little bit in the backstretch. We hooked bumpers. I didn’t need to wreck him at all. I hope he saved it.”

Gales finished fourth, Robertson was fourth, and Lynn finished sixth.

In the 20-lap QRC HVAC and Refrigeration race, Brad Lewis persevered through seven cautions to and defeated Christian Joyce for the win.

It is Lewis’ second win of the season and eighth overall.

“He’s tough,” Lewis said of Joyce. “You know, when he’s behind he’s going to run you clean. You don’t have to worry about it. I wouldn’t have cared if he had won the race. I love that guy that much.”

Bryan Sykes Jr. finished third, followed by Bryan Sykes Sr., and Bryan Robertson.

Blaze Sanders picked up his first career win after winning the first 15-lap race in the Q104.1 Stadium Stock Series.

Sanders, the son of A.J. Sanders, defeated runner-up Chris Allison.

“It’s been a long time coming,” Blaze Sanders said. “I probably started about three years ago and I’ve never won a race in my life. But I made a statement tonight, ‘I was going to win it.'”

Patrick Mullen finished third, followed by Tyler Rose, and Austin Cates.

In the second 15-lap Stadium Stock race, Tyler McDonald won his first race of the year and his eighth overall.

“It’s been a year,” McDonald said. “A lot of good shots at it, but just slipped from us every time. (This is the) first year we’ve had all these sponsors on the car. This is the first time we’ve got them to Victory Lane.”

Brandon Brendle finished runner-up, followed by Luke Smith, Chuck Wall, and Levi Holt.

Next week’s racing is highlighted by the Ortega Twin 50s in the Brad’s Golf Cars Modified Series. In addition there will be two 25-lap races in the Law Offices of John Barrow Sportsman Series, a 20-lap race in the QRC HVAC and Refrigeration Series, and either one or two 15-lap races in the Q104.1 Stadium Stock Series.

Many of the photos of William Byron from his first win of the NASCAR Cup Series season showed him beaming in Victory Lane at Daytona International Speedway, holding two fingers aloft. He could have just as easily signaled No. 1 that February day, marking his place atop the scoring pylon or signifying his first scratch of this year’s win column. Instead, the gesture commemorated a rare feat as a winner of two consecutive Daytona 500 crowns.

The accomplishment positioned Byron for a sizable streak atop the Cup Series standings, which he led for 17 out of 18 races through the heart of the season’s first half. But lately, that veneer of peerless performance from the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports group had shown signs of giving way. The start of summer was especially cruel, and questions laced with doubt started to enter in about when — or even if — win No. 2 might arrive.

“Haven’t gotten many good finishes, and you get constantly — we kind of joked about it today — you constantly have these questions of what’s going wrong, what’s wrong, what’s wrong,” said No. 24 crew chief Rudy Fugle. “This year, I don’t know that there’s a ton wrong other than circumstance, and sometimes that’s the way these races play in the summer is that way.”

It took Byron nearly five and a half months to put two and two together in his 2025 campaign, and the 27-year-old driver savored the occasion of Sunday’s fuel-squeezing victory at Iowa Speedway with measures of elation and relief. The 22-race drought that had threatened to become a curious burden for the No. 24 team had finally ended, and Byron was eager to turn that reversal into forward progress with the Cup Series Playoffs approaching.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Iowa

“I really feel like we needed to win a race. I feel like we deserved to win a race based on how we’ve run all year. It just wasn’t happening,” said Byron, who won for the 15th time in his Cup Series career. “I felt like we were trying to — we had to learn how to do basically everything right, and things were still not really working out in our favor. This was just a big relief to have one go our way, and we’ve just been running so well this year, I feel like this is going to be a big momentum boost for our team just to be able to check that one off the list and keep carrying the speed that we’ve had.”

The team’s strength hasn’t been a major question mark, even as the Victory Lane absences began to accumulate. Byron had finished second or third on four other occasions this season, and his race-best 141 laps led in Sunday’s Iowa Corn 350 vaulted him back atop that category in the Cup Series this year.

His earlier brushes with a second 2025 victory came in sometimes heartbreaking fashion as the regular season entered its back half. Byron blistered the Coca-Cola 600 field by leading 283 of the 400 laps, only to place as the runner-up behind a resurgent Ross Chastain. Two weeks later, Michigan also appeared to be within his grasp when his No. 24 Chevy sputtered with a dry gas tank just before the white-flag lap.

