HAMPTON, Va. — Matt Waltz entered Saturday’s Hampton Heat with redemption on his mind after he was disqualified from a second-place run at Virginia’s South Boston Speedway in the first leg of the 2025 Virginia Late Model Triple Crown.

Mission accomplished — and he couldn’t have picked a better time and place.

Waltz, the 2017 Langley Speedway champion, finally won his home track’s biggest race when he cruised to a convincing victory in a race that was delayed by four hours due to a passing storm. Waltz was the leader at the halfway break when the storm arrived. He never looked back.

“I’ve been trying to win this thing for a long time, so to come out here after so many years and be able to win this thing, it’s awesome,” Waltz said. “So fired up. We had such a good race car today.”

Waltz won on a day that saw him set the best lap in practice. He then started on the front row, and 95 laps into the race, he found himself pushing Atley Wiese for the lead. Waltz made the pass just in time for the halfway break.

He then owned the second half of the race, consistently jumping out to large leads on multiple restarts. Such a gap was important in the closing laps, as a pair of Langley aces in Connor Hall and Brenden “Butterbean” Queen were attempting to run down the leader.

Waltz, though, navigated lapped traffic and managed his tires to perfection, leaving himself plenty of space ahead of his challengers as the checkered flag waved.

“I tried to just keep the tires on it in the first half the best I could and just keep the track position” he said. “I was doing the rain dance at halftime, but it’s all good now.”

Waltz is now locked into the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway, the third and final leg of the Triple Crown set to run in September. Hall also is locked into the Triple Crown finale thanks to his victory at South Boston.

At Langley, Hall finished second ahead of Queen in third. The latter made his first Late Model Stock Car start of the year and was coming off a victory at Dover Motor Speedway in the ARCA Menards Series the night before.

Woody Howard finished fourth ahead of Kade Brown in fifth.

Carson Loftin, Peyton Sellers, Ronnie Bassett Jr., Trevor Ward and Brandon Pierce finished sixth through 10th, respectively.

WINCHESTER, New Hampshire – For Tommy Catalano, watching his brother Trevor earn his first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory at Monadnock Speedway last year was emotional for several reasons.

Trevor’s triumph came in only his eighth NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour appearance. Entering Saturday’s Duel at the Dog 200 at Monadnock Speedway, Tommy had 96 career starts on his resume, none of which had resulted in a win despite several close calls.

RELATED: Complete results from the Duel at the Dog 200

Years of patience and hard work brought a second Catalano to Monandock’s Victory Lane in thrilling fashion.

Tommy was tasked with fending off Patrick Emerling during an overtime restart while on older tires. Emerling briefly took the lead from Tommy, but a nudge to Emerling’s back bumper knocked him out of the groove just enough for Tommy to earn an emotional breakthrough victory by the slimmest of margins – .007 seconds.

“I didn’t really want to get [Emerling] like that into [turn three],” Tommy said. “I was hoping to kind of move him up the hill a little bit. Everyone was kind of tight right there. Justin [Bonsignore] was right on my bumper. It’s unbelievable.

“Hopefully this isn’t the last one.”

After starting 12th, Tommy cycled to the second position after electing to stay on track during a caution with 42 laps remaining that, ironically, involved his brother Trevor.

Tommy lined up second behind Luke Baldwin for the ensuing restart, with Tyler Rypkema providing the two a buffer between Emerling, who led the remaining lead lap cars off pit road. Knowing he needed to move quickly, Tommy dove underneath Baldwin in Turn 1 to take the lead, which also pinned Emerling on the top line.

By the time Emerling worked his way back to second behind Tommy, another caution would trigger an overtime restart. The fastest car at Monadnock all evening would now be lined up to Tommy’s outside for the final two-lap sprint, but even with the odds against him, the seasoned veteran was not ready to surrender the win just yet.

Emerling led at the white flag. Through determination and sheer will, Tommy led at the checkered flag, albeit just barely.

The scene in Victory Lane was nearly identical to last year’s Duel at the Dog 250, with the only difference being the role reversal of the brothers.

