The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series is back in action this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the Ecosave 200 (9 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

LAS VEGAS ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series

Here is a look at the drivers slated to run at Las Vegas:

The NASCAR Xfinity Series travels to Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where the field looks to leave its mark in the LiUNA! on Saturday (4:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

LAS VEGAS ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Craftsman Truck Series 

Here’s a look at the full entry list for Saturday’s event:

NASCAR heads to the Nevada desert for the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube on Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

LAS VEGAS ENTRY LISTS: Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

See the full entry list for this weekend’s 267-lap event in Sin City:

It seems virtually absurd now — as he sits on the verge of equaling two seven-time Cup champions — but Christopher Bell’s ambition once nearly got the better of him.

It seems just as odd that someone blessed with one of the most cherubic faces in motorsports would be so antsy about his NASCAR career.

The rosy-cheeked Bell looks like he’s 30 going on 13. His prodigious talent has cemented him on can’t-miss prospect lists for years.

MORE: Phoenix results | Cup schedule

But midway through the 2019 season, Bell was a rising star with a 2017 Truck championship, a 2018 Xfinity title race appearance and an unshakable belief that he belonged in the Cup Series yesterday.

“I think the best way for me to win at the Cup level is to get there and start trying at it,” he told reporters during a national call on July 31, 2019. “Everyone is saying that they’re moving guys up too quick, and the difference is that I’m 23 years old. I’m not 18, 19 or even 20 years old.

“I’ve got a lot of racing experience, and right now I feel like I’m in my prime as a race car driver. If the opportunity comes to go Cup racing next year, I definitely don’t want to waste another year in my prime, so to speak, of not learning and not getting that experience of Cup racing.”

On its face, that bold statement could be taken as extremely confident but also a tad audacious and maybe a little selfish. The words landed hard in the upper levels of management at Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota Racing Development, which subsequently counseled Bell to temper his opinions (especially when they could be viewed as unwittingly denigrating the ladder series).

Bell typically eschews headline-making bluster in favor of letting his results do the talking. He quickly clarified the remarks and holstered speculation about his future.

But during a post-race news conference Sunday after making history as the first with three consecutive victories in the Next Gen car, he candidly provided overdue context about why he was so anxious to reach the Cup Series five years ago.

“Whenever I got into full-time Trucks (in 2015), I was 21 years old,” Bell said in the Phoenix Raceway media center. “At that time Erik Jones was in the Cup Series, younger than me. Chase Elliott was in the Cup Series, younger than me. I was like, ‘Man, I have to get to the Cup Series tomorrow, otherwise I’m not going to make it.’ ”

His sense of urgency has been vindicated. Bell was promoted from Xfinity for the 2020 season and then replaced Jones in JGR’s No. 20 Toyota for 2021.

Christopher Bell performs a burnout at Phoenix Raceway.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Since then in the Cup Series, Bell has 12 victories, two championship round berths and a very real chance he could become the first to win four in a row since Jimmie Johnson in 2007.

None of which would have seemed possible when he signed with Toyota in 2014 to run 15 Late Model races in hopes of making the difficult transition from dirt to asphalt.

“It’s unbelievable to look back,” Bell said Sunday after becoming only the second driver in JGR’s storied history to win three consecutive races. “It seemed like it was so far away to be here today in this moment. Looking back at it, it felt like it happened overnight.”

That perspective also was warped by the excellence of his current Cup peers. Many are younger than Bell, and that age gap heightened the tension.

By the end of Bell’s rookie season in Cup, Chase Elliott was the 2020 champion, William Byron was a race winner, and a formerly unheralded driver from Norman, Oklahoma, who entered NASCAR with no stock-car pedigree understandably was freaked out about meeting expectations.

MORE: Christopher Bell through the years

He had been fretting since joining the driver development program at TRD, which literally invested tens of millions of dollars in his progression after executives David Wilson, Tyler Gibbs and Jack Irving saw that Bell was for real.

But there were irritating signs of self-doubt for their emerging phenom.

As Truck teammates at Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2016, Bell managed only one win to Byron’s seven with future Cup crew chief Rudy Fugle. With Byron moving to the Xfinity Series in 2017, Bell pleaded with team owner Kyle Busch to match him with Fugle the next year. The pairing happened and he won a Truck title.

