NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Talladega Superspeedway. 

With 36 races and 36 full-time Charter cars, our players select one car per race, but there’s a simple twist: once they’ve made the pick, they can’t choose that car again for the rest of the 36-race season. Yes, that means every car will be selected exactly once … a survivor pool, by another name. 

Follow along weekly as our panel of pickers — Dustin Albino from Jayski, along with Steve Luvender and Cameron Richardson from NASCAR.com — embarks on a season-long journey to think like strategists and prove their picking prowess. 

We’ll also feature a fourth “community” 36 for 36 pick each week, as decided by fan vote on the r/NASCAR subreddit. Can the collective vote topple our trio of full-timers?

Current Standings:

  1. Steve Luvender: 757
  2. Dustin Albino: -45
  3. r/NASCAR Community: -79
  4. Cameron Richardson: -144

Race 31 of 36: Talladega

Last week’s race at Kansas tightened up the battle at the top of the season-long standings. Cameron Richardson’s string of dreadful luck continued, earning just 12 points from defending race winner Tyler Reddick. Steve Luvender’s pick of new dad Bubba Wallace earned 20 points from a 17th-place finish, opening the door for second-ranked Dustin Albino to lop off 16 points following Denny Hamlin’s eighth-place day. The r/NASCAR community scored a respectable 30 points from selecting Chase Elliott, who finished ninth.

Talladega is bound to excite and shake up not only the playoffs but 36 for 36. It’s the final draft-heavy superspeedway of the year, making for perhaps the last chance for an underdog to put up a solid day, while playoff drivers will likely focus on exiting the 2.66-mile track with their cars in one piece.

Jayski’s Dustin Albino: No. 31, Daniel HemricGraphic of Dustin Albino's survivor pool picks.

Dustin’s pick last week: No. 11, Denny Hamlin (36 points)

Total season points: 716 (second place)

Dustin: At this point, I’m starting to feel like I’ve cursed drivers and teams this season with my picks. While I chipped 16 points off of Steve’s lead at Kansas, the No. 11 team had its roughest day of the year on pit road. This week, I’m leaning towards Hemric, who needs a signature moment after Kaulig Racing announced last weekend that it would replace him with Ty Dillon in 2025. The number to watch here is nine. All four of Hemric’s top 10 finishes in 2024 have been ninth-place results, including Talladega in the spring. I’ll take a ninth this weekend and get out of dodge.

NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 15, Cody Ware Graphic of Steve Luvender's survivor pool picks.

Steve’s pick last week: No. 23, Bubba Wallace (20 points)

Total season points: 757 (first place)

Steve: Cody Ware has a knack for getting to the end of chaotic superspeedway races with a car intact, and that’s what I need this weekend to protect my slimming points lead. Ware drove the No. 15 to a fourth-place finish at Daytona in August, where I considered picking him but ended up looking elsewhere.

NASCAR.com’s Cameron Richardson: No. 15, Cody Ware
Graphic of Cameron Richardson's survivor pool picks.

Cameron’s pick last week: No. 45, Tyler Reddick (12 points)

Total season points: 613 (fourth place)

Cameron: I just don’t know anymore. I have to be cursed at this rate with the results of my picks throughout the season. With this being the last drafting track of the season, I have to go with the No. 15 here. These races are always a toss-up for smaller teams but Ware survived an attrition-filled summer race at Daytona to finish fourth and completed every lap at Talladega in the spring.

r/NASCAR Community: No. 10, Noah Gragson
Graphic of Reddit's survivor pool picks.

r/NASCAR’s pick last week: No. 9, Chase Elliott (30 points)

Total season points: 678 (third place)

The NASCAR subreddit voted Chase Elliott as their Kansas pick in this week’s voting thread. Here’s what Redditors had to say:

u/Dont_hate_the_8: “We’ve got a few A-tier drivers left. The only ones I wouldn’t put in that category are Preece and Gragson. Between them, I think their best bet for a good run is Preece at Martinsville, so I say we use Gragson here.”

u/Extreme-Bite-9123: “The races we have left are set, and Gragson goes here”

Check back next week to see how our pickers fared as the season-long 36 for 36 journey continues.

