Limited visibility halted Monday’s Pennsylvania 400 at Pocono Raceway on Lap 132 of 160, continuing a tough weekend of weather conditions at the 2.5-mile track. Chris Buescher was the race leader when the caution flag came out.

The red flag came out on Lap 138 at 2:50 p.m. ET, and the cars went to pit road. At 3:08, drivers were allowed to exit their vehicles; at 3:45 crews were ordered to cover the cars as the threat of severe weather moved into the area. At 4:10, the race was called with Buescher declared as the winner.

The start of the race (NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) was delayed by a day when weather washed it out Sunday. Then, the green flag for Monday’s rescheduled race was pushed back when damp conditions persisted and led to weepers. Precipitation delayed the race at Lap 85 with Joey Logano in the lead.

Originally scheduled for 1:30 p.m. ET Sunday, the series’ second stop at the 2.5-mile track was moved to Monday at 11 a.m. ET. Green flag for Monday was originally set for 11:07 a.m. ET, then moved to 12:07 p.m.

Drivers were called to their cars at 11:50 a.m., and the race got underway at 12:10 p.m., with polesitter Martin Truex Jr. leading the field to the green.

Truex Jr. led 16 laps before a competition caution. Shortly after that, he ran into bad luck, hitting the wall in Turn 2 on Lap 19 and had to come to pit road. Truex later cut a tire on Lap 40 and headed to the garage for repairs before returning on Lap 59.

The June Sprint Cup Series Pocono event also was postponed by weather and eventually ran the following Monday. Three-time “Tricky Triangle” winner Kurt Busch was the victor in his No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet with Hendrick Motorsports’ Dale Earnhardt Jr. locking in the runner-up position.

This week, as Dale Earnhardt Jr. continues to recover from concussion-like symptoms, Jeff Gordon is wheeling the No. 88 Chevrolet for the second time this season. He started 24th.


Chase Elliott and Joey Logano wrecked on Lap 104 in the Pennsylvania 400 on Monday at Pocono Raceway.

Elliott appeared to get too close to Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota before his No. 24 Chevrolet slid up the track and into Logano’s No. 22 Ford, pushing the Team Penske vehicle into the outside wall in Turn 2.

“Yeah, we came off of Turn 1 and those guys were three-wide,” Elliott said. “I thought Denny (Hamlin) had the best run, so I elected to push him down the back, down there at the exit of Turn 1; I thought that would be a good move to kind of get him passed, that hopefully he’d drag me by; and I was just still next to him and got in there. I thought I slowed down enough to not get loose, but got loose and collected Joey.

“So, I apologize to those guys. It was completely my fault. And I apologize to my guys. Man, they gave me a good car. I need to re-think my evaluation of how I’m going to approach these races because it’s not working out right now.”


Logano was not in the lead at the time of the wreck, but had led a total of 38 laps in the scheduled 160-lap event. Logano went to the garage, but returned to the race on Lap 128, 23 laps down. He finished 37th.

“We were able to drive up to the lead a few times,” Logano said. “Only if it had rained a little earlier we would have had a lot different outcome. We had a new rear carrier today and he came out of the gate swinging which is awesome. I am super proud of that. There were a lot of positives today.

“We just ended on a negative note racing hard and trying to get back up there after that caution. We all had to pit because we tried to win the race when it rained and we lost our track position and then the 24 got loose under me. It is just part of racing. It stinks to be on this end of it. It is just part of it.”


Elliott entered today’s race in 12th place in the provisional Chase Grid, but his 33rd-place finish pushed him down to 14th place.

Martin Truex Jr. had a tough day from the pole position and was involved in three incidents that led to a 38th-place finish in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Pennsylvania 400 at Pocono Raceway.

Truex was running third when he hit the wall in Turn 2 on Lap 19 of a scheduled 160 of Monday’s Pennsylvania 400 at Pocono Raceway. He came in for repairs and fell a lap down.


On Lap 40, Truex’s right-front tire went down, and he came down pit road for more repairs. The four-time career winner in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series went to the garage for repairs shortly thereafter and returned on Lap 59.

Truex would find trouble for a third time on Lap 98, smacking the wall in Turn 1 to bring out a caution. The driver of the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota would bring his car around to the garage and call it a day after the last incident.

“Just blew a right front (tire),” Truex said of the first incident. “A lug nut bounced off the ground, fell in behind the wheel behind a pit stop. It’s just bad luck honestly. I knew something wasn’t right in (Turn) one and two and I got real tight off of (Turn) two on that restart and went down the back and was like, ‘Ah, it feels OK.’ And, as I got closer to the tunnel turn I felt it start to go down and by the time I let off and tried to slow down it was just going straight for the fence.”