As the Catalanos celebrated, Emerling felt a mix of frustration and disappointment with his second-place effort. He was critical of the maneuver Tommy pulled on him to take the victory but does not plan to linger on Saturday’s defeat for long.

“We had the best car today,” Emerling said. “We led basically the whole race and the whole team executed really good. We were doing exactly what we had to do and had the race won in the last corner but got smashed out of the way. That’s not the type of racing that I do, but I guess that’s how it goes.”

If Emerling had edged Tommy at the line, he would have snapped a streak of different winners to open 2025, having previously won at New Smyrna Speedway. Austin Beers’ victory at Lancaster Motorplex last weekend tied the record for seven different winners in seven events that was set in 1999.

Instead, Tommy’s valiant effort during the final laps set a new NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour record; eight winners in the first eight races.

Building up Catalano Motorsports has been a prolonged, methodical effort not only by Tommy, but his mother Amy, his father Dave, his brothers and every member of his team. That elusive first victory finally arrived on Saturday, a day Tommy wasn’t sure would ever materialize.

“It’s just nuts,” Tommy said. “You see all the people that have won so far this year and if you said any of them were going to win their second race [this year], that wouldn’t have surprised me at all. To come here and do what we did is phenomenal.

“You start getting down thinking it’s not meant to be, but you keep plugging away and keep at it.”

Kyle Bonsignore finished third in his 100th NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour start, followed by his cousin Justin Bonsignore and Beers. The rest of the top 10 included Rypkema, Baldwin, Stephen Kopcik, Craig Lutz and Anthony Nocella.

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour competitors will have less than 24 hours to prepare for their next race, as the Cheshire County Clash 200 at Monadnock Speedway takes place at 3:30 p.m. ET Sunday. FloRacing will carry live coverage of the second part of Monadnock’s doubleheader.

Duel at the Dog 200 presented by USNE Power

Monadnock Speedway

  • Race results
Pos. No. Name Sponsor Laps Diff.
1 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 204  —
2 1 Patrick Emerling Fleetworks Inc. 204 0.007
3 22 Kyle Bonsignore MTT/ChaLew Performance/Munns Auto 204 0.168
4 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications Inc 204 0.196
5 64 Austin Beers G&G Electric/Lumiere Electrical/AP Marquadt & Sons/Dell Electric/Andrew James Interiors/Hughes Motor 204 0.398
6 3 Tyler Rypkema USNE Power/Northeast Drilling/J&R Pre-Cast 204 0.569
7 7 Luke Baldwin* Baldwin Automotive 204 0.603
8 21 Stephen Kopcik* Newtown Pools/Wanick Construction 204 0.793
9 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 204 0.914
10 17 Anthony  Nocella Keene Towing & Recovery/Copart/Xtreme Autobody/Sontag Motorsports 204 0.978
11 15 Joey Cipriano III Eastern Propane & Oil/ The Bass Planting Company 204 1.174
12 06 Sam Remeau Quality Fleet Services/Powell’s Stone and Gravel 204 1.439
13 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power & Construction 204 1.548
14 25 Brian  Robie Bar Harbor Bank & Trust 204 1.707
15 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 204 1.716
16 20 Max Zachem USNE/Lu-Mac’s 204 3.677
17 60 Matt Hirschman Elite Towing/Bar Harbor Bank and Trust 202 2 Laps
18 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Inc 201 3 Laps
19 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feed 201 3 Laps
20 59 Tyler Barry* Pro Systems/BNP Machine/West Swanzey Meats 200 4 Laps
21 81 Nathan Wenzel 1812 Paint & Body 199 5 Laps
22 29 Mike Marshall* MLM Diagnostics/Jusczak Electric 188 16 Laps
23 18 Ken Heagy Hunter Mechanical 168 36 Laps
24 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Ave Landscape Supply 108 96 Laps
25 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Power/Eighty-Two Services 54 150 Laps

 