That Mitten State misfortune was the first of eight races that Byron endured without a top-five finish, a stretch that included his first three DNFs of the year. Just last weekend, Byron faded from third place to 16th at the end of the Brickyard 400 with an ill-timed fuel fizzle. Memories of those late-race heartaches crept up again Sunday for Fugle, who watched the 350-lap race reach a wide split of pit-stop strategies with a mad rush of yellow flags in the later going.

“Yeah, in two of the races, three to four tenths of a gallon of gas would have gotten us a win in the past couple months, and then just these weird — even today I felt like the hammer was dropping on us,” Fugle said. “We were going to run in the top five and then all these cautions come and I was like, it’s all going against us. Thankfully, that last caution, and thankfully we had a good enough car that we were able to save gas and get there.

“It’s a credit to everybody on the team, but yeah, it’s been tough because you’re just waiting for that next thing to drop, so that’s why we were all sitting up there like, when is something to go wrong today, and it just didn’t. Thankfully, that gives us more confidence, and it’ll give us a boost for sure.”

The bigger-picture benefits from Iowa may not be calculable just yet, but the short-term gain returns Byron to the top of the Cup Series standings. He has good company in those upper reaches with Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase Elliott (18 points back) and Kyle Larson (minus-45) rounding out a 1-2-3 team monopoly in the points.

MORE: Cup Series standings | Race Rewind: Extended highlights

Byron said the competition at the top hasn’t been a prime discussion topic among his fellow team members, calling it a “strength on strength” scenario that provides motivation to push forward. Even if it’s not a top talking point, the Regular Season Championship and the bounty of 15 playoff points that go with it remain an advantage worth chasing — even when those brief rough patches arise.

“When you get in these times, you just can’t question yourself,” said Jeff Andrews, Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager. “You’ve got to know that you’re putting the very best race cars on the race track you can, and I firmly believe that. The men and women of Hendrick Motorsports do an incredible job and build amazing race cars. We get to come to the race track and execute that great product. It’s been not that far off. It’s incredibly close right now. … It just doesn’t take much to go from top 2 or 3 and a little hiccup here or there and all of a sudden you’re outside the top 10, and once you get back there these days with this car, it’s tough. It’s a struggle to claw your way back up there.

“I love our race teams. I love where our mindset is right now. We’re rolling through the late part of the summer here, which typically hasn’t been our strongest time of year, and I just love what we’ve got going on right now, and we’re focused on that 1, 2, 3 in that Regular Season Championship and getting all those bonus points that are available. That’s another big one for us.”

The outcome was also huge for the collection of drivers competing for the three remaining playoff spots available with three regular-season races remaining, since Byron’s triumph prevented another new winner from narrowing the postseason window. The bad news on the other end is that an invigorated Byron is a dangerous Byron; one who has the realistic potential to reach the Championship 4 round of the playoffs for a third consecutive year.

His veteran crew chief put two and two together in pretty short order.

“I think he’s the best driver all around in the field right now,” Fugle said. “Of course, he’s mine, and I should say that, but I really think he’s maturing and getting the experience to show that off. He’s very well diversified, and then he’s a fighter. He’s got a heart of a lion and fights through everything. There’s no quit. Those are things that he’s gotten better at as well over the years is just rolling with the punches and what happens next, and next thing you know, you’re leading and you’ve got a chance to win.”

An incident-filled Iowa Corn 350 Powered by Ethanol left Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron celebrating in Victory Lane while myriad drivers found trouble at Iowa Speedway on Sunday afternoon.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

A season-high 12 cautions altered strategy throughout the final stage, aiding some drivers to excellent finishes and others to poor ones. Here’s who’s heading to Watkins Glen International with momentum on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) and who needs a boost heading to Upstate New York.

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 16th

Finished: 7th

What happened: Bowman may not have scored the crucially important victory to lock himself into the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, but another stellar day for the No. 48 team kept him firmly in the postseason picture. With his sixth finish of 11th or better in the past seven races, Bowman now sits 63 points ahead of the provisional elimination line with just three races remaining in the regular season. Any number of new winners over the next three weeks could upend any points cushion, but Iowa provided Bowman and Co. a strong performance in which he was inside the top 10 nearly all race long.

What’s next: Crew chief Blake Harris will be tasked with a difficult scenario at Watkins Glen, where Bowman has never finished better than 14th in eight starts — a mark he’s set three times. Will the strategy be to stay out and score stage points? Or will there be another move from the playbook Harris can use to propel Bowman into the postseason?

