RELATED: See all 16 Chase drivers | Full Chase grid | Richmond results
The lights surrounding Richmond International Raceway were keeping darkness at bay, if not the insects, and the majority of fans had already begun to depart.
Along pit road, 15 of the 16 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers were milling about – only race winner Denny Hamlin was elsewhere, in Victory Lane celebrating a win in last Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 with his Joe Gibbs Racing crew.
Drivers lounged against pit wall, stood by their cars, spoke with crew man, media, owners or just one another.
After 26 races, NASCAR’s 2016 Chase for the Sprint Cup field was officially set.
“We’re just going to have fun,” Austin Dillon is telling someone. “We haven’t been (locked in) the Chase all year; these other guys have. We’re going to go and really just look to win and upset these guys.”
Dillon, 26, is making is his first appearance in the 10-race playoff, and carrying the hopes of Richard Childress Racing. Teammates Ryan Newman and Paul Menard failed to make the cut. RCR hasn’t won a premier series title since 1994, a decade before the new Chase format debuted.
“The pressure is off me,” Dillon says. “I’ve been sweating it the last three weeks; I’m not going to take that approach going into Chicago. I’m going to have fun and go all out.”
Nearby, team owner and Dillon’s grandfather Richard Childress wore a smile and a look of relief.
Dillion isn’t the only new face in this year’s Chase. Kyle Larson and rookies Chase Elliott and Chris Buescher will be making their first appearances as well when the battle to determine this year’s champion gets underway this weekend at Chicagoland Speedway.
Larson and Buescher made the field thanks to career-first wins earlier this year. Dillon and Elliott qualified based on their respective points positions after the season’s 26th race.
They’ve been in championship battles before — all but Larson are former XFINITY Series champs; Dillon has a Camping World Truck Series title as well.
Still, none of the four can fully understand what lies ahead. Their crew chiefs do. Chad Johnston (Larson), Bob Osborne (Buescher), Alan Gustafson (Elliott) and Slugger Labbe (Dillon) have varying amounts of Chase experience and success.
Kevin Harvick knows, too. The 40-year-old won it all in 2014, his first year with Stewart-Haas Racing, and finished second last season.
Do the kids have a chance?
“I guess that depends on how you approach it,” Harvick, seated atop pit wall, tells a reporter. “Are you happy to be there or do you want to win?
“There are obviously a lot of very competitive cars that can go out and win races but it’s hard to win a race; it’s hard to keep yourself in contention week after week, keep living up to that pressure, keep your cars prepared week after week and adapt to something that you might need to change … you have to be able to adapt on the fly.
“Those are the things that you have to learn as you go through this. I would definitely say it’s a disadvantage if you haven’t been through this before.”
Eight organizations are represented in this year’s Chase, the same number as last year and the year before. A few new faces and a few new names but the majority are old hands at this.
None belong to Roush Fenway Racing, one of the few long-running, multi-team groups not represented. Buescher’s Front Row group is Roush-affiliated — in addition to a technical alliance, both Buescher and crew chief Osborne have RFR backgrounds.
It seems like yesterday that the Roush organization was winning back-to-back titles with Matt Kenseth in 2003 and Kurt Busch in ’04.
Kenseth’s crown was the last before the arrival of the Chase; Busch was the inaugural Chase champion.
If RFR is missing, JGR is easy to spot. For the second consecutive year all four of its teams are headed into the Chase and that’s an impressive accomplishment for any organization.
MORE: Bruce: Toyota the Chase favorite?
Stewart-Haas sends three of its four into the Chase, and no other group can boast that all of its Chase teams feature former series champions (Harvick, Busch and co-owner/driver Tony Stewart).
It’s difficult to say what’s been the most impressive aspect of Furniture Row Racing with driver Martin Truex Jr.: The team’s speed and competitiveness this year or that they’ve now made the Chase with two different manufacturers. A year ago, the Denver-based team was aligned with RCR and Chevrolet; this year it’s been JGR and Toyota. Didn’t skip a beat.
Truex made it all the way to the final round at Homestead-Miami Speedway last season. His ’16 chances, he said, are “as good as anybody’s right now.
“I don’t think anybody’s got a leg up on us,” he said. “… The cars have been fast all year long. We have to do our job and be consistent … we’ve done that the last couple of weeks and hopefully we can keep it up.”
Hope is the prevailing feeling. That and a sense of accomplishment.
Saturday night they took a moment to let it soak in.
This weekend at Chicagoland, the battle begins again (Sunday, 2:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).