BRISTOL, Tenn. — In a matter of 28 hours, crew chiefs at Bristol Motor Speedway had to scramble through multiple plans for tire strategy.

Sunday’s Food City 500 was a straight-forward domination by Kyle Larson on Goodyear tires that held up just as well as these same tire codes did in September of both 2023 and 2024.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

That didn’t appear to be the case after Saturday’s practice session, though. Each of the two 25-minute sessions took place under overcast, cool conditions — and the tires responded differently, wearing to their inner cords within a 50-lap window, similar to the spring of 2024.

Suddenly, the crew-chief contingents’ well-baked plans, believing that last spring’s race was an anomaly, were in doubt. Engineers agonized overnight about different strategies and car setups that could better support a repeat of the tire wear that led to track-record lead changes a year ago.

But by Lap 50 on Sunday, those concerns were eradicated. The tires degraded at their initially anticipated rate, allowing teams to go the entire 125-lap first stage on the same set of Goodyears.

“If we had all bet our houses on it like we said we would, we would all be homeless based on our practice yesterday,” said James Small, crew chief of Chase Briscoe’s No. 19 Toyota. “We didn’t think it was going to be like that.”

Neither did his teammate, Adam Stevens, who sits atop the pit box for Christopher Bell’s No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Stevens told NASCAR.com it “definitely” felt like the strategy changed twice in one weekend.

“To be honest, I wasn’t expecting the high wear coming into the weekend,” he said. “Then we got it in practice, and I thought for sure we’d have it in the race and adjusted for it — and then we didn’t have it. So we — us as a team — were just one step behind the whole time, not optimized for the actual race.”

Nonetheless, the JGR foursome of Denny Hamlin (second), Ty Gibbs (third), Briscoe (fourth) and Bell (eighth) finished inside the top 10 despite the quickly changing circumstances.

Ryan Blaney and William Byron race at Bristol.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

Team Penske crew chief Jonathan Hassler used Sunday’s lack of tire degradation to his benefit, leaving Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 Ford out 30 laps longer than the leaders in the race’s waning laps in an attempt to gain significant track position. At one point, Blaney led the race on his own lap — trapping the whole field a lap down — which would have benefitted the No. 12 team tremendously if the caution flag flew. It didn’t, but Blaney still snagged a fifth-place finish on the day.

“Tires had really stopped calling off altogether, so it was really a minimal penalty for us to run long,” Hassler told NASCAR.com. “And it opened up the options for us. If we got a caution when we had everybody trapped a lap down, that’d be great. If we got a caution after our stop, we had ran long enough that I think those guys (who had already pitted) might come back for tires. So just kind of gave us some different options without giving up too much.”

Still, there lies a lingering confusion about the reasons Saturday’s tires wore out more easily and Sunday’s lasted for over 100 laps at a time. Track temperatures were notably higher Sunday as the sun directly hit the track’s high-banked concrete, but the PJ1 Trackbite was also reapplied to the bottom lane of the surface Sunday morning.

“One of the telltale signs was this morning, when they reapplied, it was incredibly sticky,” Small said, “whereas yesterday was not. It was very, very slick. Even after practice, even with temperature, it had very little grip. And we’ve seen here in the past, even with testing, when they’ve changed compounds and stuff like that, just a little bit more (PJ1) on the bottom can make a big difference. So I don’t know it was a combination of that, slightly increased temperatures — I don’t know. It’s a black box, so just leaving here as confused as ever.”

Significant tire wear or little tire wear, it didn’t seem to matter to Larson, who led 411 of 500 laps. That was no coincidence, not after leading 462 of 500 at Bristol last September and placing third in last spring’s tire-burner. A heaping portion of credit falls to crew chief Cliff Daniels, who had a good idea of managing either situation presented to him Sunday.

“To be honest, our learning experience from last year when it was the ‘chaos’ race was a well-balanced car was still going to give you the best potential to manage it on either side,” Daniels said. “So our focus yesterday in practice, even though we went really fast for what our run was and wore out our tires really quickly, it gave us a great read on the balance of the car and a couple of little things we could take into today, knowing that, either way the race could potentially go, we’re just trying to set ourselves up for the best opportunity for longevity, for pace, for Kyle being able to manage the runs with the tire degradation in mind.”