Truex came in as the polesitter and was one of the favorites after leading final practice. He was also running the same car that dominated to the tune of leading 392 of 400 laps in the Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Truex was hoping that the team could get this particular car fixed up since it has been such a great car for the him and the organization

“That was my initial thought after it happened is like, ‘Alright, let’s go to the garage and make sure we don’t blow another tire and destroy the thing,’ ” Truex said.

“The car was so good. I was literally on cruise control and driving away. I don’t know — frustrating but it’s racing I guess.”

The Furniture Row Racing driver led the first 16 laps of Monday’s race at Pocono before a scheduled competition caution.

Brad Keselowski and Greg Biffle, who stayed out, were the lead cars on a Lap 18 restart.

During that restart, Paul Menard lost power and fell back in the field, causing cars to maneuver around him. Menard went to the garage and returned 16 laps down.

Goodyear tweeted out the official diagnosis on both of Truex’s incidents.

 

RELATED: Watch live online at NBCSports.com

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR XFINTIY Series will gather for a doubleheader weekend at Watkins Glen International this week. Check out the full weekend schedule below.


Note: All times are ET


THURSDAY, AUG. 4:

ON TRACK

— 1-2:25 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series first practice (Results)

— 3:30-4:55 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series second practice (Results


FRIDAY, AUG. 5:

ON TRACK

— 10-10:55 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN (Results)

— 12:30-1:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series first practice, NBCSN (Results)

— 3-4:25 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN (Results)

— 4:45 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN (Results)


PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)

— 10:45 a.m.: Chris Buescher
— 11:15 a.m.: Chase Elliott
— Noon: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— 2:05 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 2:30 p.m.: Martin Truex Jr. and Joe Garone, Furniture Row Racing team president
— 6 p.m. approx.: Post-NASCAR XFINITY Series qualifying

GARAGECAM (Watch live)

— 9:30 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series

— noon: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series


DAILY ROUNDUP

At-track photos: Friday, Watkins Glen

Junior gives concussion update, intends to get back to racing

Dale Jr. talking ‘weddin,’ more tweets

Earnhardt Jr. targets contract extension at Hendrick

Junior: ‘I’m not ready to stop racing. I’m not ready to quit’

Dale Jr. in his own words

Furniture Row GM: ‘Good time’ to mull second team

Chase-clinching scenarios for Watkins Glen

Allmendinger, Truex lead Sprint Cup practice at The Glen

Following Pocono’s ‘big moment,’ Buescher steadies Chase focus

Full lineup for tomorrow’s XFINITY Series event

SATURDAY, AUG. 6: 

ON TRACK

— 12:15 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, CNBC (Results)

— 2 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Zippo 200 at The Glen (82 laps, 200.9 miles), CNBC (Results)


PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 1:30 p.m. approx.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying
— 4:30 p.m. approx.: Post-NASCAR XFINITY Series race

DAILY ROUNDUP
— Sources: Details set for Furniture Row announcement
— Watkins Glen mayhem tights XFINITY Chase standings
— Cain: Dale Jr.’s trip to the track brings mutual reassurance
At-track photos: Saturday at The Glen
— ‘Rowdy’ surprises fan with autograph on RV
— Logano wins Penske-dominated race at Watkins Glen
— Said still having a blast with fans, racing
— Snapshot: Watkins Glen
— Backward pit stops? How stops at The Glen work
— Edwards earns pole award at Watkins Glen
— See the entire Watkins Glen 40-car field

SUNDAY, AUG. 7: 

ON TRACK

— 2 p.m.: Driver Introductions
— 2:28 p.m.: Canadian National Anthem: Amy Rivard, Singer/Songwriter 
— 2:30 p.m.:  USA Live on air
— 2:30 p.m.: Presentation of Colors: U.S. Marines Color Guard (on stage), New York State Troopers (Turn 1), Alfred State ROTC (Turn 2), Chemung-Schuyler Cadet Squadron (Esses)
— 2:30 p.m.: Invocation by: Reverend David Fife, Bentley Creek Wesleyan Church
— 2:31 p.m.: National Anthem by: J.W. Cortes
— 2:32 p.m.: Flyover by: C-130 Hercules, 914th Airlift Wing, Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station
– 2:38 p.m.: “Drivers, Start Your Engines” by: John Persons, President and Chief Operating Officer, Top’s Markets and Johnny Persons
— 2:49 p.m.: Start of the Cheez-It 355 (90 laps, 220.5 miles), USA (Results)


PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 10 a.m.: Furniture Row Racing announcement
— 5:30 p.m. approx.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race

