On Wednesday, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the L1-level penalty issued to the No. 17 RFK Racing team and driver Chris Buescher on May 15 after the NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway.

Upon hearing the testimony, three members of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel ruled that the No. 17 team violated one or more, but not all, of the rules from the initial penalty. The team violated 14.5.4 (front bumper cover) but did not violate 14.1.2 (exhaust cover panel). Therefore, the panel amended the original penalty assessed by NASCAR to include a loss of 30 championship driver and team owner points (it was initially a 60-point loss), a loss of five driver and team owner playoff points, a two-race suspension for the crew chief and a $75,000 fine for the team.

In reaching its decision, the panel provided the following explanation: “The panel concluded that NASCAR met its burden of proof regarding the reinforcement of the front bumper cover but did not meet it regarding the trimming of the exhaust panel cover. The rule book regarding the exhaust panel trimming lacked specificity on the amount trimmed or not trimmed. Accordingly, the panel reduced the owner and driver points penalty from 60 to 30 points.”

As a result of the modified points penalty, Buescher moves up to 16th in the Cup Series points standings. He now is the first driver below the NASCAR Playoffs cutline, -6 to RFK Racing teammate Ryan Preece.

RELATED: Updated Cup standings

The three-member panel was comprised of Tom DeLoach, Cary Tharrington and Kevin Whitaker.

At Kansas, Buescher finished eighth in the AdventHealth 400 and his No. 17 Ford was selected as one of two cars to be taken back to the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, North Carolina, for further inspection. That is where officials ruled the car was in violation.

Crew chief Scott Graves has already served his two-race suspension.

“We appreciate the opportunity to present our case to the National Motorsports Appeals Panel today and are pleased that the panel overturned one of the two assessed penalties,” RFK Racing said in a Wednesday statement issued to its social media accounts. “Our goal is to always comply fully with the letter of the NASCAR Rule Book, and our focus is now looking forward to competing for a win in Nashville this weekend.”

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to action Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Nashville schedule | Get Prime Video, 30-day free trial

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Historic moments can happen on any given night at Bowman Gray Stadium.

Burt Myers proved that by winning his 100th Brad’s Golf Cars Modified Series race, and—given how strong he’s been in long races this season—Myers has more than a fighting chance to tie Tim Brown atop the all-time wins list if he can capture the Elite Underground Utility 100 trophy this Saturday.

“But we’ve talked about it, we’ve won three weeks in a row,” Myers says. “Should’ve won the first week, had a shot to win the next week. We are just a couple bad breaks from being five in a row. So, we’ve got a good car, we’ve got a great team, but this is still Bowman Gray.”

Meanwhile, Brown says he’s worn out on hearing about Myers racking up wins, and he’s hungry for one of his own.

“People keep after me and asking why I’m letting Burt win these races,” Brown says, “Let’s be clear: I’m not letting Burt do anything, but we’re not going to improve our own season by worrying about what everyone else is doing.”

The Fans’ Challenge is back in play, and one driver could pocket a $6,000 bonus. Third-place points driver Mike Speeney is among those expected to take the challenge if he gets a chance.

“I keep saying it, but we’re out there just having fun, and it’s a neat thing to do for the fans,” Speeney says.

The Law Offices of John Barrow Sportsman, QRC HVAC & Refrigeration Street Stock, and Q104.1 Stadium Stock Series drivers will also be in action.

Gates open at 6 p.m. Saturday night with racing action to start at 8 p.m. Fans can get tickets online right now at www.bowmangrayracing.com. Tickets are $12 for adults and $2 for kids ages 6 to 11.

Though Kyle Larson had ample time for a punctual arrival at the Coca-Cola 600, NASCAR was prepared to delay the green flag at Charlotte Motor Speedway for its star.

After previously excusing Larson from the mandatory drivers meeting and driver introductions, NASCAR was open to moving back the Coke 600 start time to smooth his journey from racing in the Indianapolis 500.

During the latest episode of “Hauler Talk,” NASCAR managing director of communications Mike Forde said there was talk of a Charlotte delay after the 12:46 p.m. ET start of the 109th Indy 500 was pushed back nearly 45 minutes by rain, and the race then was plagued by early cautions.

Before crashing out of the Indy 500 on Lap 91, it was unlikely Larson would have been able to complete the race at Indy and arrive in time for the 6:27 p.m. start at Charlotte.