“(Byron) kicked my butt (in 2016),” Bell said. “He just outperformed me. I remember having a conversation with Kyle Busch in the fall of 2016 after Homestead. I said, ‘Kyle, I have to be paired with that team.’ I needed to prove to myself or learn if I can do this or not. If I can’t do this, I’m going to try and be a sprint car driver.

“Kyle, I think, had reservations of pairing me with Rudy Fugle for 2017. Thank God he did.”

Christopher Bell celebrates his 2017 NASCAR Truck Series championship.
Chris Trotman | Getty Images

Bell has done the rest, though. With each passing week, that 2019 proclamation of being an inevitable force in Cup seems much more prophetic than presumptuous.

This is the heady list of Cup drivers with four consecutive victories: Cale Yarborough, Darrell Waltrip, Dale Earnhardt, Harry Gant, Bill Elliott, Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon and Johnson.

Bell will be a heavy favorite to join them at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where he dominated last year and has two pole positions and two runner-up finishes. And if he does win, it again would prove why he was right about reaching the big leagues as soon as humanly possible.

As it turned out, it was only a matter of time until the Christopher Bell Era began in the NASCAR Cup Series.

Why would he squander a second of such potential greatness?

Teddy Hodgdon Racing announced today their schedule for the 2025 season in the No. 55 Modified – one that will bring the team up and down the East Coast.

For the first time in his career, driver Teddy Hodgdon will make five NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts. His debut will take place during the Icebreaker 150 on March 30 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.

Hodgdon will compete in all three NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour events at Thompson as part of the FloRacing Connecticut Challenge – a three-race series that offers $25,000 in total cash.

Team owners who compete in all three Thompon events that have not competed on the Tour in the last three years, or ever, are eligible for the bonus cash. Hodgdon will also run NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour events at both North Wilkesboro Speedway (May 18) and Martinsville Speedway (October 23).

After scoring his first two Modified career wins last year, Hodgdon is ready for a major step up in 2025, with a challenging schedule on tap.

“I’m excited to say the least,” Hodgdon said. “The opportunity to race on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour is something all Modified racers look forward to doing in their career when coming up through the ranks at local short tracks.

“I can’t say I’ve ever been more excited for a race season.”

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Early on in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Phoenix Raceway, Ryan Preece rocketed through the field with superhero-style strength. With his No. 60 RFK Racing Ford equipped with softer, high-grip “option” Goodyear tires, he charged from 33rd place to 10th in just 11 laps, reaching third and harvesting extra points at the end of the brief 60-lap first stage.

That’s when Preece, in his first season with RFK, almost had a pivotal early moment in the chemistry-building process with his new crew chief.

“Good driving, driver,” veteran Derrick Finley called out over the No. 60 radio.

“I know we passed cars,” Preece replied. “I don’t want a kiss, though.”

“Good,” Finley shot back. “I didn’t want to.”

The jokingly offered incentive was a callback to the previous week’s race at Circuit of The Americas, where Finley tried to coax his driver to make up ground on the front-runners. That was a one-week offer, Finley said with a laugh later, but a bigger reward than a smooch was on the No. 60 team’s mind.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Phoenix

Preece and Co. were the first to alter the script to Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500, making the first lunge for the option tire with the red-lettered sidewalls. The effect was a sudden jolt into the scoreboard’s upper reaches, and though the strategy later came undone, both the 15th-place finish and the 34 laps led were season bests.

“So a 15th, that wasn’t phenomenal, but certainly with the situation that was playing out with being off sequence, you know what, after the past three weeks, it’s been a real kick in the nuts,” said Preece, who opened the season with finishes of 32nd, 18th and 33rd. “So it felt good to actually have a good points day.”

Sunday’s 312-miler was the Cup Series’ third-ever race and first this year that provided teams with two Goodyear tire choices — a baseline “prime” tire with traditional yellow lettering on the sidewalls, and two sets of the soft-compound reds or “option” tires that produced far better grip and speed at the expense of higher wear at the end of a green-flag run.

Ten caution periods — the most at Phoenix in five years — threw a variable into how some strategies might develop. The No. 60 team pounced on the first one after a Lap 10 stack-up, fastening up reds and collecting stage points in the process.

A late-race tire gambit also nearly found pay dirt. Finley didn’t go for option tires when the rest of the top 15 did for the start of the final stage. A caution flag with 97 laps to go opened the door for another alternate route, and Preece zoomed from 13th place to the lead in 12 laps on the team’s last set of reds. That’s where the No. 60 group stood with a nearly three-second advantage when another yellow flag for debris on Lap 268 foiled their hopes for a green-flag run to the end.

