DOVER, Del. — It has been an up-and-down stretch for William Byron and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team through the opening portion of the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series campaign.
Entering Sunday’s All-Star Race action at Dover Motor Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), William Byron sits 12th in the Cup Series standings; the 28-year-old driver dropped two markers to outside the top 10 following his 36th-place result at Watkins Glen International last weekend, his third finish of 30th or worse in the last five races.
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“I just looked when I was in the bus, I mean, it’s like we finished top 10, we finished 30th, we finished top 10, 30th,” Byron said on his recent rocky stretch. “It’s kind of been that for five weeks now, so yeah. Some of it was just bad luck. I mean, last week we just got crashed out and kind of that restart in the way that that went, just got cleaned out there. Talladega, there’s not much we could do with the big ones, so yeah.
“The saying kind of goes: If you’re in the middle of the back or you’re back there, you’re bound to get in stuff. So that was unfortunate last week because I thought we were on the back side of the top 10 and had a shot to finish there, and I feel like we would’ve, but yeah, got cleaned out there, and yeah, it’s just been not gathering a lot of stage points, either, and so that’s kind of where we’re at.”
Byron’s No. 24 Chevrolet has shown glimpses of the high-upside speed that has netted the star at least one Cup victory every season since 2020. Aside from a 28th-place DNF at EchoPark Speedway in February, Byron began the year with six finishes of 13th or better in the first seven races, including a season-best fifth-place result at Martinsville Speedway in March.
Since Martinsville, however, turbulence has increased, with no laps led since and a dip from fifth in the Cup standings to 12th. Byron’s 57 stage points rank 12th among all drivers, and his 34 laps led rank 16th. Through the first 12 races of 2026, Byron possesses two top fives and six top 10s with a 16.0 average finish.
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Though there are no points on the line during All-Star competition at the “Monster Mile,” Byron believes a strong exhibition showing from practice to the race itself can be just the momentum needed to get the No. 24 camp back on track. Byron, already locked into the main event, will start fifth in the opening segment. Byron’s best All-Star Race finish came at North Wilkesboro Speedway last season (sixth).
“I think the speed is encouraging this weekend,” Byron said. “I think the speed was good at Texas, and we’re working super hard, so just got to put it all together and have smoother races, calmer races where you’re just up toward the front and have a chance to gather a bunch of points, so yeah, it’s just tough when you’re kind of in the middle and things can happen.”