RELATED: Watch Larson’s crash in the Indy 500

“Serious discussions never started happening, (as) once he wrecked out, it was clear he was going to be able to make it to Charlotte Motor Speedway in time,” Forde said. “But preliminary discussions did start occurring on if there were any windows we could move back by five, 10 or 15 minutes. So, we were prepared to have the discussions. There was starting to be chatter to what can we do to help accommodate Kyle if absolutely necessary.”

Last year, Larson missed the Coke 600 because of a four-hour rain delay at the Indy 500. By the time the 2021 Cup Series champion arrived at Charlotte, the 600 was in a rain delay that resulted in the race being called after 374 miles.

NASCAR eventually granted Larson a championship eligibility waiver but changed the rules for 2025, wiping out playoff points for drivers who were granted waivers for missing a start in similar situations.

Larson was successful in his second attempt at becoming the fifth driver to run the Indy 500 and Coke 600 on the same day, but his results were disappointing. Larson finished 24th at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and then 37th at Charlotte after being involved in two cautions despite leading 34 laps.

The Hendrick Motorsports star seems uncertain of attempting “The Double” again next year, noting the difficult logistics. Forde said NASCAR would welcome another attempt, noting that officials worked with Hendrick “to make it as logistically seamless as possible” (the excusal of Larson from pre-race ceremonies was made days earlier). A delegation led by NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell and including Daytona International Speedway president Frank Kelleher also visited this year’s Indy 500.

“We love ‘The Double,'” Forde said. “Obviously, it’s difficult when there are things out of your control. But Steve O’Donnell took a contingent of NASCAR folks to Indianapolis just to see what this spectacle is all about and if there’s anything NASCAR can learn to be better because this is a gigantic race.

“We have these new waiver rules that give our fans and NASCAR some guarantee that our biggest stars will be at every race. There were a lot of Kyle Larson shirts (at the Coke 600), and he probably got the loudest ovation in driver introductions. So it’s important for us that our stars are in the car when the green flag waves. There could be an argument of should there be concessions just for this day. But our counter is this is a crown-jewel race, it’s the first on Amazon Prime (Video), and it’s important to have a field of our stars. … Very rarely do we allow drivers to miss driver intros, and we were willing to do that, but to take one of our stars out of the start of a race might be a little bit of a bridge too far for us. Overall, we do embrace The Double and hope to see it again.” …

While Larson was unable to win his second consecutive 1.5-mile race, the Coke 600 still had a compelling winner in Ross Chastain who started from the rear in a backup car after crashing in practice Saturday.

Teams’ approach to backup cars has changed since the 2022 rollout of the Next Gen car that included limits of seven annual chassis. Though teams still make the call on when to use a backup car, Forde explained the move must be approved by NASCAR.

“And so what that means is if you have a team that already has a backup car prepared, and they get in a minor brush the wall and just want a fresh car, we’re probably not going to approve that,” Forde said. “In this case, they had some chassis damage.” …

After hinting in a recent “Hauler Talk” episode that NASCAR was considering an increase to 750 horsepower for Cup engines as early as this season, Forde said that the topic came up last week during separate meetings with team owners and drivers.

RELATED: NASCAR’s Sawyer on possibility of adding horsepower

“It was something we proactively brought up to have a further discussion of improving the short-track package,” Forde said. “Obviously the drivers all embraced that topic and requested more and more horsepower. So we said, ‘You got it. We’ll look into it.’ We are working with engine builders on that, and we’ll see if this is something that’s put into place this season.”

Other topics covered during the 16th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:

— The international provisionals introduced for the Mexico City Xfinity Series race that possibly could have increased the field to 40 cars.

— The debut of Prime Video’s NASCAR coverage and what that means for expanded post-race shows.

— The final two episodes of the “Earnhardt” docuseries that will be released Thursday on Prime.

Click on the embed above to listen or search for “Hauler Talk” wherever you download podcasts to hear it on your phone, tablet or mobile device.

Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He also has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour returns to the northeast this weekend for a trip to the famed Cement Palace of Seekonk Speedway.

Open to the public since 1946, the Venditti family have overseen a proud, vibrant racing culture at Seekonk that includes Modified competition. The list of names who have won a weekly Modified Seekonk includes many of the discipline’s greatest drivers like Bugsy Stevens, Ron Bouchard and Geoff Bodine, among others.