Duel at the Dog 200 presented by USNE Power

Monadnock Speedway

  • Qualifying results
Pos No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 1 Patrick Emerling Fleetworks Inc. 11.487 78.349 2 2
2 17 Anthony  Nocella Keene Towing & Recovery/Copart/Xtreme Autobody/Sontag Motorsports 11.543 77.969 2 2 0.056
3 64 Austin Beers G&G Electric/Lumiere Electrical/AP Marquadt & Sons/Dell Electric/Andrew James Interiors/Hughes Motor 11.567 77.808 1 2 0.08
4 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications Inc 11.584 77.693 2 2 0.097
5 22 Kyle Bonsignore MTT/ChaLew Performance/Munns Auto 11.602 77.573 2 2 0.115
6 25 Brian  Robie Bar Harbor Bank & Trust 11.611 77.513 1 2 0.124
7 7 Luke Baldwin* Baldwin Automotive 11.662 77.174 2 2 0.175
8 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power & Construction 11.676 77.081 1 2 0.189
9 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 11.676 77.081 2 2 0.189
10 15 Joey Cipriano III Eastern Propane & Oil/ The Bass Planting Company 11.706 76.884 2 2 0.219
11 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 11.711 76.851 1 2 0.224
12 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 11.714 76.831 2 2 0.227
13 60 Matt Hirschman Elite Towing/Bar Harbor Bank and Trust 11.783 76.381 1 2 0.296
14 06 Sam Rameau Quality Fleet Services/Powell’s Stone and Gravel 11.808 76.22 2 2 0.321
15 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feed 11.826 76.104 1 2 0.339
16 21 Stephen Kopcik* Newtown Pools/Wanick Construction 11.846 75.975 2 2 0.359
17 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Inc 11.849 75.956 1 2 0.362
18 59 Tyler Barry* Pro Systems/BNP Machine/West Swanzey Meats 11.883 75.738 2 2 0.396
19 3 Tyler Rypkema USNE Power/Northeast Drilling/J&R Pre-Cast 11.905 75.598 1 2 0.418
20 20 Max Zachem USNE/Lu-Mac’s 11.909 75.573 2 2 0.422
21 18 Ken Heagy Hunter Mechanical 12.037 74.769 2 2 0.55
22 81 Nathan Wenzel 1812 Paint & Body 12.041 74.745 2 2 0.554
23 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Midwest Operations/Eighty-Two Services 12.048 74.701 1 2 0.561
24 29 Mike Marshall* MLM Diagnostics/Jusczak Electric 12.522 71.874 2 2 1.035
25 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Ave Landscape Supply 12.533 71.81 2 2 1.046

 

Lest anyone doubt the all-around natural racing talent of 18-year-old Connor Zilisch, the rookie claimed a series best fourth NASCAR Xfinity Series victory on the season in Saturday’s rain-shortened BetRivers 200 at the one-mile Dover Motor Speedway.

Zilisch led 77 of the race’s 134 laps in his No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet before NASCAR was forced to call the scheduled 200-lap race early because of rain. A pair of Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas, driven by former NASCAR Cup Series veteran Aric Almirola and Xfinity regular Brandon Jones rounded out the top three.

Although he qualified third — three rookies topped the starting grid — Zilisch ran first or second for most of the race, ultimately taking the lead for good on the restart following the Stage 2 break.

MORE: Race results | Best Dover photos

“We’ve been showing it lately,’’ a smiling Zilisch said when he was informed on pit road the race was official and he was the winner. “First of all, I hate that we couldn’t finish the race the right way. Aric [Almirola] was really fast and was going to give me a run for my money. Props to him for making me work for it.

“Still really proud of this JR Motorsports team. … We capitalized on all fronts, had good pit stops both stages and put ourselves in a position to be in the right spot when the rain fell. Very thankful.”

Zilisch’s win total is best in the series. And the North Carolina teenager has been so good this summer that that he’s now on an eight-race top-five streak that includes three wins and three runner-up finishes for an average finish of 2.25. He’s led laps in 15 of the 19 races he’s started this season.