Kyle Larson and the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team put on a masterclass in winning Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Larson led 411 of the 500 laps, just missing out on a weekend tripleheader sweep after finishing second in Friday’s Craftsman Truck Series race and prevailing in Saturday’s Xfinity Series go.

Plenty of other strong performances were worth noting from Sunday’s event, as were a handful of showings that could have used some improvement. With the Cup Series’ lone off weekend of the season coming up, here are our nods for three drivers up and three drivers down after Race 9 of the 2025 season:

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Started: 14th

Finished: 4th

What happened: Briscoe righted the ship after a subpar 28th-place finish the week before at Darlington Raceway, netting his third top-five finish of his first season with Joe Gibbs Racing. Briscoe’s day in the No. 19 Toyota rounded out a solid performance all around for JGR, which placed three cars in the top five and all four Camrys among the top 10.

What’s next: The Cup Series is idle next weekend while the Xfinity and Craftsman Truck Series visit Rockingham Speedway, but Briscoe & Co. will return the following Sunday (April 27) at Talladega Superspeedway, where the No. 19 driver will aim to add to his tally of just one top-five finish in eight starts.

Chase Briscoe offers up a wave during driver introductions at Bristol Motor Speedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2. Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Started: 35th

Finished: 7th

What happened: The Trackhouse driver wound up with a seventh-place outcome for the second straight week, making up the most spots of any driver in the field over the course of the 500 laps. Chastain bumped up one more spot to 11th in the Cup Series standings after recording his third consecutive top-10 run.

What’s next: Chastain had changed into some on-brand flannel for his post-race interview, and he said his off-weekend plans involve getting back to his roots on his family’s watermelon farm. After that, he’ll be back in action in two weeks at Talladega, where he drove the No. 1 Chevy to victory in 2022.

Ross Chastain's No. 1 Chevy races to the low side of Michael McDowell's No. 71 at Bristol Motor Speedway
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

3. AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

Started: 8th

Finished: 9th

What happened: The ‘Dinger backed up his top-10 qualifying effort with a top-10 result Sunday, securing his third top 10 in the last five races. The Kaulig veteran also pocketed a point in the Cup Series standings for registering the Xfinity Fastest Lap, turning in a 15.38-second heater on Lap 396 on fresh tires after a pit stop.

What’s next: Allmendinger might be out of his road-course comfort zone when the Cup Series resumes after a rare idle weekend, but he’s heading to Talladega — the site of an Xfinity Series victory for him in 2022.

AJ Allmendinger's No. 16 Chevrolet leads Chase Briscoe's No. 19 at Bristol Motor Speedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 1st

Finished: 37th

What happened: An otherwise promising day for the No. 48 driver began to sour shortly after the final stage set sail. An engine issue sapped Bowman’s Chevy of its competitive speed, eventually forcing him to the garage and saddling him with his first DNF of the year.

What’s next: The season so far has been an undulating ride for Bowman, who strung together four straight top-10 finishes before landing on his current run of three consecutive results outside of the top 25. Talladega has produced a mixed bag of results for Bowman, who was fifth in the track’s springtime 500-miler last season.

Alex Bowman's No. 48 Chevrolet leads the pack in the early going at Bristol Motor Speedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford

Started: 38th

Finished: 24th

What happened: Logano started at the back of the pack after bopping the wall in his Saturday qualifying run, and he was unable to overcome that deficit in the Food City 500. The Team Penske vet is a two-time winner at Bristol, but he’s gone the last nine races in the Tennessee hills without a top-10 finish.

What’s next: The defending series champ heads to Talladega in two weeks still in search of his first top-five result of the season. The 2.66-mile Alabama track has been kind to him in the past with three wins (2015, 2016, 2018), but his last top-five effort there came in 2021.

Joey Logano's No. 22 Ford makes the rounds in practice and qualifying at Bristol Motor Speedway
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

3. Daniel Suárez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Started: 23rd

Finished: 33rd

What happened: Suárez started in the back half of the field, and his Bristol adventure was complicated by an eventful Stage 2 pit stop. An errant wheel from John Hunter Nemechek’s No. 42 Toyota clanked into Suárez’s back bumper, just missing his No. 99 crew, and the team was hit with a removing equipment penalty for a separate violation.