And, if you’ve got a competitive itch beyond meticulously managing your Fantasy Live lineup each week, feel free to save or print your own 36 for 36 sheet and see if you can beat our pickers and the Reddit community!

Since 2022, Chase Elliott has scored 31 more points than anybody else in the NASCAR Cup Series at Talladega Superspeedway.

The 2020 Cup champion — a two-time ‘Dega winner — also has the longest active streak of finishing on the lead lap at the historically treacherous 2.66-mile tri-oval, spanning eight races — most since Ryan Newman accomplished the feat nine times from 2017-2020.

He returns to the famed Alabama track in the midst of yet another Cup Series Playoffs appearance, entering the middle race of the Round of 12, four points above the provisional elimination line before Sunday’s YellaWood 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Informed with such flattering statistics during a Wednesday phone interview with NASCAR.com, his reaction was about what you might expect:

“Thanks. Thanks a lot. Looking forward to crashing now.”

There was a sarcastic laugh tacked onto his gratitude. Can’t imagine why.

MORE: Talladega schedule | Cup Playoffs standings

Even with two Talladega triumphs in his back pocket, Elliott can’t pinpoint any one thing that has led to his success there. In reality, maybe that shouldn’t be so surprising. Pack racing at Talladega largely depends upon those around you rather than a solo effort of carving through the field.

“A lot of it’s just being lucky at different times, or being in the right place at the right time or wherever it may be,” Elliott said. “We’ve been on the fortunate side of the speedway stuff I feel like in general, all the way up ’til Daytona for the summer race, so hopefully we can get some of that back. But yeah, we were certainly due for a bad one. That’s just kind of the way it works.

“We’ll try to put ourselves in positions that we feel are most promising to have a good finish, and outside of that, it’s out my hands, so just try to make the best choices I can based on what’s put in front of me and hope it goes your way.”

From the outside looking in, this stretch of the NASCAR postseason seems to favor the six-time defending most popular driver, with victories at both remaining tracks in the Round of 12 — Talladega and the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course. A revamped and reconfigured road course may alter that, but Elliott maintains confidence in his No. 9 team regardless of what’s next on the calendar.

RELATED: Aero changes ahead of ‘Dega | Inside the Roval reconfiguration

That comes with good reason. The No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet maintains the best average finish in the Cup Series at 11.3 after 30 races with one win to its credit (Texas Motor Speedway in April) along with eight top fives and 17 top 10s. Yet it’s felt like a quieter year than usual for the ninth-year veteran. His runner-up effort at Bristol in the Round of 16 finale marked his first top five since a third-place result at Iowa Speedway back in June. Additionally, Elliott has only posted double-digit laps-led totals twice in the 21 races since his Texas win, with 41 led at New Hampshire and 29 at Michigan, his most recent circuits out front.

His Bristol performance, however, was notable, parlaying a 10th-place qualifying effort into a P2 day with 38 points scored, his most since tallying 43 mid-July at Pocono.

“I feel like our pace has been better, really, for more than just the last couple weeks,” Elliott said. “There’s been a lot of high spots in my eyes throughout the year, but, yeah, been kind of quiet I guess in terms of race wins certainly and top fives and and laps led. So we’d love to have more of all that. But, you know, you’ve got to get there in steps. It doesn’t just all happen overnight, and I think we’re doing some of the things that it takes to do that on a consistent basis pretty well.”

Chase Elliott drives in a pack during a NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Entering Talladega promises nothing for any competitor, with volatile danger looming at any given moment. But for now, Elliott sits on the positive side of the elimination line — if only barely. A ‘Dega win would guarantee his spot in the Round of 8 as one of eight competitors left to vie for the NASCAR Cup Series Championship through Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Homestead-Miami Speedway and Martinsville Speedway. But that potential victory would even benefit him next week at the Charlotte road course.