Alex Bowman drives at Iowa Speedway.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

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

Started: 15th

Finished: 6th

What happened: Contact with John Hunter Nemechek at Lap 242 put Wallace, last week’s Brickyard 400 winner, into the wall exiting Turn 4 and damaged his right-rear toe link. Repairs put the No. 23 Toyota two laps down within the final 80 laps, but a rash of other cautions allowed Wallace two free passes as the first car one or more laps down when future yellow flags waved. Back on the lead lap with fresher tires, Wallace charged through the field to score consecutive top-10 finishes for the first time since June, when he finished sixth and fourth, respectively, at Nashville Superspeedway and Michigan International Speedway.

What’s next: Road courses have never been Wallace’s strong suit, evidenced in part by his Watkins Glen results, where he has just two top 20s in six starts. But those two positives have come in each of the past two trips to Upstate New York, and Wallace has notably improved on the twisting courses through the NASCAR schedule. The good news for him is that, regardless of the result, he’s still locked into the playoffs thanks to his Brickyard victory.

Bubba Wallace shares a laugh before a NASCAR Cup Series race at Iowa.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

3. Austin Dillon, No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Started: 18th

Finished: 10th

What happened: Dillon was finally able to put a miserable three months of results in the rearview mirror Sunday, scoring his first top-10 finish since Texas Motor Speedway on May 4. The 2018 Daytona 500 winner was a factor inside the top dozen all day long before netting out in 10th place. The result ends an 11-race stretch in which the No. 3 Chevrolet had finished 15th or worse each week, with four top 20s and two DNFs scattered within that span.

What’s next: Watkins Glen has not treated Dillon well. The 2013 Xfinity Series champion has just three top 20s in 10 starts at the 2.45-mile road course. But Dillon and his team may already be looking one week ahead to Saturday, Aug. 16 at Richmond Raceway, a 0.75-mile tri-oval that shares plenty of similarities with Iowa and where Dillon went to Victory Lane in 2024.

Austin Dillon drives at Iowa Speedway.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 3rd

Finished: 28th

What happened: A rough-and-tumble day on restarts resulted in a miserable afternoon for Larson. Multiple restarts led to contact for Larson, including one with teammate Chase Elliott and another later with fellow dirt racer Christopher Bell. Late contact to the back of Ty Dillon’s bumper created more damage to the nose of Larson’s car and contributed to an uncharacteristic second finish of 28th or worse in the past four weeks.

What’s next: A bounceback is likely at Watkins Glen for Larson, who won consecutive races there in 2021 and 2022. The 2021 Cup champion has finished inside the top 10 in an even half of his 10 career starts at The Glen and is seeking his third top five in the last four races this season.

Kyle Larson races at Iowa Speedway.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

2. Michael McDowell, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 13th

Finished: 27th

What happened: McDowell seemed like a contender for a top-10 finish through much of Sunday’s race at Iowa. But the melee of cautions and on-track incidents never played into the No. 71 team’s favor, sinking McDowell outside the top 20 and en route to his third finish outside the top 25 in the past five weeks.

What’s next: McDowell will enter Watkins Glen in attack mode, understanding the road course presents what could be his best chance at launching into the Cup Series Playoffs from here on out. He’s qualified inside the top 10 in each of the three Next Gen races at The Glen and finished seventh or better twice, the exception coming in 2023 due to an electrical issue after leading 17 laps. McDowell charged to a fourth-place finish at Sonoma in July and led the opening 31 laps of this year’s Chicago Street Race, so an upset is certainly on the table.

Michael McDowell races ahead of Riley Herbst and Zane Smith at Iowa Speedway.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

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

Started: 11th

Finished: 24th

What happened: Hamlin had been on a monster tear through the NASCAR Cup Series, placing inside the top five in six of his last eight races prior to Iowa. That came to a screeching halt Sunday as the No. 11 Toyota was nowhere to be found, even spinning through Turns 3 and 4 at Lap 221. In what has been a dominant summer for Hamlin, the Midwest short track marked a rare off weekend and left Hamlin 51 points out of the hunt for the regular-season title.

What’s next: The No. 11 team can get itself back into the Regular Season Championship hunt at The Glen, where Hamlin won in 2016 and has finished inside the top five in five of the last eight races. The Next Gen races haven’t gone as well for Hamlin at Watkins Glen, with finishes of 20th (2022) and 23rd (2024), but he did earn the pole in 2023 before finishing second to William Byron.

Denny Hamlin spins during a NASCAR Cup Series race at Iowa Speedway.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

NEWTON, Iowa — RFK Racing is in the midst of a conundrum.

Chris Buescher and Ryan Preece continue to fight for the 16th and final NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs spot, while Brad Keselowski looms outside the bubble, trying to win his way in.