What’s next: Suárez has been four straight races without a top-10 finish, and in two weeks, he’ll visit a Talladega track that historically has been unkind. Suárez is 0-for-16 for his Cup Series career when it comes to top-five results.

Daniel Suárez's No. 99 Chevy leads Tyler Reddick's No. 45 Toyota through the turns at Bristol Motor Speedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

BRISTOL, Tenn. — “I think the five was the best.”

Sunday’s Cup Series race at Bristol had a similar tune to the song and dance of the Xfinity Series race. Kyle Larson once again dominated as he won two of the three events at the Tennessee short track this weekend.

Denny Hamlin was the one chasing Larson for most of the 500-lapper as the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet swept the stages and led 411 circuits — the second consecutive Bristol race that Larson has led more than 400 laps.

Finishing second and falling just shy of extending his win streak to three, Hamlin said he only needed a touch more if he was to contend with Larson.

RELATED: Race results | Best photos from Bristol weekend

“Just needed a little more speed … needed to be a little bit more versatile,” Hamlin said. “I thought that the five was able to navigate traffic slightly better than what I was and that was a big benefit. Certainly, I felt like an open race track, I could run with him and was able to catch him there on the second long stint, but I couldn’t navigate the traffic quite as good as he could.”

After Saturday’s practice sessions saw tires cording on short runs, Sunday’s race did not bore the same results as a single set of tires could last over 100 laps before pitting under a green-flag cycle or a stage caution.

With the strategy and pace of Sunday’s race having a 180-degree turn to what the expectation was coming in, Hamlin wasn’t disappointed in how the race played out and instead, was more impressed by the dominance of the No. 5 team.

“You got to give teams their due when they dominate, right?” Hamlin said. “We shouldn’t throw mud on the racing because someone goes out there and dominates. I at least kept them honest for a little while there. They were superior here in the fall and they were superior again today. Sometimes you’ll have that and then someone will hit it. That’s what will happen when you have a really good team and a really good driver.”

Bristol paid dividends to all four Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas with Ty Gibbs and Chase Briscoe scoring top fives while Christopher Bell anchored in eighth.

Sunday marked the first top-five run for Gibbs since Kansas last season and his best result since Michigan in the same year.

After a slow start to the season for the newest JGR pilots, both Briscoe and Gibbs are finding their stride.

“They’re with a good team. They’re going to have opportunities to run well,” Hamlin said. “Obviously, the 11 team’s run really well and they’ve taken notice of that, and they’ve implemented some things probably that has helped them. We’re nine races in. You probably now can start to see the haves and the have-nots and who’s going to contend for this thing in the long run. And now we get to reset. Everyone needs that at some point. I think it’s come for a good time for those two teams that struggled early in the year.”

Two of the best drivers early this season were by far the two best drivers Sunday at Bristol. After winning Martinsville and Darlington, Hamlin will take a competitive second despite Larson evening the score between the friendly rivals in 2025.

“You got to give them their flowers for performing great and not making any mistakes,” Hamlin emphasized. “They’re on their game, and when they hit it, they’re hard to beat. That was all I had there to run them down and stay close to them. If you put somebody else up front, I think that us and the five go around them. I just think that it was a thing where he qualified well, set the tone early with the pace and never looked back.”

BRISTOL, Tenn. — He did it for Jon.

For the second straight day at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kyle Larson dominated a NASCAR race and dedicated the victory to friend and PR representative Jon Edwards, who passed away suddenly during the week leading up to the race weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway.

On Sunday, Larson won the Food City 500 NASCAR Cup Series race in overwhelming fashion, leading 411 of 500 laps and sweeping both stages.

SHOP: Race winner gear

The victory was Larson’s second of the season, his second straight at the 0.533-mile high-banked short track and the 31st of his career, and it came one day after the driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet ran away with the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Thunder Valley.

“This one’s definitely for Jon,” said Larson, who finished second in Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race, one spot short of sweeping the weekend. “He’s just a great guy. Successful weekend here. Wish he was going to be here with us to celebrate, but I know he’s celebrating with us in spirit.

“Just a flawless race once again here at Bristol for the 5 team. Really, really good car. That was a lot of fun.”

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

Larson, who brushed the outside wall at the apex of Turns 1 and 2 with five laps left — without consequence — finished 2.250 seconds in front of Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin, who fell one spot short of a third straight Cup victory. Hamlin’s teammate, Ty Gibbs, was 6.679 seconds back in third in a race that ran without caution for the final 235 laps.