“If you’re able to win this weekend, you put yourself in a position to be able to jump stages at the Roval, which massively increases your chance of winning that race, in my opinion,” Elliott explained. “So yeah, I think it’s a little bit of twofold, because you get yourself in a position where, yeah, if you can get lucky and and win this weekend, you have a great opportunity to get more bonus points the following week. So yeah, definitely a great opportunity for us and everybody, for that matter. I’m sure everybody knows that. So yeah, it’s important to have a good week if you can do it.”

MORE: Will Elliott leave ‘Dega as a title front-runner?

Should Elliott charge through the Round of 8 and advance to the Championship 4 for the fourth time in the past five years, he and the No. 9 team will need to be atop the sport’s best at the checkered flag Nov. 10 at Phoenix Raceway to win his second title, bettering the other three teams contending for NASCAR’s greatest glory. But Hendrick Motorsports has not excelled on flatter, shorter ovals recently. Kyle Larson dominated on the 0.533-mile Bristol bullring just two weeks ago, but its high banks offer a stark contrast from tracks like New Hampshire, Richmond or Phoenix.

In a June interview with NASCAR.com, Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon conceded improvements were necessary in advance of Phoenix, particularly after New Hampshire. Larson ran fourth that day, but a failed engine relegated Alex Bowman to last place; Elliott drove only to an 18th-place finish and William Byron was 26th.

“No, I think we have work to do,” Gordon said. “We’re not there right now. You know, I feel like our teams do an amazing job at stepping up and finding what they need to find in that moment. But right now, I think, especially coming off of New Hampshire, we missed it. And it’s a concern for Phoenix as well. I mean, first you have to get there to compete for the championship. But every track that you go to, the way that the cars load the tires and the suspension and the underwing and how you’re using that aerodynamically — it’s dynamic. It changes from corner to corner, changes from track to track.

“And some of them, I think we’ve done really well, and others, we need work. And right now, I would say Phoenix is one of those tracks that we need work or we need to improve.”

In March, Hendrick’s four-car stable was simply outrun at Phoenix. Chevrolets led none of the 312 laps that day, and Larson marked Hendrick’s highest finisher in 14th. William Byron, Elliott and Bowman finished 18th, 19th and 20th respectively. That performance weighs not just on Elliott but the whole of the Hendrick shop.

“The bigger concern in my eye is how bad we all were at Phoenix in the spring,” Elliott said. “You know, that was probably more concerning to me than Loudon (New Hampshire), just because every track kind of has its own deal. But on the same token, I have been through this enough at HMS now where when the company struggles in such a large way across the board — I don’t think any of us were very good there in the spring — there then becomes, not that there’s not already emphasis put on that race because of what it is, but you get even more emphasis put in because of those struggles.

“So while it’s concerning on one hand, I also can look at it as a little bit of a positive, just from the sense of there is no one in that building that wants to go run that bad again, whether it’s the championship race or not. So I can look at that both ways. But we certainly have work to do there, and we’ve been doing a lot of that work throughout the season as we progress through and try to learn things for for that style of track.

“And I do have confidence that when we get there, hopefully, we’re in a position where it matters. And if so, I feel that we’re going to be in a much better position than we were in the spring and most certainly have a shot to win that race.”

Throughout the 2024 NASCAR season, Ken Martin, director of historical content for the sanctioning body, will offer his suggestions on which historical races fans should watch from the NASCAR Classics library in preparation for each upcoming race weekend.

Martin has worked exclusively for NASCAR since 2008 but has been involved with the sport since 1982, overseeing various projects. He has worked in the broadcast booth for hundreds of races, assisting the broadcast team with different tasks. This includes calculating the “points as they run” for the historic 1992 finale, the Hooters 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The following suggestions are Ken’s picks to watch before this Sunday’s YellaWood 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (2 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Dale Earnhardt drive black No. 3 Chevrolet at Talladega.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

2000 Winston 500:

Dale Earnhardt was Talladega.