DAILY ROUNDUP
Hamlin wins thriller at Watkins Glen
Keselowski, Truex make post-race contact
Chase Bubble: Analyzing the playoff picture post-Watkins Glen
‘Dinger hangs head after final lap run-in with Larson
Jones, Furniture Row announce second car for ’17
Childers airs frustrations during Watkins Glen race
Hard-hitting wreck brings out the red flag
Gordon makes 800th Cup start Sunday
NASCAR looming for IndyCar’s Newgarden?
Cope addresses strange explosion
Race-day images from Watkins Glen

All times ET

Monday, Aug. 1
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN
11 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Pennsylvania 400, NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, Aug. 2
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, Aug. 3

7 a.m., Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge: Lime Rock Park (re-air), FS1
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Pocono Mountains 150 (re-air), FS1

Thursday, Aug. 4
10:30 p.m., Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge: Lime Rock Park (re-air), FS2

Friday, Aug. 5
7 a.m., NASCAR: The List (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., NASCAR: The List (re-air), NBCSN
8 a.m., NASCAR: The List (re-air), NBCSN
8:30 a.m., Building 43, NBCSN
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Scan All 43, NBCSN
10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN
Noon, NASCAR America, NBCSN
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN
2 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series: Iowa, NBCSN
3 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
7 p.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
8 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice (re-air), NBCSN
9 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice (re-air), NBCSN
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice (re-air), NBCSN
Midnight, NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), NBCSN

Saturday, Aug. 6
2:30 a.m., NASCAR: The List – Iconic Cars (re-air), NBCSN
Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, CNBC
1:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Countdown, CNBC
2 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Zippo 200 at The Glen, CNBC
4:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Post-Race Show, CNBC

Sunday, Aug. 7
12:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS2
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Countdown, USA
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, USA
4 p.m., WeatherTech SportsCar Championship: Road America, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Post-Race Show, USA
Midnight, NASCAR Victory Lap, NBCSN

TUNE-IN GUIDE

Daytona Market:

Brighthouse Cable 

USA Network: Channel 1238 

NBCSN: Channel 1152

CNBC: Channel 1219

 

Charlotte Market:

Time Warner Cable

USA Network: Channel 101

NBCSN: Channel 314

CNBC: Channel 205

 

New York Market:

Time Warner Cable

USA Network: Channel 101

NBCSN: Channel 314

CNBC: Channel 205 


Optimum Cable

USA: Channel 38

NBCSN: Channel 212

CNBC: Channel 24


Verizon FIOS

USA: Channel 550

NBCSN: Channel 590

CNBC: Channel 602

 

Los Angeles Market:

Time Warner Cable 

USA Network: Channel 101

NBCSN: Channel 314

CNBC: Channel 85 

 

National Carriers:

DIRECTV

USA Network: Channel 242

NBCSN: Channel 220

CNBC: Channel 355

 

Dish Network

USA: Channel 105 

NBCSN: Channel 159 

CNBC: Channel 208


Verizon FIOS

USA: Channel 550

NBCSN: Channel #590

CNBC: Channel 602

RELATED: Latest updates, timeline on Dale Jr.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. gave some health-related updates Monday on “The Dale Jr. Download” podcast, including a revelation that his doctors think his latest concussion occurred at Michigan on June 12 and that his plan for the future “is to race more.”

 

“The symptoms have sort of plateaued,” Earnhardt Jr. revealed. “There are days when I feel like that the balance is better and then there’s certainly moments when it’s not. “

 

NASCAR’s most popular wheelman is itching to return to the track, too. Earnhardt missed the past three races after experiencing concussion-related symptoms. Jeff Gordon filled Junior’s seat in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Pocono Raceway. Alex Bowman replaced Junior at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.


“I’m very impatient and I want change now and I want improvement now,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “I’m constantly texting my doctor. (I told him), ‘tell me you can fix this.’ “

Here are more quotes from the podcast:


— “My doctor’s don’t want me sleeping much.
… (I) can’t be lazy and laying around all day.”

— “The balance is up and down. The main issue that I have is called gaze stability. That’s the main problem and that is, what I believe, is tied to the balance.”

— ” … the problem is with my eye being able to fix on an object from a great distance. That’s the problem, when I move my head, I lose the object that I’m trying to target.”

— “It’s only been three weeks since I really first got checked out so that’s really a short span of time in the grand scheme of things.”

— “I have to follow their (the doctors) orders with everything they want me to do and hope that over time that’s going to make a difference.”

— “This particular time, my doctor wants me to expose myself to situations that drive the symptoms. And that would be going places that I’m super unfamiliar with. Even going over to JR Motorsports just on a weekday drives the symptoms up.”