Even before making his full-time NASCAR debut this season, Zilisch was a multi-race winner in the sports car ranks with huge victories in the biggest races on the schedule — last year’s Daytona 24 hour and Sebring 12 hour endurance classics.

Not too surprisingly, he immediately proved himself a road-course ace when given the NASCAR Xfinity Series opportunity, winning from pole position in his first series start at historic Watkins Glen International last September.

He answered that resoundingly this year as a full-time competitor, hoisting trophies at Circuit of the Americas and Sonoma Raceway, a pair of road courses, but also proving his oval-metal, winning at the 2.5-mile Pocono Raceway last month and now adding the one-miler to an increasingly broad resume.

Zilisch’s effort at Dover’s “Monster Mile” moves him into second place in the championship standings — 56 points behind points leader and his JR Motorsports teammate, reigning series champion Justin Allgaier, who finished fourth Saturday.

Zilisch’s best friend, Richard Childress Racing’s Jesse Love was fifth at Dover, followed by Ryan Sieg, polesitter Taylor Gray, Sheldon Creed and rookies William Sawalich and Christian Eckes rounding out the top 10.

“It’s been awesome, and I feel like even when we miss a little bit, we’re still a top-five car, and being able to go the race track and know that in the back of your head has definitely been comforting and confidence inspiring every weekend,’’ Zilisch said. “Gotta keep knocking the door down with wins.”

Jeb Burton, who finished 20th, now holds a seven-point advantage on his cousin Harrison Burton for the 12th and final playoff-eligible position in points.

The Xfinity Series travels to Indianapolis Motor Speedway next Saturday for the Pennzoil 250 (4:30 p.m. ET, The CW, IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage was completed without issue, confirming Zilisch as the winner.

DOVER, Del. — Although Carson Hocevar recognizes Josh Berry’s sincerity in wanting to reach out following an on-track incident at Sonoma Raceway last weekend, the 22-year-old Spire Motorsports driver maintains his opinion when it comes to on-track scuffles and discussions thereafter.

The circumstance came during the NASCAR Cup Series’ Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway, where a late-race bump from Berry’s No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford during the contest’s waning laps resulted in the No. 77 Chevrolet spinning through the grass and finishing 32nd. Berry stated that he attempted to reach out to Hocevar but received no response.

RELATED: Dover schedule | At-track photos: Dover

“I mean, it’s just racing,” Hocevar said at Dover Motor Speedway regarding the Sonoma incident and Berry’s attempted exchange afterward. “I mean, sometimes, you know, stuff happens. We’re all in the limit of everything of all people, right? I’m on the limit of everything. So, yeah, it doesn’t bother me. I don’t really like the whole ‘have to call’ and do that and have to apologize on Monday, say whatever, right? Because, I mean, even if you do it intentionally or not, you’re never going to say that to the person.

“So, it just kind of just becomes a pony show a little bit. So, you know, if I don’t like it … it’s a little weird for me. I’ve never been on this side of it, but yeah. I’m just kind of just going through the actions of it. I don’t really like doing it, or I don’t like how it is, so, yeah, I mean, I appreciate the apology or whatever, but I think we just go race, that’s part of it.”

Hocevar has taken the Cup Series world by storm during his sophomore 2025 campaign, and while the Michigan native currently stands 96 points below the playoff elimination line, his aggressive nature and speedy No. 77 Chevy have illustrated to drivers and fans alike what his racing style is.

Of course, such an aggressive style has led to numerous feather-ruffling moments for the young Hocevar during the 2025 campaign. Among other incidents, Hocevar has had run-ins with Ryan Blaney and Ross Chastain at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway) in February and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. at Nashville Superspeedway and then again two weeks later at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez.

With an outgoing personality and a no-regrets mindset, Hocevar’s viewpoint is simple when it comes to on-track friendships.