A Keselowski victory nearly happened Sunday afternoon at Iowa Speedway as the No. 6 Ford driver and 2012 series titleholder swept the first two stages, but ultimately came up short in third place as William Byron stretched his fuel tank 144 laps to score his first checkered flag since the season-opening Daytona 500.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Iowa

“We had an opportunity today, but yeah, it’s disappointing to not be able to get the win,” Keselowski said after the race. “We put ourselves in position. We can’t control what we can’t control, and we need to focus on what we can. We couldn’t control all the yellows that shifted the dynamics of the race today away from us. It’s unfortunate, but I love the position we were in and the speed that we had.”

A pivotal moment during the 350-lapper occurred in the latter portion of Stage 2 as drivers such as Byron, Chase Briscoe, Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott pit during a green-flag cycle. However, Keselowski was among those who stayed out in hopes that a caution would come out.

That caution did come as Shane van Gisbergen spun on Lap 171, pinning the drivers who came down pit road a lap down and on the back foot to catch up to those who stayed out.

However, cautions were the name of the game after SVG’s spin as 10 yellows flew between Lap 181 and Lap 282.

It caused a jumble in strategy in the field, and Byron benefited from the free pass on the initial SVG caution to put himself in position to win and take the gamble on fuel.

keselowski drives at iowa
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

“He did a great job,” Keselowski said of Byron. “He caught all the breaks and he took the opportunity and maximized it. He deserves credit for that. That’s what this sport’s about. You got to be fast, you got to execute, and you got to have some luck, and they did all three today.”

Keselowski’s teammate, Ryan Preece, was also a beneficiary of staying out before the van Gisbergen caution in Stage 2.

Preece ran outside the top 25 for the early portions of the race and needed a big swing to have any chance of a quality result. The multitude of restarts throughout the day worked into the No. 60 driver’s hand as Preece used the highest groove to drive through the field and squeeze out his second consecutive top five.

“We were struggling in dirty air, and I think [crew chief] Derrick [Finley] knew the easiest way to make up spots is on restarts,” Preece said. “We had a pretty badass one there when I think we went from 26th to 12th in about two corners. I don’t really know what the actual number was, but we did our job there. He [Finley] gave me a great car to stick it where I needed to, and that was fun.”

WATCH: Kyle Petty talks RFK’s resurgence 

The short run worked perfectly for Preece, and he found himself in third with a chance to pull off another Iowa triumph, the track where he scored his first NASCAR national series win in the Xfinity Series in 2017.

But the longer the runs went, the harder Preece’s car was to drive, and the No. 60 faded to fifth in the final 64-lap run to the checkered flag.

“Once we settled in and we got about 20 laps into that run, I just started getting really loose,” Preece said. “Brad caught me. Figured, even though I hate losing another spot in the points, I knew it was the right thing to do with how fast he was at the time and how many laps he led. Ultimately, still a good finish from how it started. I thought we were going to run in 28th to 30th, and had a little bit of luck. Got a break on that caution, and then some good adjustments gave us the opportunity to have a solid day.”

Preece added that he wouldn’t have given Keselowski the spot in the closing laps if he weren’t a teammate and noted the double-edged sword of wanting RFK to succeed as a whole, even in the position he’s in regarding the playoffs.

“I want to do the best thing I can for him and do what’s right for the company,” Preece said. “It’s the right thing to do for the situation we were in. If I didn’t get as loose as I did and I felt like I could challenge the 19 or the 24 for the win, yeah, I would’ve raced the [expletive] out of him. But at that point in time, it was damage control and try to not lose more time to anybody behind us.”

preece drives at iowa
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

Buescher struggled Sunday and finished 22nd. It narrowed the gap between him and Preece for the final playoff spot to just 23 points heading into Watkins Glen next Sunday (2 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), where the No. 17 driver is the defending winner.

As for Keselowski, he once sat outside the top 30 in points, and after four consecutive finishes of 11th or better, the No. 6 driver sits 21st in the playoff standings with three more opportunities to win his way into the postseason.

“I just feel like we can win any of these next three races, and that’s a good feeling,” Keselowski said. “Can’t take anything for granted. Ultimately, we need to get wins, and I think we all know that.”

There will come a point later in the year when Preece will celebrate his best Cup season to date. However, his 10th top 10 of the year will only stand as a statistic for the Cup journeyman until that first triumph comes or if he can point his way into the postseason.

“I think if we continue to do what we did at the end of this race and throughout the race, we’ll have our day.”