— “You don’t even realize you have anxiety until it affects you. I didn’t think I had much anxiety in my life. … Just the simple things you take for granted.”

— “He (the physician) wants me to go to the grocery store with Amy. He wants me to live my life.”

 

— “The hardest thing to understand is what’s most important in life.”

 

— “I’m not a doctor. So I have to lean on the professionals I’m working with. When I first went to get checked out, we went through every single test. We went through every possible issue from inner ear, blood tests, checked for Lyme disease. Everything we could think of.”

 

— “They seem to really feel confident that this occurred in Michigan. I’ve never had a concussion that came on weeks after the event. Most of them you feel it immediately and they sort of get better over time. So this has been the opposite. This is scary for me because of the way it’s been different.”

— “In my mind, my plan is to race more.”

 

— “You go to bed at night hoping you’re going to be able to wake up the next morning and tell a difference. That drives you absolutely crazy.”

Listen to the full podcast here

 

RELATED: Results | Standings | Chase Grid
SHOP: Buescher gear

LONG POND, Pa. — Chris Buescher sat in his car on pit road, dreaming of the possibilities.

NASCAR had just red-flagged Monday’s rain-delayed Pennsylvania 400 when a heavy fog settled over Pocono Raceway after 138 of a scheduled 160 laps, and Buescher was the unlikely race leader.

“I’m thinking of every kind of rain dance I can,” Buescher said on his radio.

The mental rain dance worked.

When NASCAR ended the stoppage by calling the race because of weather, Buescher had his first victory as a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver, and Front Row Motorsports had its first win since David Ragan took the checkered flag at Talladega Superspeedway 118 races ago.

Buescher took the top spot by staying out on the track, outlasting faster cars that had pitted behind him. Brad Keselowski finished second, followed by Regan Smith, whose team made the same strategic call that propelled Buescher to the unlikely victory.

Kevin Harvick ran fourth, followed by Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Tony Stewart.

Even though the early call of the race deprived Stewart of a chance to win, he wished the best for Buescher during the red-flag period.

“He’s a good kid and an XFINITY champion (2015),” Stewart said during the red-flag period. “It doesn’t matter how you get your first win. You just want to get your first win. I hope it works out for him right now.”

For Buescher, the long, tense wait for NASCAR to call the event was well worth it.

“It was stressful,” said Buescher, who lost a lap because of a pit road speeding penalty on Lap 94 and regained it as the highest-scored lapped car under caution on Lap 109. “I tried not to get my hopes up because I know how these things can play out. Mother Nature can be really nice sometimes and really mean.

“If that sun would have come out, it would have changed our whole day.”

With rain in the area, Kyle Larson and Austin Dillon were among six drivers who stayed on the track under caution on Lap 67, and when the race went green on Lap 73, Larson streaked into the lead with Dillon in pursuit.

With a strong run off Turn 3, Dillon inched ahead at the start/finish line on Lap 78, but Larson regained the top spot into Turn 1. Three laps later, Dillon moved to the inside of Larson in Turn 3, and their Chevrolets collided side-to-side.

Logano, who had given the two frontrunners a wide berth, slipped to the inside and into the lead, passing both cars as they slid wide through the corner.

RELATED: Logano goes around Larson, Dillon


When NASCAR called the fourth caution of the day on Lap 85, Logano stayed out under the yellow and brought the field to green on Lap 92.

Logano held the top spot until pole winner Martin Truex Jr. pounded the outside wall for the third time on Lap 100 to bring out the fifth caution. At that point, the field inverted, with Logano and Kevin Harvick pitting from the first and second positions, respectively.

That handed the lead back to Larson, who had pitted under yellow on Lap 86, along with Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch and Dillon.

On Lap 106, Logano’s winning chances evaporated when Chase Eliott’s Chevrolet broke loose in the Tunnel Turn (turn 2) and knocked Logano’s No. 22 Ford into the outside wall. Elliott’s car also took extensive damage when it nosed into the inside wall.

WATCH: Logano, Elliott collect and spin

But Buescher inherited the lead during a cycle of green-flag pit stops that started on Lap 124 and was running up front when NASCAR called the seventh caution on Lap 133 because of lack of visibility.

Buescher can earn a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup if he finishes the 26-race regular season in 30th place or higher in the series standings. Buescher currently is six points behind 30th-place Ragan, who now drives for BK Racing.

Buescher is the first Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate to win a Sprint Cup race since Logano accomplished the feat in 2009. Coincidentally, Logano’s victory came in a rain-shortened race at New Hampshire.