Entering the second race at the track in 2000, the driver of the iconic No. 3 car had nine victories in 43 starts at the track. This also included 22 top-fives and 26 top-10s.

His nine victories were the most at the track, with a handful of drivers behind him with four.

Earnhardt also seemed to keep getting better at the track. He swept both races in 1999 and finished third in the spring of 2000.

The second race at Talladega in 1992 was the only race since the start of 1990 in which Earnhardt had not led at least five laps. Five of those races saw Earnhardt lead over 100 laps.

If those numbers weren’t eye-popping enough, Earnhardt left everybody in awe with another statement victory at the track.

Earnhardt was running in 18th position with five laps remaining. He quickly moved his way through the field, slicing and dicing past every other driver in his way, thanks to help from the Andy Petree Racing duo of Kenny Wallace and Joe Nemechek.

He had complete control of the race on the final lap, as he took the checkered flag at Talladega for the 10th time in his career.

The race also turned out to be the 76th and final victory of Earnhardt’s illustrious Cup Series career, as he passed away following a last-lap crash in the 2001 Daytona 500.

Earnhardt’s improbable march through the field put an exclamation point behind his name in the Talladega record books, fittingly ending his career at the track with one of the most memorable and unbelievable victories in NASCAR history.

View of Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick and Clint Bowyer all racing to the finish line.
Jerry Markland | Getty Images

2011 Aaron’s 499:

The eighth race of the 2011 NASCAR Cup Series season ended with one of the closest finishes in the history of the premier series.

The tandem-drafting style of restrictor plate racing kept the action on the track exciting from the drop of the green flag through the 188th and final lap of the day.

An eye-popping 88 lead changes kept the fans in the crowd on their feet, with most of the lead changes lasting for a few laps at most before someone else took control. 26 of the 43 drivers in the field saw time at the front of the pack, with 14 of them leading the way for at least five laps.

Jeff Gordon took the white flag as the leader, with his teammate Mark Martin close behind. The Richard Childress Racing combination of Kevin Harvick and Clint Bowyer then powered themselves to the front of the pack.

Enter the inseparable tandem of Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr.

The two drivers were racing together the entire day, but Earnhardt Jr. called for an audible late in the race and had Johnson jump out front of his No. 88 car.

They forced their way below their teammates Gordon and Martin, as they approached the start-finish line. At the same time, Bowyer got a push from Harvick, and the six drivers, along with the Jack Roush-powered combination of Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle, all approached the line.

Johnson edged out Bowyer by 0.002 seconds to the checkered flag. Gordon, Earnhardt Jr., Harvick, Edwards, Biffle and Martin followed in thrilling fashion.

Joey Logano holds up steering wheel and celebrates in Victory Lane.
Getty Images

2015 CampingWorld.com 500:

It seemed like it was Joey Logano’s world and every other driver was living in it.

Logano won two of the final five races before the playoffs started and didn’t stop there.

He kicked off the playoffs with a sixth-place finish at Chicago and followed that up with two more top-10 finishes to move on to the following round of the playoffs.

Logano really took off, winning at Charlotte and Kansas, which took all the pressure off of him as the series headed to Talladega for an elimination race.

With Logano already locked in, seven other drivers looked to punch their ticket to continue their quest to win the title. Denny Hamlin sat second in the standings, just 20 points ahead of Ryan Newman in tenth. The unpredictability of the high banks of Talladega left all of the drivers on the edge, hoping that they were not one of the drivers eliminated.

The race looked like another typical historic Talladega race, as Dale Earnhardt Jr. led a race-high 61 laps, as he looked to win and punch his ticket to the next round. He took his car to the pits with just under 20 laps remaining but found his way back up near the top of the board as the final laps passed by.