Although Modifieds are no longer at the forefront of Seekonk’s weekly racing program, the facility has intermittently hosted NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour races since 1987. Sunday’s J&R Precast 150 marks the third consecutive year Seekonk has been on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour calendar.

Seekonk’s confined layout leaves little margin for error and requires constant precision around the facility’s wide, fast corners. Consistency around Seekonk will be imperative for drivers this weekend if they wish to join an exclusive group of NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour winners at the historic facility.

Tickets to the J&R Precast 150 can be purchased here. Below is everything to know ahead of the fourth race of the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Matt Hirschman driver of the #60 PeeDee Motorsports Troyer in actions during the J&R Precast 150 for the Whelen Modified Tour at Seekonk Speedway on June 1, 2043 in Seekonk, Massachusetts. (Jaiden Tripi/NASCAR)

J&R Precast 150

Ever since the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour returned to Seekonk Speedway, no driver has been more dominant than Matt Hirschman.

After leading every lap at Seekonk in 2023, Hirschman put together a spirited drive last season to earn his second consecutive victory there. Relegated to eighth on the starting grid following a redraw that shuffled him from the pole, Hirschman methodically worked his way toward the front before passing Austin Beers with 21 laps remaining.

Beers was the one who inherited the pole in 2024 due to the redraw and would end up leading a race-high 129 laps. Still searching for his first victory of the 2025 season, Beers seeks to replicate his strong Seekonk performance and usurp points leader Craig Lutz in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings.

Lutz’ triumph at North Wilkesboro Speedway gave him a one-point advantage over Beers and reigning series champion Justin Bonsignore. Holding that lead after the J&R Precast 150 will require Lutz to obtain his first top five at Seekonk since 2019, where he placed third behind race-winner Doug Coby.

The last two drivers within single digits of Lutz’s points lead are Luke Baldwin and Stephen Kopcik. Baldwin led 19 laps at North Wilkesboro before settling for a strong runner-up finish, while Kopcik earned a career-best showing of fourth at Seekonk last season.

Other names set to compete at Seekonk on Sunday include Jon McKennedy, Jake Johnson, Eric Goodale, Chase Dowling, Kyle Ebersole and Dave Sapienza, among others.

The complete entry list for the J&R Precast 150 can be viewed here.

Seekonk Speedway
Boasting a rich history of racing, another driver will add their name into Seekonk Speedway’s record books as a NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour winner on Sunday. (Photo: Jaiden Tripi/NASCAR)

RACE FACTS

Race J&R Precast 150
Date Sunday, June 1, 2025
Track Seekonk Speedway
Layout 0.333-mile asphalt oval
Location Seekonk, Massachusetts
Start time 4 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Posted Awards $104,304
Tickets Here
How To Watch FloRacing

Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. 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 J&R Precast 150 is limited to 28 starters including Provisional Positions.

Redraw: The fastest qualifier will spin the wheel to determine the number of drivers that will redraw for their starting positions: 4, 6, 8, or 10 positions will redraw. Once the fastest qualifier spins the wheel, NASCAR will have the various buckets ready to immediately start the redraw procedure. Driver will redraw in their qualifying order after qualifying has been completed (1 through 10, or however many applicable). The pole position and/or any bonus point(s), if applicable, will be awarded to the fastest qualifier and will be the pole of record. If, due to adverse conditions, qualifying is canceled, the field will be set in accordance with the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour rulebook. The redraw procedure will still take place regardless of how the field is set. However, pole awards and/or bonus point(s), if applicable, will not be paid, if due to adverse conditions, the field is set in accordance with the 2025 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour rulebook.

Tire allotment: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eight (8) 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. For (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. The tire change rule is one (1) tire per caution period.

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series heads to Nashville Superspeedway for the Rackley Roofing 200 on Friday (8 p.m. ET, FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). FS1 will also air Truck Series qualifying at 5:10 p.m. ET Friday.

QUALIFYING ORDER: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

The qualifying order below is determined via metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).

RELATED: How to watch Cup races on Prime Video

Friday’s qualifying session will be one lap and one round.