“It was kind of a cat-and-mouse game,” Finley told NASCAR.com. “Depending on how the cautions fell was going to basically determine your race. We saw that, for us, we were going to go for something big and we did. So we kind of got on the opposite side of what people were doing, so I thought that was an easy thing to do, but it’s not because you’re trying to predict what the other guys are doing. I was trying to do the opposite of that. Had it played out differently, who knows? But as it was, we’ll take the stage points and the 15th and know that we were going for something big.”

A similar tack was employed by the No. 22 Team Penske Ford team and defending Cup Series champion Joey Logano, helping them try to preserve a solid finish after an early-race penalty for a restart violation. Logano began Stage 2 in 24th place after the punishment, but with option tires bolted on, the No. 22 team radio brimmed with optimism: “No reason why we can’t win this stage right here.”

Logano led big chunks of Stage 2, bypassing eventual winner Christopher Bell to complete his rally. Bell eventually slipped back by Logano for the stage victory, regaining the top spot once the No. 22 Ford’s tires gave out. Like Preece’s team, No. 22 crew chief Paul Wolfe had hoped for a long green-flag run to round out the day, but the remaining flurry of cautions left Logano to fight for a 13th-place result. Even then, Wolfe appreciated the challenge that the tire-choice format presented.

“The tire worked well. I mean, it did exactly what I think NASCAR was going for, so kudos to NASCAR and Goodyear for that,” Wolfe told NASCAR.com. “You know, we just obviously got behind the 8-ball when we had the penalty, and they gave us the option to get back up there. But then it was a question, when do you use that second set? You know, not understanding how the cautions would fall at the end of the race, we probably could have done something a little different at the end to maybe get a little better finish, but overall, I thought the tire part of it worked out well.”

Preece also shared in the commendations, not just from a competition standpoint but also in how it transformed a race where he started a deep 28th in the 37-car field.

“These races have just become so tough to get off sequence, and it creates options,” Preece said. “And if you look at it, the way this race played out, we used a set early. We were taking our lumps. Luckily had a caution. Then we used them off sequence, wished the caution didn’t come out. And then those last two, three runs, there were cautions and you were wondering, ‘when’s that red going to give up?’ And to be honest with you, it gave up on some of them. So that was a lot of fun, and I applaud Goodyear and everybody in NASCAR for doing this, because it’s taking a risk.”

MORE: Race Rewind | All-time wins at Phoenix

Risk-taking also suited Finley, who helped Preece to a six-spot jump in the early Cup Series standings.

“From a crew chief perspective, especially an old one like me whose nerves are about shot, it’s kind of crazy,” Finley said. “But I do like the fact that it mixes up. All the teams have gotten to the point where they play their statistical game, where everyone has their races mapped out, and everything’s pretty ho-hum, and what it does do is it adds that sense of, ‘hey, there’s something new you can do. There’s something different you can try.’ So from that aspect, I enjoy it. It brings back more of the old school that way.”

Goodyear officials indicated there are no immediate plans for another tire-choice race on the schedule, but haven’t ruled out the possibility. A tire test scheduled Monday at the 1-mile Arizona oval is framed around the objective of developing a single tire that keeps tire management and wear in the equation for Phoenix and similar tracks.

Should option tires make another appearance, the risk vs. reward factor will be along for the ride — just so long as the reward doesn’t involve puckering up.

“I’d rather just … you could just thank me,” Preece said. “So yeah, it’s fun.”

Ryan Preece's No. 60 Ford leads the pack into Phoenix Raceway's dogleg
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Merritt Speedway has been a staple of dirt-track racing in the state of Michigan for nearly 40 years.

Founded by Gene and Maryann Kregear and opened for the first time in 1968, the track has played host to some of the greatest dirt racers in the country through the years.

A decade ago, the track was acquired by Mike Blackmer, a veteran track owner and promoter who had previously operated another Michigan short track, Berlin Raceway.

“When I was a kid, I used to attend (races) at Merritt Speedway,” Blackmer recalled. “In 1985, I moved to Grand Rapids. I met a friend there, and he introduced me to Berlin Raceway. That would have been about 1987.