In typical Talladega fashion, the race needed two green-white-checkered attempts, with the race ending under yellow after a ten-car incident occurred.

NASCAR said that Logano was ahead of Earnhardt Jr. at the time of the caution, giving him his third victory in a row and keeping Earnhardt Jr. from advancing to the next round.

Matt Kenseth, Hamlin and Newman were also eliminated, in addition to Earnhardt Jr.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The Brushy Mountain Powersports 150 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at North Wilkesboro Speedway has been rescheduled for Sunday, Oct. 20, at 2 p.m. ET.

NASCAR and Speedway Motorsports announced earlier this week the postponement of the event, originally scheduled for this coming weekend, in cooperation with local authorities to ensure all local emergency resources remain dedicated to clean-up and recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s impact on the area.

The race now becomes the penultimate race on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule, and it will play a key set-up role for the championship finale at Martinsville Speedway on Oct. 26. Next up, the Tour heads to Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on Sunday, Oct. 13.

Defending and two-time champion Ron Silk and three-time champion Justin Bonsignore are continuing their rivalry stemming from their down-to-the-wire championship battle from a year ago. The pair is separated by only 11 points with three races remaining in the season. Silk leads the standings and holds the advantage in wins this year with four over Bonsignore’s two.

Tour veteran Patrick Emerling, the most recent race winner at Monadnock Speedway, has come on strong late in the season with three wins in the last four races, and he lurks only five points behind Bonsignore.

Advance tickets for adults are $30 and $35 on race day for the Brushy Mountain Powersports 150. Tickets for kids ages 12 and under are $10. Fans can visit www.NorthWilkesboroSpeedway.com to purchase.

For updated schedule and ticket information for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, fans may go to nascar.com/whelen-modified-tour.

As the region continues to recover, North Wilkesboro Speedway remains a designated collection site for hurricane relief donations through this Sunday, Oct. 6. Fans may bring the following items by the Speedway for donation:

• Non-perishable food items
• Cleaning supplies
• Disinfecting wipes
• Paper towels
• Mops
• Buckets
• Gloves
• Bottled water
• Batteries
• Portable chargers
• Hygiene items
• Diapers & wipes
• Baby formula

Donations can be dropped off at North Wilkesboro Speedway (381 Speedway Ln, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659) between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. this Wednesday through Sunday. Items will be distributed through Wilkes County Emergency Management and Samaritan’s Purse to communities in need.

Members and teams from the NASCAR community are joining to help those suffering from the damage caused by Hurricane Helene.

The storm devastated much of western North Carolina, flooding towns and destroying homes and roadways in its path.

To aid, multiple entities from the racing faction are coming together to collect donations or volunteer their efforts to help those in need.

That includes Greg Biffle. Named one of NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers in 2023, Biffle took to the air over the weekend in attempts to help rescue stranded families and deliver supplies to the area.

Below is a list of ongoing efforts to continue helping those reeling:

NASCAR & Charlotte Motor Speedway

  • Due to the overwhelming need for continued support of the N.C. mountain areas devastated by Hurricane Helene, Charlotte Motor Speedway will continue to take relief donations each Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. through the month of October. Collections will take place in the Silver Parking Lot directly across from the speedway’s main entrance (6558 Bruton Smith Blvd, Concord, N.C.). The initiative is asking for donations of priority items (non-perishable food, water, diapers, wipes).
  • Opening campgrounds for evacuees seeking refuge.
  • Parking lots open for Duke Energy.
Daniel Suárez and his wife Julia help load pallets of pet food to aid relief efforts after Hurricane Helene.
Courtesy of Charlotte Motor Speedway

The NASCAR Foundation

  • The NASCAR Foundation is donating $150,000 toward Hurricane Relief Efforts. For NASCAR fans interested in making a financial contribution, The NASCAR Foundation is accepting donations to support the American Red Cross in its disaster relief efforts. Donations can be made by visiting here.