MORE: Weekend Schedule

# denotes series rookie
(i) denotes ineligible for driver points

PositionCar No.DriverMetric ScoreGroup
163Akinoi Ogata40.7001
22Clayton Green29.6001
35Toni Breidinger #29.1001
426Dawson Sutton #28.9001
522Tyler Tomassi (i)28.0001
633Frankie Muniz #27.6001
798Ty Majeski25.7001
876Spencer Boyd24.6001
902Nathan Byrd24.4001
1038Chandler Smith24.4001
1191Jack Wood23.8001
1215Tanner Gray23.3001
1381Connor Mosack #22.7001
1466Luke Fenhaus20.1001
1588Matt Crafton19.4001
1617Giovanni Ruggiero #18.6001
1777Andres Perez De Lara #18.1002
1899Ben Rhodes16.1002
191William Sawalich (i)12.7002
2052Stewart Friesen12.7002
2107Kyle Busch (i)12.3002
2242Matt Mills10.9002
2371Rajah Caruth10.8002
2413Jake Garcia10.7002
2518Tyler Ankrum9.6002
2619Daniel Hemric6.5002
2744Bayley Currey6.2002
287Corey Day (i)6.2002
299Grant Enfinger5.7002
3034Layne Riggs4.9002
3145Kaden Honeycutt4.5002
3211Corey Heim1.0002

The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Nashville Superspeedway for the Cracker Barrel 400 (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Prime Video will also air Cup Series qualifying at 5:40 p.m. ET on Saturday.

QUALIFYING ORDER: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

The qualifying order below is determined via metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).

RELATED: How to watch on Prime Video

Saturday’s qualifying session will be one lap and one round.

MORE: Weekend Schedule 

# denotes series rookie
(i) denotes ineligible for driver points

Pos.Car No.DriversMetric ScoreGroup
167* Corey Heim (i)40.71
266* Chad Finchum36.91
344* JJ Yeley (i)35.91
438Zane Smith35.11
599Daniel Suárez34.21
677Carson Hocevar30.11
735Riley Herbst #29.81
87Justin Haley29.71
912Ryan Blaney28.71
1023Bubba Wallace28.41
1151Cody Ware28.31
125Kyle Larson26.51
1341Cole Custer25.21
142Austin Cindric25.01
1542John Hunter Nemechek24.91
1654Ty Gibbs24.31
1748Alex Bowman23.31
1810Ty Dillon22.61
1917Chris Buescher22.31
203Austin Dillon21.21
2188Shane van Gisbergen #19.72
2245Tyler Reddick19.72
2334Todd Gilliland19.22
2443Erik Jones17.22
258Kyle Busch15.92
264Noah Gragson15.42
2722Joey Logano14.62
2821Josh Berry13.22
296Brad Keselowski13.12
3011Denny Hamlin13.02
3147Ricky Stenhouse Jr.11.92
3260Ryan Preece10.82
3371Michael McDowell10.62
3416AJ Allmendinger7.92
3520Christopher Bell6.52
3619Chase Briscoe5.72
379Chase Elliott5.42
381Ross Chastain3.12
3924William Byron1.72

The NASCAR Xfinity Series heads to Nashville Superspeedway this weekend, with qualifying at 3:10 p.m. ET on Saturday (The CW App).

QUALIFYING ORDER: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

Forty drivers are vying for 38 spots, meaning two cars will fail to qualify for Saturday’s race (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Weekend schedule

The qualifying order below is determined via metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).

Qualifying will be one lap and one round.

# denotes series rookie
(i) denotes ineligible for driver point

Pos.Car No.DriversMetric ScoreGroup
135TBA40.41
29Ross Chastain (i)40.11
324Jeffrey Earnhardt39.81
432Katherine Legge (i)35.81
545Mason Massey34.11
699Matt DiBenedetto33.31
74Parker Retzlaff33.11
870Thomas Annunziata32.61
928Kyle Sieg32.11
1053Mason Maggio30.41
1191Myatt Snider29.61
1214Logan Bearden28.71
138Sammy Smith28.41
1407Nick Leitz27.61
1510Daniel Dye #26.81
1654Taylor Gray #25.81
1731Blaine Perkins25.21
1842Anthony Alfredo24.41
195Kris Wright22.51
2044Brennan Poole21.41
2119Aric Almirola19.12
2225Harrison Burton18.92
2318William Sawalich #18.02
2451Jeremy Clements17.82
2527Jeb Burton17.62
2620Brandon Jones15.42
271Carson Kvapil #15.22
2871Ryan Ellis13.42
2939Ryan Sieg12.22
3016Christian Eckes #12.02
3100Sheldon Creed10.92
3211Josh Williams10.52
332Jesse Love9.62
3426Dean Thompson #8.92
3541Sam Mayer8.62
3648Nick Sanchez #6.62
3721Austin Hill5.52
3817Corey Day3.42
397Justin Allgaier3.12
4088Connor Zilisch #2.92