“In 2008, I ended up purchasing Berlin Raceway. I promoted Berlin Raceway from 2008-12. I sold it and then moved back to Northern Michigan and ended buying Merritt Speedway in 2015.

“I never thought I would be a dirt track owner, ever.”

In the years since, Blackmer has worked hard to make Merritt a premier dirt racing facility in the state of Michigan, but he felt like something was missing. That’s why this year the track will be part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.

“I have been thinking about changing to NASCAR’s sanction for maybe five years now,” Blackmer said. “The time wasn’t right. It was right around COVID time and all that. It just wasn’t right.

“Becoming NASCAR sanctioned, I think it’s great for everyone. It’s going to be good for my racers, it’s going to be good for the fans, and it’ll be good for the track to have something different. I’m really excited to be part of it.”

Merritt Speedway
Late Models will be Merritt Speedway’s NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I class during the 2025 racing season. (Photo: Courtesy of Merritt Speedway)

Blackmer is the first to admit Merritt Speedway has struggled in recent years, but he’s not giving up on the three-eighths-mile clay oval.

He considers the addition of the NASCAR as the track’s sanctioning body a reset of sorts for the track, which will open its gates for the 2025 season on May 17.

“The last couple years have been rough as a promoter. It’s probably been two of my hardest years in racing,” said Blackmer, who recently sold another track he operated to focus all of his attention on Merritt. “I sold my other race track this past winter, and now I’m going to concentrate on one race track. If there was a time to make changes, this year was it.

“For a dirt race track, it’s probably one of the nicest dirt tracks you’ll attend. It’s clean, it has some of the best racing. It’s always had good racing. I call it the premier dirt track in Michigan. It’s just a great place to come watch dirt track racing.”

Located off East Houghton Lake Road in Lake City, Michigan, Merritt Speedway sits on the edge of a wooded area that is deeply engrained in the history of the facility.

Original Merritt owners Gene and Maryann Kregear also owned a logging truck company, which they eventually sold to their son-in-law Ed VanDuinen and daughter Carmen.

Ed and Carmen VanDuinen eventually took ownership of Merritt. It was during their time as owners of Merritt that the track’s most historic race, the Wood Tic, was born.

Even after Ed and Carmen VanDuinen sold the track, the Wood Tic has remained a staple of the annual schedule at Merritt. This year, the 37th running of the Wood Tic will be held on Aug. 1-2.

“Around our area is forest products, where they go and cut the trees down and bring it to (mills),” Blackmer explained. “The guy that owned Merritt at the time also owned a forest company too, so they named the race the Wood Tic. We call it the Ed VanDuinen Wood Tic.”

Another major event on the Merritt Speedway schedule this takes place July 3-5. The event, a special 4th of July Weekend race, will include fireworks on July 4 and a $5 ticket night on July 5.

“We probably put on one of the best fireworks shows in Northern Michigan,” Blackmer said.

Late Models will serve as Merritt Speedway’s NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I class. The track will also feature Modifieds, Factory Stocks, Pro Stocks and 4-Cylinders on a weekly basis. Click here to see the full Merritt Speedway schedule for 2025.

Blackmer is looking forward to a new season of racing at Merritt Speedway and is hopeful a fresh start under the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series banner will bring fresh faces to the historic dirt track.

“I’ve been very honest with NASCAR and everybody,” Blackmer said. “I’ve been a promoter since 2008, and the last couple of years have been rough. We’ve got our work cut out for us to be the premier dirt track in Michigan. This is the start by having the NASCAR sanction.

“I’m looking forward to the future. I think the future is going to be very good for Merritt Speedway.”

AVONDALE, Ariz. — One day after the NASCAR Cup Series held its third event with two Goodyear tire choices, dialing in the right race-ready rubber will again be in focus in a tire test scheduled Monday at Phoenix Raceway. This time, the objective is to evaluate a one-tire solution that’s suitable for the Championship Weekend’s host track and elsewhere.

Three drivers and teams (one from each Cup Series manufacturer) are set to participate in the Goodyear test: Austin Dillon in the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, Josh Berry and the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing team and the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota for Tyler Reddick. By putting the different compounds to the test, Goodyear and NASCAR competition officials aim to continue the progression toward a softer tire with better grip but with advanced wear, which would impact pit-stop strategies for teams and on-track tire management for drivers.