“I just don’t like fakeness,” Hocevar said. “I like genuineness, and I know how I am as a driver and I think we’re all two-faced, so I just might as well just cut it at the cord and know my friends are my friends. It’s always just awkward when you’re on the limits and run into your friends and whatever. I’ve just had that from quarter midgets and everything, and you race your friends differently. I mean, I do it on iRacing even. I don’t sometimes like racing my friends because sometimes they want me to push them or do everything, and it just reminds me of, just like, man, imagine if we were doing it where our jobs were at stake and investment money and everything.

“We have that feeling of that when it means nothing on a video game. So, yeah, it’s a lot easier to know my friends are in my circle. We just go racing. That’s it. I don’t need anyone.”

MORE: Cup Series standings | Cup Series schedule

While outside noise geared toward Hocevar might be louder compared to other Cup Series pilots, the young racer understands the importance of carrying himself with confidence and maintaining his opinion.

“I’m just doing all the genuine stuff I’d want to do,” Hocevar said. “If people want to enjoy that, or like it or dislike it, that’s good. It’s sustainable for me because I would be doing it if one person was watching or 10,000. I’d be racing the same way, whether zero people are making noise or not. So the fact they’re making noise by what I want to do and what I’m doing is cool. Hopefully, we sell T-shirts and help move the sport forward. But other than that, if I had to pretend to act a certain way or drive a certain way to appease fans, I’d probably hang it up and go find something different.”

Kyle Busch’s three victories at Dover Motor Speedway make him the winningest driver in Sunday’s field. And not only does he have an enviable assortment of trophies, but his 14 top-five and 22 top-10 finishes are also best in the field.

Certainly, it’s a healthy dose of statistical feathers-in-your-cap, but the driver of the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet is still racing for his first trophy in the series since June 2023.

The two-time series champion is ranked 18th in the playoff standings — only 37 points behind the all-important 16th place position, currently held by Bubba Wallace, and only three points behind Ryan Preece, the first driver outside the elimination line.

MORE: ‘Rowdy’ through the years | All of his national series wins

Busch conceded Saturday that he’s well aware of his situation — but encouraged by back-to-back top-10 finishes at the Chicago and Sonoma road courses in the two weeks heading to Dover’s famed “Monster Mile.”

“I mean, you’re obviously looking at it [the standings] every week,’’ said Busch, who has a combined nine additional wins in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series at Dover, too. “I think we leave probably the fifth race of the year looking at points, like where we’re at and what are we doing?

“But honestly, points take care of themselves when you run good. Results are what matters. Being able to get stage points and being able to get good finishes will all equate to higher point totals and you not having to look at the sheet. So obviously with a ‘win and you’re in,’ you really don’t have to pay any attention to it.

“That’s certainly on our radar right now. We’ve had a couple of good weeks where we’ve made up some of the deficit. I feel like there is potential and opportunity for us to continue that way, and we want to continue to climb that way and put ourselves above the cut for making the playoffs.”

The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Regular Season champion Tyler Reddick has advanced to the In-Season Challenge semifinals this week — and will be racing head-to-head with fellow Toyota driver, Ty Gibbs.

Reddick said the excellence his team has shown in the inaugural head-to-head midseason $1 million-to-win tournament has been enjoyable. And now, possibly quite profitable. But more importantly for Reddick, the success in recent weeks is a good omen for his No. 45 23XI Racing team, which is still looking for its first win of the season after tying a career-best single-season mark last year with three victories.

RELATED: Starting lineup | Best Dover photos

“I think it’s fair to say, I think we are to some degree, frustrated we haven’t won, for sure, but we’ve been using it as motivation to finding speed,’’ said Reddick, who is ranked 13th in the standings and tops among the four drivers still without a victory yet. “We haven’t backed away from fact we haven’t won a race; we’re using it to motivate ourselves right now.”

As for the In-Season Challenge, Reddick smiled about his face-off with Gibbs.

“The last three weeks I feel like we’ve been racing around each other a bunch, so I don’t know if I’m going to need any (real-time updates) and I feel like that’s going to continue,’’ said Reddick, who will roll off fourth Sunday.