WATCH: Jones honors his father at Michigan race

 

NEWTON, Iowa — Erik Jones’ hard-fought victory at Iowa Speedway on Saturday night was meaningful in several ways.

 

It marked the 20-year-old’s third win of the season and first trip to Victory Lane since May. But it also went a little deeper than that: It was the first race Jones had won since his father Dave passed away from cancer on June 7.


“It’s pretty special,” Jones said after the race. “It’s the first NASCAR win I’ve gotten that he’s not here for. In a way, it’s special for me to get back to Victory Lane without him. I know he’s riding along with us and it’s hard not to think that this one was for him.”

 

WATCH: Jones celebrates in Victory Lane at Iowa


Jones posted a tweet confirming his father’s passing just before the XFINITY race at his home track of Michigan International Speedway. He concluded the tweet, which also included an extended tribute to his father, with the following:


“I’m going to miss you at the racetrack every weekend, always with a pre-race pep talk. I’m going to miss seeing you every time I come home, I’m going to miss sharing jokes with you, but most all of I’m going to miss my best friend. I love you dad, and I can’t wait to see you again.”


While his father wasn’t there to witness his son take the checkered flag at Iowa, Jones knew he was watching.


“Definitely wish he could have been there to celebrate with us, but I know he’s definitely smiling down on us tonight,” Jones said.

RELATED: Results | Chase Grid | Standings

 

NEWTON, Iowa — Ty Dillon’s face shone with sweat and slight disappointment as he climbed out of his No. 3 Chevrolet and exchanged a quick word with crew chief Nick Harrison on pit road following a runner-up finish to winner Erik Jones in Saturday night’s U.S. Cellular 250 at Iowa Speedway.

His Richard Childress Racing ride was dominant, leading 83 of the 250 laps — but it wasn’t enough for the checkered flag, leaving Dillon a bridesmaid for the second time this season in the Hawkeye State.

And for a driver who hasn’t won since Indianapolis in 2014, that certainly stings.

“It’s heartbreaking, I really wanted to win ever since two years ago at Indy,” Dillon said on pit road. “We’ve had so many ups and downs and so many second-place finishes.

“To lead a lot of laps here is encouraging, but man, it just hurts.”

His No. 3 was aggressive all night, moving through the field with purpose since the drop of the green flag. By the time the first caution flag was waved at Lap 29, Dillon had already moved into the top 10 after starting 15th. As the race continued, the 24-year-old driver looked poised for Victory Lane when a strong pit stop won Dillon the race off pit road at Lap 152. He held onto the lead for 83 laps, but Jones’ powerful No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota eventually overtook Dillon’s No. 3 Chevy.

 
“I was pushing so hard, I just started to get a little bit loose and a little bit looser and his car was just a little bit better at that point,” Dillon said. “I could make it work for a couple laps there, but every once in a while I’d just get a little too free and he’d make a gain on me. There were other cars in front of me and I don’t know if it just kind of took a little air off us or what, but I could not get to them, could not get past them and let Erik get a good run on us.

“I knew he was going to try the top and he was just better than me, so he could run whatever line I wasn’t. I tried to block him and he made a good move and got by me.”

The Joe Gibbs Racing fleet has flexed its muscle this season across all series, winning 13 of the 19 XFINITY Series events alone. Daniel Suarez won the Coors Light Pole for the organization and remained near the front of the field for the much of the race’s first half until a run-in with Josh Berry’s No. 88 left the No. 19 with too much damage to continue.


“You’ve just got to be so perfect to outrun them and when you get the lead, you can’t give them any inch cause they’re there,” Dillon said of the Gibbs cars. “I try to be perfect all night and just came up 10 laps short.”

Joe Gibbs Racing’s continued success begs the question: What is everyone else missing?

According to No. 3 crew chief Nick Harrison, not as much as it appears.

“I don’t think Gibbs has got anything else that we don’t have — I just think that they’re a little bit better in a couple areas right now,” Harrison said in the garage post-race. “It’s not that we don’t notice — we’ve got everything they’ve got and we’re making gains. I feel like come time to shine, we’ll be right there for the sun to get on us.”

While the runner-up finish stings, the team’s dominance and aggressiveness throughout the night also sings praises — and provides encouragement as the Chase draws nearer.

“We were in second tonight and showed we could compete with those guys,” Dillon said. “We know we’ve got to get better, we know we can get better. If we execute like that we’ll have a great shot going in the Chase.”

And Harrison can see his driver’s motivation — and appetite for victory — growing.

“These second-place finishes, they’ve not all been so bad because they probably make Ty that much more hungry, make my guys that much more hungry,” Harrison said. “… And come time for it, we’re going to be there to get our meal.”

 

MORE: Photos from the day