Joe Gibbs Racing 

  • Utilizing its helicopter to get supplies to those in western North Carolina.
  • Donations can be dropped off at JGR: Water, tarps, non-perishable food (boxed).
  • Drop-off times are Oct. 1 from 7-10 a.m. ET at 13415 Reese Blvd W, Huntersville, NC 28078.

Hendrick Motorsports  

  • Hendrick Motorsports is using its helicopter to get supplies to those in western North Carolina.

23XI Racing

  • Team co-owner Michael Jordan and 23XI Racing are donating $1 million to relief efforts, contributing $500,000 each toward the NC Disaster Relief Fund and the Second Harvest of Metrolina.
  • Collection drive at Airspeed from Oct. 1-4:
    • Items can be dropped off from 7:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. ET
    • Drop-off location: 12311 Airspeed Dr., Huntersville, N.C. 28078 

JR Motorsports

  • This week, JR Motorsports and the CARS Tour are collecting donations for Hurricane Helene relief. Fans may drop-off items by end of day Wednesday, Oct. 2 — the address is 349 Cayuga Drive, Mooresville, NC, 28117.

Joey Logano Foundation

  • Joey Logano, Brittany Logano and the Joey Logano Foundation have pledged $250,000 in hurricane relief efforts — the first $25,000 is being donated to the Convoy of Hope. Logano fans or anyone who wants to help via the Foundation can donate here.

Greg Biffle 

  • Utilizing personal helicopter to get supplies to those in western North Carolina.
  • His Venmo account is accepting donations to pay for fuel and supplies that are being delivered.
  • Biffle appeared on NASCAR Daily to discuss his relief efforts and spread awareness for those impacted.

Darlington Raceway   

  • Purchasing supplies through Darlington Shares funds and getting them delivered through one of its Chamber of Commerce Partnerships.

Kaulig Racing

  • Accepting donations, and if you want to help and live near the shop (105 Austin Lane, Welcome, NC 27374), please stop by with water, boxed non-perishable food items, tarps and other supplies.
  • Collecting items through Thursday, Oct. 10. Donations can be dropped off at Kaulig Racing (299 Austin Lane, Lexington, NC, 27295) during business hours (Monday-Thursday 7 a.m. – 4 p.m. ET) 
  • Items needed: Bottled water, canned or non-perishable goods, diapers, baby wipes, formula, toiletries/sanitary items, pet food, cleaning supplies, first aid items, batteries. 
  • Please do not bring: Money, used clothing, fuel, flammable items. 

Operation Airdrop 

  • Carl Edwards is assisting in this effort.

 Bristol Motor Speedway

  • Bristol Motor Speedway will serve as the Northeast Tennessee Disaster Relief Center in the aftermath of the devastating flooding from Hurricane Helene. The property, starting Thursday at 8 a.m. ET will be a major donation and collection site, provide workspace for the logistics and search and rescue teams, and house a regional disaster relief hotline (423-830-2696).

North Wilkesboro Speedway

  • Postponed NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race for this weekend until Oct. 20.
  • In further support of the recovery efforts, North Wilkesboro Speedway will host a hurricane relief drive and serve as a collection site for the following: Non-perishable food items, cleaning supplies, disinfecting wipes, paper towels, mops, buckets, gloves, bottled water, batteries, portable chargers, hygiene items, diapers and wipes, baby formula.
  • Donations can be dropped off at North Wilkesboro Speedway (381 Speedway Ln, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659) between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 through Sunday, Oct. 6. Items will be distributed through Wilkes County Emergency Management and Samaritan’s Purse to communities in need.

 Talladega Superspeedway

  • The superspeedway will serve as a drop-off location for supplies during the upcoming race weekend to support Hurricane Helene recovery efforts in NASCAR communities. Donations will be routed to families in need in affected areas. Requested items are canned/non-perishable food, bottled water, diapers and wipes. Collection will take place outside of the Turn 3 tunnel, near the Dega Depot.