RELATED: At-track photos: Phoenix | Cup Series schedule

The test comes one day after Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500, where a “prime” tire served as the baseline rubber with two sets of softer “option” tires available for teams to form their race-day strategies at the 1-mile Phoenix track. Recent tests informed this weekend’s tire setups, and Monday’s test here will help determine what sorts of decisions Goodyear could reach for tracks with similar setups — 1.058-mile New Hampshire Motor Speedway and 0.75-mile Richmond Raceway, for example — and when the Cup Series returns to Phoenix for the title-deciding finale on Nov. 2.

“The goal is to develop a single tire that will give us what we need and what the drivers are asking for as far as tire wear and fall-off,” said Mark Keto, Goodyear’s senior technical project manager. “This is really a project that started probably 18 months ago. We tested at Sonoma, Watkins Glen last year, and we tested Martinsville and kind of had a breakthrough at the Watkins Glen and Martinsville tests, and that’s what you saw that raced at Watkins Glen and Martinsville, then at Bowman Gray. So it’s just building on what we’re learning with some different style compounds to generate that wear.”

Keto said that as part of the collaborative effort among Goodyear officials working with NASCAR’s competition group, drivers and teams, the input that’s been gathered in that approximate 18-month span has been positive. It’s come with a note of encouragement from drivers, who have welcomed the direction that Goodyear has taken, ever since last year’s springtime race at Bristol Motor Speedway placed an unexpected premium on tire management.

“We’ve gotten a lot of positive feedback,” Keto says. “The drivers asked us last year, they were very clear: ‘We want you to take more risks,’ and we understand the nature of taking more risks that sometimes you might step over the line, but the drivers have collectively told us, we’ve got your back. We want you to be more aggressive, and we feel like we’re getting better at finding that edge and pushing right up to that edge with some of the new technology we’re using on the compound side.”

Reddick said his anticipation of Monday’s test was high, hedging in Saturday remarks that his primary focus remained on his race-weekend goals with his No. 45 team. The previous weekend at the Circuit of The Americas, Reddick started from the pole position and registered a third-place finish, saying that tire strategy factored into the outcome.

“I think the more that we’ve gone the direction of making the tire softer, laying more rubber, I think it has helped the racing for this car,” Reddick said before Saturday’s practice and qualifying sessions at Phoenix. “COTA has had some good races over the years, certainly, but I feel like we were primed to have that good finish we did because the tires were important to have. They did matter, so hopefully, it allows us to more frequently pit for tires and allows more rubber to go down on the track. The more rubber gets on the track, the more that we’re going to have to search around for grip. So I’m excited about it.”

MORE: Phoenix Raceway through the years

Sunday’s race marked only the third time that the Cup Series has competed with a choice in tire compounds. Option tires were also available for last year’s non-points All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in May and made their points-paying debut in August at Richmond.

No other races are currently scheduled for the prime-and-option format, and Keto says that while the introduction of tire choices has been a worthwhile endeavor, having those competition rules become an every-week routine isn’t the ultimate objective.

“I think in our discussions with NASCAR and with the drivers, I think the majority prefer to have one tire, but they also understand what the use of an option tire allows us, right?” Keto said. “It’s the best test bed you can possibly get because you’re putting a tire in the competition, but you also have the primary tire there that if you do overstep it or you do run into blistering or the wear’s a little too high, you have the primary tire to fall back on. So we’re using it kind of as a learning experience, but obviously we can revisit it down the road, that if we find something that we think, hey, maybe we should run an option here, maybe at the All-Star Race or what have you. I think it’s always on the table, but that’s not a goal, to make it a regular occurrence.”

The fourth NASCAR Cup Series race of the season resulted in a stellar finish as Christopher Bell held off fierce charges from Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson to score his third consecutive win of 2025.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos 

Some drivers had great runs in the desert and left Arizona on an upswing. Others took a turn for the worse and are ready to hit track at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Josh Berry, No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford

Started: 4th

Finished: 4th

What happened: The start-and-finish box score won’t show it, but Berry fought hard for his first top-five finish of 2025. Berry and the No. 21 Wood Brothers team rebounded from a slow pit stop early at Phoenix to score their best finish of the season by a long shot. After the first three races of the year (and despite leading 56 laps at Atlanta), Berry hadn’t finished better than 25th. On Sunday, he netted the historic Wood Brothers team its first Phoenix top five ever — an impressive feat in the organization’s 75th year.