“However many laps of green we ran there was a lot of fun,” Larson said. “I was pretty comfortable with things, and then Denny came on really strong there before the pit cycle and kind of kept the pressure on from there.”

MORE: Bowman’s race ends with engine issue | See Bristol race highlights

After the final pit stops, Hamlin could close within a second of Larson in traffic but never threatened to take the lead.

“You have to give that team their due — just a dominant performance,” Hamlin said. “It looked like a pretty flawless day for them. It looked pretty easy. It was all I had to try to keep up there. I’m glad we were able to give him a little bit of a run with our Progressive Toyota.

“But this weekend, we are all thinking about Jon Edwards’ family, (racing journalist) Al Pearce, (team owner) Shige Hattori (all of whom passed away within the last eight days). We’ve lost a lot of great people in our sport over the last week, so our thoughts are with them.”

“Wish we could have got one more spot, but I just wanted to keep him honest there at the end. That was all I was trying to do, but he was a little too much to handle.”

Hamlin and Larson have finished 1-2 on seven occasions. Sunday’s race was the first of the seven times Larson has come out on top.

Contrary to strong indications from Saturday’s practice, Bristol’s concrete surface rubbered in, and tire wear was not the factor that most teams and drivers anticipated. Ryan Blaney, for instance, ran 175 laps on one set of tires before pitting on Lap 440.

Chase Briscoe came home fourth, as JGR claimed the three positions behind Larson. Blaney ran long during the final green-flag run, led 48 laps after Larson pitted on Lap 390 for tires and fuel and worked his way back to fifth at the end.

Pole winner Alex Bowman led the first 39 laps before Larson grabbed the top spot for the first time. Larson went to win the first stage over Hamlin and the second over Bowman, who later fell out of the race when his engine expired.

The Stage 2 victory was the 66th of Larson’s career, tying him with Martin Truex Jr. for the most since stage racing was introduced in 2017.

William Byron charged forward to a sixth-place finish after starting 26th. Ross Chastain ran seventh, followed by Christopher Bell and AJ Allmendinger, the last driver on the lead lap. Austin Dillon was 10th, the first driver one lap down.

NOTE: There were no issues in post-race inspection in the NASCAR Cup Series garage, confirming Larson as the winner. No cars were headed back to R&D.

Polesitter Alex Bowman found late trouble in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race, heading to the garage with engine issues at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Bowman’s No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was running in the third position in the 39-car field when he began to lose ground on the 285th of a scheduled 500 laps in the Food City 500. By Lap 290, Bowman had fallen to 10th place, telling his crew that he felt his engine was about to expire.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

Ten laps later at the 300-lap mark, he had faded to 22nd and toppled off the lead lap soon after. On Lap 347, Bowman pulled his No. 48 Chevy to pit road and eventually the Cup Series garage. He was later deemed out of the race and credited with a 37th-place finish.

Bowman entered and exited Sunday’s race – the ninth of 36 points-paying events this season – ranked 10th in the Cup Series standings after his third consecutive finish outside the top 25. His Busch Light Pole Award on Saturday was his second pole position in four weeks.

Bowman led the first 39 laps from the top spot before teammate Kyle Larson took command. He was a regular top-five runner Sunday until his mechanical issue cropped up.

Can’t wait any longer to go Inside the Race following each NASCAR Cup Series event?

Visit our NASCAR YouTube page post-race to get live, immediate breakdowns and analysis from veteran crew chief and broadcaster Steve Letarte, alongside additional co-hosts and reporters from the track.

MORE: Full Bristol preview | Speeds, pit stalls, more

Following today’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway, Jeff Burton will join Letarte to dissect the winning and losing moves, plus other top story lines.

NASCAR reporter Alex Weaver will also join the show, providing insights and observations directly from the track.

Watch today’s Cup Series race (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), then tune in for immediate analysis on NASCAR’s YouTube page.

The NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series all race at Bristol Motor Speedway this week. Bookmark this page and come back often for your race-week essentials — from links to qualifying order, average practice speeds, results and more.

MORE: Full Bristol Cup race preview | Photos from the track

NASCAR Cup Series

Race day: Sunday at 3 p.m. ET on FS1. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information is available.