Martinsville Speedway 

  • Water collection drive at new Martinsville office on Friday, Oct. 4 from noon-5 p.m. 
  • Collecting cases of water and working with God’s Pit Crew – they will provide a tractor trailer and will deliver the water for us. 
  • Drop off at:
    • New Martinsville Speedway Office, 4201 Greensboro Road, Ridgeway, VA  24148

Nashville Speedway 

  •  Will serve as a primary donation dropoff location for disaster relief. All items will be transported to Bristol Motor Speedway. The donation drop-off will be open Monday, Oct. 7, to Saturday, Oct. 12, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Drop-off location: 4847-F McCrary Rd, Lebanon TN, 37090. In front of Ticket Services at NSS.
    • Collecting bottled water, canned or non-perishable food and baby diapers/wipes,

Jordan Anderson Racing 

  • Delivered supplies to the Statesville Airport.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Jeffery Earnhardt 

  • Earnhardt and Queen City Overland spent Monday gathering 12,000 pounds of supplies and delivering them to those in need in Hendersonville and Asheville.

Trackhouse / Justin Marks 

MRO 

  • Collecting donations for those impacted. All donations will be delivered to McDowell Technical College by Mission Christmas and all donations for the animals will be distributed to animal shelters by Rescue Ranch.

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour teams – No. 1, 46 and 51 

  • No. 46 team’s crew chief Douglas Ogiejko posted on social media, explaining the team will be taking donations at the 46 trailer at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park the weekend of October 11-13. There will be a box set up for drop off.  It will be loaded in the 51 hauler and headed south.
  • No. 1 team’s crew chief posted it will also have a box at its hauler to collect donations at Thompson to collect items for the above effort. 

The NASCAR Cup Series takes the 2024 Playoffs to one of the most anticipated races of the season this weekend — Sunday’s YellaWood 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) on the world-famous Talladega Superspeedway high-banks.

With a non-playoff driver in Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain claiming the trophy last weekend at Kansas Speedway, now only two races — at Talladega and at the Charlotte Roval next week — remain in this round for the 12 playoff-eligible drivers to score a win and automatic ticket to the Round of 8.

With his runner-up showing at Kansas, Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron has taken the lead in the playoff standings – six points ahead of reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion and Team Penske driver Ryan Blaney along with Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell. Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson is ranked fourth.

JGR’s Denny Hamlin, Hendrick teammates Alex Bowman and Chase Elliott and Team Penske’s Joey Logano complete the top eight drivers. Elliott and Logano, however, have only a four-point advantage on the Regular Season Champion, 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick, for that final spot to advance in the playoffs.

MORE: Full 2024 playoff standings | Talladega weekend schedule

Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez (-14), Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe (-25) and Team Penske’s Austin Cindric (-29) are all below the elimination line heading into the weekend. But when it comes to racing on the Talladega high banks, anything can happen. And typically does.

Blaney is the defending race winner, the victory last year setting him up for a Championship 4 Round appearance where he ultimately claimed the title in the Phoenix season finale. In fact, Blaney, driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford is a three-time winner at the big track and joins Elliott – the 2020 series champion – as the only multi-time Talladega winners in the last 10 races at the track.

MORE: See every fall winner at Talladega | Surprise winners, too

Owner-driver Brad Keselowski is the winningest active driver at Talladega – scoring his first career NASCAR Cup Series win there in 2009 and making five additional trips to Victory Lane since. He finished runner-up to Reddick this spring.

Only three current playoff drivers — Reddick, Byron and Bowman — finished among the top 10 this May.

Among the current playoff contenders, Blaney, Elliott (two), Hamlin (two) and Logano (three) all have multiple Talladega victories.