What’s next: A sophomore driver, Berry is still new to the Cup Series with limited experience at Las Vegas, finishing 20th or worse in his three starts. He does own two Xfinity Series wins there, however, and has a new team around him heading back to the 1.5-mile track in Nevada next week.

Josh Berry races at Phoenix.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

2. Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford

Started: 13th

Finished: 5th

What happened: Buescher pieced together yet another quiet, steady yet impressive run toward the front of the field Sunday for his first top five of the year and third top 10 in four races. Sure, he may have schmeared some cream cheese from his paint scheme onto Ryan Blaney’s car while battling hard for a top-10 position, but it was an otherwise productive and uneventful day for the No. 17 team.

What’s next: In 16 tries, Buescher has not quite found what he’s looking for at Las Vegas, where he owns just two top 10s. The good news: One of those top 10s came in his last visit to Vegas in October, where he finished 10th.

Chris Buescher races at Phoenix.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

3. Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 32nd

Finished: 7th

What happened: Alex Bowman’s solid start to 2025 continued at Phoenix despite a dismal qualifying effort on Saturday. The Hendrick Motorsports driver now has three top 10s in four races to open the campaign after a hard-fought charge through the field at his home track.

What’s next: Bowman has had excellent results at Las Vegas since the Next Gen car debuted in 2022, winning the car’s inaugural race at Las Vegas in March 2022 with two other top fives in his last four starts.

Alex Bowman races at Phoenix.
Charlie Ramirez | For NASCAR Digital Media

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Spire Motorsports

Started: Carson Hocevar 3rd; Michael McDowell 7th; Justin Haley 8th

Finished: Michael McDowell 27th; Justin Haley 34th; Carson Hocevar 36th

What happened: A team-best qualifying effort Saturday went awry Sunday as the trio fell victim to some treacherous circumstances. At Lap 92, Michael McDowell suffered his first issue with a flat right-rear tire sending his No. 71 Chevrolet sliding into the wall in Turns 3 and 4 before driving back to the garage for repairs. On the ensuing restart, both of his teammates were eliminated in an 11-car pileup exiting Turn 2 when Chase Briscoe made contact with Justin Haley, rocketing them both into Carson Hocevar. Both Haley and Hocevar took on race-ending damage that wiped away a promising weekend.

What’s next: Historically, Spire Motorsports hasn’t found much success in the Nevada desert, holding a best finish of 15th scored twice — once by former driver Corey LaJoie and once by Hocevar. Hocevar qualified sixth there in October, however, and has two new teammates that could boost their odds in Sin City.

A compilation of photos of Spire Motorsports cars at Phoenix.
NASCAR Digital Media / Getty Images

2. Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford

Started: 12th

Finished: 28th

What happened: Blaney — who seemed to have a permanent residency inside Phoenix’s top-five results sheet — was relegated to the garage prematurely on Sunday after a blown engine derailed his seven-race streak of top fives at the 1-mile oval. Despite his mechanical troubles, Blaney was inside the top 10 most of the day, evidenced by a 9.52 average running position, per NASCAR Loop Data. The power plant beneath his hood, unfortunately, had different thoughts.

What’s next: Las Vegas has been a place of feast or famine for Blaney and the No. 12 team. In 17 career starts there, he has six top fives and 10 top 10s, including a third-place showing last spring. However, he has three finishes of 28th or worse in his last six Vegas starts, including a 32nd-place finish there in October.

Ryan Blaney races at Phoenix.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

3. Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota

Started: 9th

Finished: 20th

What happened: Tyler Reddick was a mainstay in the top five all day, as his third-best 5.96 average running position indicates. Gremlins in his steering compartment undid those efforts late in the going, though, as an apparent leak in the power steering system hindered the No. 45 driver in the late stages of Sunday’s race. To add insult to injury, Reddick was caught speeding on pit road at Lap 270, sending him to the rear. Through four races in 2025, Reddick has finishes of second (Daytona) and third (COTA) … to pair with finishes of 19th (Atlanta) and 20th (Phoenix).

What’s next: Reddick has been quite strong at Las Vegas throughout his career, finishing inside the top 10 in five of his last seven starts there. He did, however, land on his lid during last year’s playoff race. So next week is bound to be better than that, right?

Tyler Reddick races at Phoenix.
Charlie Ramirez | For NASCAR Digital Media