Reddick said he saw a statistic this week that he and Gibbs — who starts ninth — have run in close proximity for more than 490 laps of racing at Dover in the last two years.

“It does feel like every time I’ve been here to Dover, since Ty’s been in the Cup Series, I can at least see him on the race track when I’m making laps,’’ Reddick said, adding, “I feel like we’re going to be around each other a lot this weekend and hopefully have some good hard racing.”

Interestingly, three of the four drivers still competing for the In-Season Challenge paycheck are named Ty — Reddick, Gibbs and Ty Dillon (who starts 21st) in the other half of the bracket.

“Has John Hunter changed his name yet?’’ Reddick joked of John Hunter Nemechek, the only driver still in the bracket not named Ty. The Legacy Motor Club driver will start 28th.

The In-Season Challenge grand finale between the winner of the Reddick-Gibbs and Nemechek-Dillon matchups will be next week at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Duel at the Dog 200 presented by USNE Power

Monadnock Speedway

  • Final practice results
Pos No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 17 Anthony  Nocella Keene Towing & Recovery/Copart/Xtreme Autobody/Sontag Motorsports 11.564 77.828 5 8
2 64 Austin Beers G&G Electric/Lumiere Electrical/AP Marquadt & Sons/Dell Electric/Andrew James Interiors/Hughes Motor 11.581 77.713 13 16 0.017
3 1 Patrick Emerling Fleetworks Inc. 11.631 77.379 13 13 0.067
4 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 11.654 77.227 17 17 0.09
5 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power & Construction 11.66 77.187 17 30 0.096
6 25 Brian  Robie Bar Harbor Bank & Trust 11.674 77.094 3 4 0.11
7 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 11.676 77.081 19 20 0.112
8 22 Kyle Bonsignore MTT/ChaLew Performance/Munns Auto 11.682 77.042 20 21 0.118
9 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communications Inc 11.689 76.995 18 21 0.125
10 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 11.696 76.949 24 28 0.132
11 7 Luke Baldwin* Baldwin Automotive 11.711 76.851 5 16 0.147
12 15 Joey Cipriano III Eastern Propane & Oil/ The Bass Planting Company 11.713 76.838 5 6 0.149
13 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feed 11.736 76.687 5 24 0.172
14 3 Tyler Rypkema USNE Power/Northeast Drilling/J&R Pre-Cast 11.74 76.661 16 24 0.176
15 21 Stephen Kopcik* Newtown Pools/Wanick Construction 11.749 76.602 4 14 0.185
16 60 Matt Hirschman Elite Towing/Bar Harbor Bank and Trust 11.759 76.537 7 21 0.195
17 59 Tyler Barry* Pro Systems/BNP Machine/West Swanzey Meats 11.802 76.258 17 18 0.238
18 06 Sam Rameau Quality Fleet Services/Powell’s Stone and Gravel 11.821 76.136 9 19 0.257
19 43 Matt Kimball J&M Towing/Birch Financial/Central Mass Tree 11.833 76.058 4 6 0.269
20 20 Max Zachem USNE/Lu-Mac’s 11.858 75.898 5 7 0.294
21 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Midwest Operations/Eighty-Two Services 11.865 75.853 8 32 0.301
22 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Inc 11.874 75.796 7 18 0.31
23 18 Ken Heagy Hunter Mechanical 12.012 74.925 11 15 0.448
24 29 Mike Marshall* MLM Diagnostics/Jusczak Electric 12.084 74.479 9 37 0.52
25 81 Nathan Wenzel 1812 Paint & Body 12.179 73.898 16 39 0.615
26 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Ave Landscape Supply 12.4 72.581 17 18 0.836

 

Track: Dover Motor Speedway
Location: Dover, Delaware
Track length: 1 mile
When: Sunday, 2 p.m. ET
Where to tune in: TNT Sports/truTV, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race purse: $11,055,250
Race distance: 400 laps | 400 miles
Stages: 120 | 250 | 400
Defending winner: Denny Hamlin, April 2024
Starting lineup: Chase Elliott to lead field to green Sunday