Tires: Ten sets, plus one set of scuffs from qualifying; four sets of wet weather tires if needed

Track: Will be treated with PJ1

Entry list
Qualifying order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Race day: Saturday at 5 p.m. ET on The CW. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information is available.

Tires: Five sets; three sets of wet weather tires if needed

Entry list
Qualifying order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

Race day: Friday at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

Tires: Four sets; three sets of wet weather tires if needed

Entry list
Qualifying order
Practice Results: PRACTICE CANCELED DUE TO WEATHER
Lineup
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

Tires were the name of the game in NASCAR Cup Series practice for Sunday’s Food City 500 (3 p.m. ET, FS1) at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Like last year’s Food City 500, practice indicated that drivers will have to manage tires again over the 500 laps, so it would behoove us to look at drivers’ lap times later in their practice runs to see who looked solid as the tires started to get worn.

And based on NASCAR odds for Bristol, there’s a hidden surprise among the field.

Despite one driver’s massive upside, he’s being overlooked in NASCAR odds thanks to some — interesting — track history here at Bristol.

Let’s dive in.

MORE: Full Bristol preview | Starting lineup in photos | Lap averages, more

NASCAR Odds, Best Bet Pick for Bristol

*Odds as of Sunday morning

Tyler Reddick Top Toyota (+800) — ESPN BET

Tyler Reddick has struggled for results at Bristol in his Cup Series career.

Aside from a fourth-place finish in the second Bristol race in his rookie year back in 2020, Reddick has finished no better than 12th on the concrete at the fastest half-mile track in the world.

While some of that can be attributed to adjusting to the Next Gen car, we can’t forget Reddick is an Xfinity Series winner at Bristol after starting dead last and beating a field that included Kyle Busch, Joey Logano, Christopher Bell, Chase Briscoe and more.

Then, the aforementioned fourth-place finish came as Reddick was one of just six drivers to finish on the lead lap, behind only Kevin Harvick, Busch and Erik Jones.

Of course, those were a half-decade or more ago, so those of us in “what have you done for me lately” mode want to see more.

Enter, practice.

Reddick ranked fourth in my practice FLAGS metric among those drivers that went out in the second practice group, right alongside fellow Toyota driver, team owner and last year’s Food City 500 winner Denny Hamlin as top Toyota in speed among that group of cars.

In fact, if we look at Reddick’s time later in the practice run, it could be argued he had the best long-run car.

From laps 29-35 on each driver’s tires, Reddick posted the single best average speed among the second practice group, and third overall behind only Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Carson Hocevar.

With fewer marbles and less rubber, Hocevar and Stenhouse may have benefitted from the conditions by going out in the first group, so Reddick potentially had the best long-run car solely based on practice speeds.

By comparison, Hamlin averaged a 16.29 second lap over those laps compared to Reddick’s 16.05-second average lap time.

The Bet: Tyler Reddick Top Toyota (+800) — ESPN BET

Track all of Nick Giffen’s picks by downloading the FREE Action Network app.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — On the surface, media requests for NASCAR superstars Jeff Gordon and Kyle Larson may seem like the sport’s equivalent of climbing Mount Everest, both supremely sought-after voices at the top of motorsports excellence.

Instead, thanks to Jon Edwards, those requests were among the most feasible in the NASCAR industry.

Edwards served as Gordon’s longtime public relations representative since 1994, one year into Gordon’s once-blossoming, now-legendary career. But it wasn’t until 2021 that he officially began his work for Hendrick Motorsports, joining to serve as Larson’s representative before an additional 2022 promotion as the organization’s director of communications.

Edwards died Thursday at age 52. Though the public may not have known Edwards personally, it felt his impact in unimaginable ways. Edwards was responsible for making heroes like Gordon and Larson more accessible to the media to better tell their stories. What could have been the most intimidating ask of a young reporter’s career was made to feel like you were instead asking for a beverage from the refrigerator.

His loss reverberated through the garage at Bristol Motor Speedway this weekend, a reminder of how impactful Edwards’ 31 years in and around NASCAR were outside Hendrick’s teams — first with Gordon’s No. 24 and later with Larson’s No. 5.