J&R Precast 150

Seekonk Speedway

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Organization Crew Chief Chassis Mfg Sponsor
1 Patrick Emerling KPL Racing LLC Dale Hedquist LFR Fleetworks, Inc.
3 Tyler Rypkema Boehler’s Racing Equipment Greg Fournier Boehler Racing USNE; Northeast Drilling
5 Kyle Ebersole Robert Ebersole Bob Ebersole FURY Race Cars Ebersole Excavating, Inc.
7 Luke Baldwin Tommy Baldwin Racing LLC Tommy Baldwin PSR Products Baldwin Automotive
8 John-Michael Shenette Eighty-Two Autosport Scott Morin LFR USNE Power; Eighty-Two Services
15 Joey Cipriano III Fueled Up Motorsports Ryan Plourde FURY Race Cars J&R Pre-Cast Inc.; Dependable Energy; The Bass Plating Company
18 Ken Heagy Christopher Fleming Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars TBD
21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Motorsports Nick Kopcik Troyer Wanick Constructions, Inc.; Newtown Pools
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Keith McDermott FURY Race Cars MTT; ChaLew Performance; Munns Auto
36 David Sapienza Judith Thilberg Greg Kleila FURY Race Cars Sapienza Enterprises; Eastport Feeds
44 Chase Dowling Tinio Motorsports Danny Gamache LFR Harshaw Paving; S&S Paving
46 Craig Lutz Goodie Racing Douglas Ogiejko FURY Race Cars Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports, LLC Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications, Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano Catalano Motorsports Rick Kluth Troyer FX Caprara; USNE Power
56 Trevor Catalano Catalano Motorsports JJ Vece Troyer USNE Power & Construction
58 Eric Goodale Goodie Motorsports Rob Hyer FURY Race Cars GAF Roofing
59 Tyler Barry Jody Lauzon Billy Michael Chevrolet Pro Systems Integration; BNP Machine
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee/Elite Motorsports Mike Stein Troyer Pee Dee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer Fastrack Electric, G&G Electrical Supply, Dell Electric, Lumiere Electrical, AP Marquadt & Sons, Andrew James Interiors, Hugh
79 Jonathan McKennedy Jonathan McKennedy Racing TBA FURY Race Cars TBA
107 Jake Johnson JMA Motorsports Justin Albernaz FURY Race Cars Platinum Fire Protection; Propane Plus; Lin’s Propane; Axis Wealth; Island International
120 Max Zachem Zachem Motorsports Ken Zachem LFR USNE; Lu-Mac’s
125 Brian Robie Robie Motorsports LLC Cody Rose Troyer Bar Harbor Bank and Trust

 

Jeb Burton has never lacked confidence. Since bursting onto the NASCAR scene more than a decade ago, he’s always felt he could get the job done.

“I probably get more frustrated than anybody because I know that I can win at any of these tracks if my car will allow me to do it,” Burton told NASCAR.com last weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “Sometimes, it’s tough to know that we’re not there yet.”

No matter the series, hurdles kept creeping up on Burton, jumping around between select Cup Series starts and additional stints in the Xfinity Series. Over the last three years, however, he’s found a stable home in Xfinity with Jordan Anderson Racing, which continues to grow.

RELATED: Jeb Burton driver page

“I think Jordan (Anderson, owner/driver) is very like-minded to me, and Jordan was looking for someone to build around,” Burton said. “Jordan and I have had our bad days, we’ve had our good days and there’s a mutual respect there. I feel like I need him, and he needs me. I need a place to race and he needs a place to have a stable driver and give them information and do a good job behind the wheel.”

Burton won early in his tenure with JAR, scoring an upset victory at Talladega Superspeedway in 2023. That vaulted the No. 27 team into the playoffs, finishing 12th in the championship standings. Almost nothing went right through the first two-thirds of the 2024 campaign, though, with the Virginia native accumulating an average finish of 21.6 for the year, the worst of his Xfinity career.

Anderson hired crew chief Mark Setzer — formerly with Jeremy Clements Racing — over the offseason to work with Burton; the company created a new competition director role for Shane Whitbeck, Burton’s former crew chief. The performance uptick has been clear.