RELATED: How to watch on TNT Sports, truTV

Dover marks return to traditional tracks, sets stage for who title favorites will be

If you made it past the last month and still find yourself above the Cup Series playoff cutline, congratulations. You just survived a stretch of races that included two road courses, a street course, a 2.5-mile triangle and a 1.5-mile superspeedway. From Mexico to Sonoma, the playoff picture and the perennial weekly contenders fluctuated dramatically. Instead of Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson or Christopher Bell pacing the field, Trackhouse Racing’s Shane van Gisbergen blitzed the field, winning three races across the last five weeks (Mexico, Chicago, Sonoma). SVG ballooned his playoff points to 17 and will be in good shape come Labor Day weekend to start the postseason. He can also focus on his steady improvement on the ovals without the added stress of pointing or winning his way into the 16-driver playoff grid.

The two other winners, Chase Briscoe and Chase Elliott, scored their first wins of 2025 at Pocono and Atlanta, respectively. The No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports driver continues his consistent and impressive campaign with 20 consecutive top-20 finishes entering Dover, and he’s placed fifth or better in four of the last five events.

RELATED: Cup standings | Full 2025 schedule

At the playoff cutline, Kyle Busch stayed within striking distance of the top 16 after stringing together top 10s at Chicago and Sonoma. He’s also been good at Dover with back-to-back poles in 2023 and 2024, with a fourth-place run in the most recent edition in Delaware.

While Busch hasn’t won since Gateway in 2023, a fourth Miles the Monster trophy would certainly be meaningful for the two-time Cup titleholder.

“There’s definitely some cool trophies that are out there, Dover being one of those with the cool Monster trophy that you get,” Busch said Saturday at track. “That’s a special piece. I always looked up to that trophy. I was able to win a couple of Truck ones, a couple of Xfinity ones, but then finally was able to capture the big one with a Sunday win for my first time. They’re all special and they all mean a lot, but this place is very tough, especially in that era going up against Jimmie Johnson. It was really hard to get those trophies as he was hoarding them all.”

The drivers that dominated the early portion of the season have gone quiet so far this summer.

Daytona 500 winner William Byron still holds the regular season points lead, but it has shrunk dramatically with finishes of 27th or worse in four of the last six races. His teammate Elliott continues to gain and sits just 14 marks back of the No. 24 with six races to go. Then, there’s the trio of three-time winners in Hamlin, Bell and Larson who have had a less-than-stellar last few weeks. The most recent winner among the bunch was Hamlin at Michigan in early June and you have to go back to Kansas in May to find Larson’s most recent triumph.

It’s interesting how close these three have trended with each other. Larson has finished outside the top 10 in four of the last five races (no top fives since Michigan), Bell owns just one top 10 in the last four races and Hamlin has either finished fourth or better or 20th or worse since Nashville.

hamlin bell and larson at phoenix
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

It sets up quite the dynamic as the three will try to separate themselves as the Cup Series title favorite when the playoffs begin with the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway. All three should be in play for strong Dover runs and then the Brickyard 400 looms the following week, where Larson won last year with Bell placing fourth. Hamlin led 21 laps in that race before crashing during an overtime restart.

Only one road course (Watkins Glen) and one superspeedway (Daytona) remain before the postseason begins. Either Hamlin, Bell and Larson will regain their status as the cream of the crop this year or drivers continuing their stride, like Elliott, will emerge as the new favorite to hoist the Bill France Cup in November.

MORE: Saturday sessions washed out due to rain

kyle busch waves to fans
James Gilbert | Getty Images

From atop the pit box …

What do crew chiefs have in focus to win Sunday’s race?

Dover is anything but straightforward, especially when it comes to race strategy at the banked facility.

As crew chief of Ty Gibbs’ No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Tyler Allen believes the uniqueness of the “Monster Mile” comes in the form of the concrete that makes up the track.