“He meant a lot to me personally,” Larson said Friday. “Just getting to be with him since 2021 and go on a couple vacations and stuff with him, getting to know him, and just be around him a lot. He’s probably the guy that I’m around the most on the 5 team. I’m gonna miss having him around. He’s had a long career with Jeff Gordon and Hendrick Motorsports.

“Definitely a sad week for the industry. We’re gonna mourn his loss and try to win some races for him this weekend. He would want us to not be sad. He was a happy person, so we’re gonna hold our heads high and represent him well this weekend.”

That Larson did on Saturday, where he gave Edwards another ride to Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series race. A decal rode on the C-post of Larson’s car as well as those of JR Motorsports Saturday, featuring his photo, name and one phrase: “One of a kind.” There to both celebrate and help coordinate hat dances in Victory Lane were Ashly Ennis and Autumn Darracq.

RELATED: Larson tributes Xfinity win to Edwards

Kyle Larson celebrates a win standing next to a decal of Jon Edwards, his former public relations representative.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Ennis is in her eighth season at Hendrick Motorsports, serving now as its communications manager and public relations representative for William Byron and the No. 24 team. She worked hand-in-hand with Edwards, who mentored her and many other communications professionals through the Hendrick campus.

“This is what Jon would have wanted,” Ennis told NASCAR.com. “Jon was someone who never wanted the spotlight or the attention, so we’ve been joking that, honestly, he probably wouldn’t have liked all of the attention he’s been getting. This (win) is what he would have wanted. He would have wanted us to come out here and just do our job and do it to the best of our ability because that’s what he taught us to do.”

Darracq was among those whom Edwards mentored as she joined the NASCAR powerhouse that is Hendrick Motorsports. After spending the 2022 season with Live Fast Motorsports, Darracq had an opportunity to interview for a job at Hendrick. What she didn’t know was that with one year of experience in the role, she was interviewing to take Edwards’ position on the road as Edwards stepped back for the 2023 campaign.

“Once I found out it was for the 5 and to fill Jon’s shoes, I was like, there’s no shot. Like there’s no way,” said Darracq, now a marketing account executive for the team. “But long story short, he believed in me. And I think that that was a common theme in the way that Jon treated people. It didn’t really matter where you came from. He saw work ethic and he was an encourager. He was someone who took so much pride in his work that it was contagious. It made you want to resemble the same. He was a leader and a role model. Jon was truly one of a kind.”

Amy Walsh Stock now serves as the Vice President of Communications for Legacy Motor Club, a role that follows a long career as a longtime PR professional for seven-time Cup champ Jimmie Johnson, Gordon’s Hendrick teammate of 14 years and now team owner of Legacy. But 25 years ago, Walsh Stock was just breaking into the sport in the Craftsman Truck Series. She met Edwards in 2000 and immediately took note of how Edwards conducted himself.

“As a young PR person in my 20s coming in, I just wanted to be like Jon,” Walsh Stock said Saturday. “He was just a consummate professional. He was always super kind. He was always there. I don’t think in 25 years that I made a single career move without talking to him first.”

Edwards, who attended the University of North Carolina, became the gold standard in his profession. Whether the goal was to promote his driver’s brand on “Saturday Night Live” or coordinate an interview with an up-and-coming blogger, Edwards handled each request with the same kindness, attention and respect any media representative could ask for. And even if Edwards had to deliver a no, there were never any hard feelings left behind.

Jon Edwards takes photo with Jeff Gordon.
Jonathan Ferrey | Getty Images

“Jon could basically tell you no and have you buy him a beer later because he was so happy,” said Joe Crowley, who handles public relations for Ty Gibbs and the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing team. “He had like a magic touch of just working (through problems). Like Amy said, it was always about finding a solution. Like, ‘we can’t do this, but I can get you the crew chief; I can get you this.’ There’s always a solution.”

Dustin Long, a longtime motorsports reporter for NBC Sports, worked closely with Edwards to coordinate countless stories dating back to 1999. In a world that evolved from written print to social videos and the different forms of media through 30 years of technology, Edwards evolved with it and helped connect drivers to the media, who then helped connect back with the fans.

“If you had a question, you can go to him and get an answer,” Long told NASCAR.com. “If you had a request, he would do his best to make it happen. And a lot of times, he would make it happen, even when maybe Jeff didn’t have a whole lot of time — but he could squeeze you in. And from a reporter’s perspective, that’s important, because at the end of the day, we are the conduit to the fan. And sometimes, it is important to hear that driver’s voice. And sometimes you get a few minutes, and sometimes it’s a snippet of time. But all of that can matter to the fans, explaining in greater detail what happened, why it happened, how it happened.