Through the opening half of the 2025 regular season, Burton’s average finish is up more than seven positions compared to 2024, and he is 14 positions higher in the championship standings compared to this time last year. Burton currently sits ninth in the championship standings, nine points behind fifth.

Slotting in 10th on the playoff grid, Burton knows how tight the points are, sitting just 44 points ahead of 15th.

“The next [13 races] are important,” Burton said. “I’m thinking that if we can just do what we’re doing, not make any mistakes and not have any mechanical failures and not do anything dumb, we should be able to make the playoffs. I feel like our cars are getting better every week.”

Anderson believes the hot start to 2025, in which Burton has already tallied more top 10s this year (four) than all 33 races last season (three), has been constructed over time. The No. 27 team has built an extended notebook, knowing what the two-time Xfinity winner likes and dislikes in his setups. And while the team has yet to find Victory Lane this season — coming up just short at Talladega in April — the progress is still paying off.

“It’s been encouraging this year to see stuff that we were doing the last two or three years, it’s starting to show the results,” Anderson said. “It wasn’t just something that we hit on over the offseason, it’s been stuff that we’ve invested back into, trying to get better with.”

Burton admits that he looks at points weekly following each race. With a strong beginning to the 2025 season, the JAR haulers are parked in the garage among the series’ superpowers. (Teams are parked based on an organization’s highest driver in points.) Only Joe Gibbs Racing, Richard Childress Racing, JR Motorsports, Haas Factory Team and RSS Racing — with Ryan Sieg’s No. 39 car in an alliance with Haas — are parked ahead of the fifth-year upstart.

“We’re in really good company over here,” Anderson noted. “It’s a big mindset when they walk into the garage area to see our stuff on this side and know what we’re capable of.”

No matter the track, Burton is focused on stage points. Last month at Rockingham Speedway, he stayed out to earn points, despite the No. 27 team’s desire for him to pit. At Charlotte, he pitted for fresh tires during a caution in the middle of the opening stage and drove all the way to fifth to tally six points, making a 20th-place result much more bearable.

MORE: Xfinity Series standings | Xfinity Series schedule

Eight of the final 13 races of the regular season — including Indianapolis on the superspeedway package — will be contested on either a superspeedway or road course, which could create chaos in the standings. Burton excels on superspeedways and considers himself a “decent” road-course driver, though the No. 27 team has needed to work on its program.

Burton remains calm and collected ahead of the series’ second half, which begins this Saturday at Nashville Superspeedway (7:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“It really isn’t that stressful because we’re not supposed to do it anyways,” Burton said of possibly pointing his way into the playoffs. “We’re doing more than we should anyways. That’s the way I look at it. It would be big to do it, but I think now with everything that happened, it would be a bigger feat for us to make the playoffs without winning a race.”

Anderson, meanwhile, stated he’s always in a constant state of stress. However, if the No. 27 group can continue to refine the fundamentals, he believes Burton can make the 12-driver playoff.

“The reason we got here now with Jeb is the basics: finishing races, having good points days,” Anderson said. “If we continue to log good finishes, we’re going to ride that wave out and not put ourselves in a bad spot. A rising tide does raise all ships.”

One NASCAR Cup Series team and one Xfinity Series team were penalized Tuesday following loose wheels in last weekend’s races at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

The No. 66 Garage 66 Ford piloted by Josh Bilicki had its right-rear wheel detach from the vehicle in Turn 4 under caution at Lap 49 of Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600. As a result, rear-tire changer Brehanna Daniels and jackman Ethan Hindman have been suspended from the next two NASCAR Cup Series races through the June 8 race at Michigan International Speedway per Sections 10.5.2.6.D in the NASCAR Rule Book regarding safety penalties.

MORE: Coca-Cola 600 results | Xfinity results

In Saturday’s Xfinity Series race, Daniel Dye suffered a similar fate when the right-rear wheel of his No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet detached from the car on the backstretch under caution, sending the car spinning into the inside SAFER barrier at Lap 200. Rear-tire changer Jerick Newsome and jackman Richie Williams have been suspended from the next two Xfinity races through the June 14 race at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez per Sections 10.5.2.5.E in the Rule Book regarding safety penalties.

Both series return to action this weekend at Nashville Superspeedway. The Xfinity Series competes Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ET on The CW, PRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. The Cup Series races at 7 p.m. ET on Prime Video, PRN Radio and SiriusXM.