“In a lot of ways, it’s the surface,” Allen told NASCAR.com. “The track surface is really sensitive to sun, heat, rubber. With a new tire combination, you never know quite what you’re going to get, if the rubber is going to go down or not.”

Travis Mack, crew chief of John Hunter Nemechek’s No. 42 Legacy Motor Club Toyota, also believes that Dover, while not a road course, brings plenty of variables to the table, especially when it comes to pitting.

“There’s always that strategy play here,” Mack told NASCAR.com. “There’s those guys that risk it to run long, and then there’s the guys that pitted more optimal halfway or short of halfway and make up track position that way. So, there’s a lot of different scenarios here that could play out, and it makes it fun and exciting.”

Allen echoed the pit road sentiment while also mentioning how its slender nature only adds to the complexity.

MORE: NASCAR In-Season Challenge hub | Inside the tracks of In-Season Challenge

“It’s a very tricky pit road,” Allen said. “It’s fairly narrow. You’ve got the bends to deal with. There’s about 10 openings, so you want to qualify in the top 10 to have at least an opening in, but you really have to manage your lights, and green-flag stops are likely, and people make mistakes here, so it’s really tricky to weigh out the risk of pitting and being a lap down if the caution comes out, or running long and trying to catch a caution.”

Gibbs and Nemechek, in addition to jockeying for a potential playoff berth, will aim to conquer their respective Round 4 In-Season Challenge matchup; the sixth-seeded Gibbs will battle 23rd-seeded Tyler Reddick, while the 12th-seeded Nemechek will look to end 32nd-seeded Ty Dillon’s Cinderella run.

“We’re focused on trying to finish the race as best we can, you know, get up there and compete,” Mack added. “But we’re also watching that 10 car. We’ll be watching the 10 this weekend. As we have through all the rounds, you know, we’ve kind of had that guy highlighted on the screen, just trying to pay attention to their race as well. And it’ll probably come down to a point to where we’re trying to cover each other, maybe on pit strategy, or just to focus on being ahead of them at the end of the race.”

— John Crane

RELATED: See where drivers will pit for Sunday’s race

History tells us …

The concrete kings will dominate. Hamlin took the checkered flag in the Bristol spring race and Dover last season, followed by Larson dominating the Bristol Night Race and then outclassing the field earlier this year at the “World’s Fastest Half Mile.” According to NASCAR Insights, Hamlin ranks top five in every metric at a concrete track this year (speed, long run, passing, defense, restarts) and tops in speed and defense.

He may not be the favorite to win, but watch out for …

COLE CUSTER. It may be outlandish to pin Custer as one to watch, but let’s not forget when he shocked the NASCAR industry with his thrilling Kentucky win in July 2020 for his first and lone Cup triumph so far. It likely won’t happen this Sunday, but crazier thing have happened on the circuit and Custer’s numbers are quite good at the “Monster Mile.” The No. 41 Haas Factory Team driver owns a pair of top 10s in four Cup starts at Dover and hasn’t finished worse than 15th in any of those attempts.

MORE: Lineup advice in Fantasy Fastlane

cole custer drives at nashville
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Speed reads

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.

NASCAR at Dover: Key info, practice reports and more from doubleheader weekend | Read more
• See you down the road:
NASCAR puts pause on Chicago Street Race for 2026, open to future return | Read more
• In-Season Challenge:
Your hub for everything related to the 32-driver showdown | Read more
• Racing Insights: Where your favorite driver is projected to finish Sunday | Read more
• Field of 16:
Can Bowman lock all four Hendrick cars into playoffs? | Read more
Turning Point to Dover: Ty Dillon continuing to do the improbable | Read more
• At-track photos:
Scenes, sights from the Blue Hen State | View gallery
• NASCAR Classics:
Rewind with full-race Dover replays from the vault | Watch now
• Paint Scheme Preview:
Cup runneth Dover — liveries for this weekend | View gallery
• Power Rankings:
Will post-double doldrums finally end for Larson on Sunday? | This week’s Top 20

cup cars at dover
James Gilbert | Getty Images