“And without the help of Jon, sometimes you wouldn’t be able to tell that story. So Jon helped myself and others tell a more complete story and better inform the fans.”

It was no wonder he won multiple rewards for his efforts, among them the NASCAR Public Relations Representative of the Year Award, the National Motorsports Press Association Ken Patterson Helping Others Award and the Jim Chapman Award for career-long excellence in motorsports public relations.

The same decal that ran on Larson’s winning car Saturday was featured across Hendrick Motorsports’ four-car stable Sunday.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — As Kyle Larson thumped the Xfinity Series field in Saturday’s SciAps 300 at Bristol Motor Speedway, Justin Allgaier chased just behind the No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet driver to bank a third-place result and his second $100,000 Dash 4 Cash prize during the 2025 program.

Leading a whopping 277 laps of the 300-circuit affair, Larson had little competition on long green-flag runs despite Allgaier’s best attempts to challenge for the lead a few laps into restarts.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

“I’m disappointed in the day, I’m disappointed in the finish but at the same time, it’s still a great day,” Allgaier said shortly after exiting his No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet. “To come out of here third and be upset about it, that’s a good thing, right?”

Making contact with lapped cars and his own teammates around the hotly-contested bullring, elbows were out all race long for Allgaier as he navigated through traffic despite racing just Austin Hill for the penultimate Dash 4 Cash award after Stage 1.

Half of the four-driver group going for the six-figure prize had their days end in dramatic fashion as Sheldon Creed and Brennan Poole had a major impact coming off Turn 4 that brought out the red flag in the closing laps of Stage 1.

Contact with Dean Thompson sent the No. 00 Haas Factory Team Ford around and skidding to a stop before hitting the outside barrier, but with little time to react as Creed’s car began the descent down the steep banking, Poole’s No. 44 Alpha Prime Racing Chevrolet collided heavy into the left-front of the No. 00, scattering debris and door foam across the concrete frontstretch.

Both Creed and Poole were checked and released from the infield care center shortly after.

RELATED: Creed, Poole collide late in Stage 1

“It happens so quickly here,” Creed said of the hit from Poole. “That first car missed me so I thought if the first one missed me, maybe they’ll all miss me, and obviously Brennan just didn’t see me. It happens every year here, right? Things happen so quickly and you’re going so fast, and not a lot of time to avoid a car sitting in the middle of the track. I haven’t had that air knocked out of me in a long time.”

“It did knock the breath out of me,” Poole said. “I was talking to Sheldon when we got in the trailer. He said it knocked the breath out of him, too. I was back to the gas coming off the corner. I couldn’t see the 00. My spotter said ‘check up.’ I started checking up immediately as soon as I saw him in frame before I could see out of my windshield, he was in the middle of track. I just didn’t expect him to even be there.”

With Hill falling a lap down during the race, the $100,000 bonus was all Allgaier’s as he battled his young teammates Carson Kvapil and Sammy Smith in the top five.

MORE: Dash 4 Cash hub page | History of Dash 4 Cash winners

Kvapil ended up squeaking by Allgaier for second in the final five laps, giving the Xfinity rookie another runner-up on a high-banked, concrete oval.

“He’s done a great job and we talked a lot before the race,” Allgaier said of Kvapil. “Him and [crew chief] Andrew [Overstreet], they’re working really well together and that whole 1 team, and really just proud of the effort as our whole shop. We’ve put a lot of effort into being good at this place and it shows. They’re [Kvapil and Smith] both great race car drivers. They’re young and they’re going to be threats when we come back here in the fall, and they’re going to be threats for the rest of the year going down to the end of the year for a championship. I’m proud of the effort that they’re putting in.”

No third victory sticker to go on the No. 7 but Allgaier remains appreciative for the opportunity to run for another bonus.

“Getting the Dash 4 Cash and what Xfinity does for this series is really a big deal,” Allgaier said. “To be able to get the Dash 4 Cash was important. We’ll go back to the drawing board — figure out what we can do better when we come back here in the fall and hopefully win ourselves one.”