RELATED: Drivers with most wins at Talladega all time

Among those four drivers below the elimination off line and needing a solid performance at Talladega to advance their playoff run, Briscoe brings a strong resume with him this weekend. In seven NASCAR Cup Series starts on the big track, his best finish was fourth in the 2023 spring race and he has finished worse than 15th only once. Briscoe’s average finish of 14.4 is fourth best in the field among drivers with multiple starts — behind only Beard Motorsports’ Anthony Alfredo (9.3), Front Row Motorsports’ Todd Gilliland (12.8) and Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott (13.7).

Instead of fearing the unpredictability of a track like Talladega, Briscoe, 29, said he has developed a calm mentality about the style of racing. And interestingly, since 2014, eight of the 10 Talladega Playoff races have been won by drivers ranked below the Round of 8 elimination line – as Briscoe finds himself this weekend.

“I think you have to have a short memory,” the two-time NASCAR Cup Series race winner said. “I’ve gone through different kinds of spectrums of superspeedway racing. I’ve taken the conservative route and I’ve gone the super-aggressive route. And every time I’ve gone the conservative route, I typically end up crashed.

“So, I’m just going to go back to being on the aggressive side. It’s a little tougher with this Next Gen car just because you can’t take runs or do things like you typically would. You’re going to have to try to be up in the mix for stage points and try to just finish the best you can.

“… I’m just going to go with the mindset of being aggressive and trying to lead every lap and trying to make every move I can and hopefully, stay out of the chaos.”

Fifteen different drivers have won the 20 Talladega playoff races. Team Penske teammates Blaney and Logano are the only current playoff contenders to win multiple playoff races at Talladega – both claiming two playoff victories.

Of note, NASCAR has issued a technical bulletin for the Talladega race weekend with changes to the cars designed to increase safety at the big track. Modifications will be made to the Rocker skirt, right side roof flap fabric and the right side roof rails will be extended to 2” with polycarbonate.

MORE: NASCAR to implement aerodynamic changes ahead of Talladega playoff race

Busch Light Pole Qualifying is set for Saturday at 1:30 p.m. ET (USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Aric Almirola won the pole position for this race last year. Michael McDowell started on pole at Talladega this spring.

For the first time in two years, the NASCAR Xfinity Series returns to Talladega Superspeedway for a playoff race — the United Rentals 250 Saturday at 4 p.m. ET (The CW, MRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Aric Almirola won last week’s 2024 playoff opener at Kansas Speedway, but because he is not playoff-eligible, this second race of the three-race round becomes even more pivotal in deciding which eight drivers will advance.

Playoff driver AJ Allmendinger won the last playoff race at Talladega in 2022. Jordan Anderson Racing’s Jeb Burton is a two-time Talladega winner and joins playoff rookie Jesse Love, who won at the big track in April as the only current full-time driver to hoist a Talladega trophy.

Entering the race, Regular Season Champion, Stewart-Haas Racing’s Cole Custer, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chandler Smith, Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill, JR Motorsports’ Sam Mayer, JGR’s Sheldon Creed, Kaulig Racing’s Shane van Gisbergen, RCR’s Love and SHR’s Riley Herbst sit above the playoff elimination line.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Remaining NXS races

Meanwhile, a pair of preseason title favorites — JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier and Kaulig’s Allmendinger are currently just below that line. Allgaier, a two-time race winner this season, is a single point behind Herbst, has only four top-five finishes in 17 Talladega starts and has never hoisted a trophy there.

A victory this week would similarly go a long way for Allmendinger, who is still racing for his first win of the season and currently sits 10th in the playoff standings, 13 points below the elimination line.

“Anything can and usually does happen at Talladega. JR Motorsports has always had an incredibly strong superspeedway program and I know that that will be the case once again on Saturday,” Allgaier said.

“We just need to be smart out there and not get ourselves caught in a bad position in the middle of the pack. If we can keep our nose clean and run up front all day long, I see no reason why we won’t be fighting for the win with our JRM teammates and get ourselves into the next round of the Playoffs once the checkered flag falls.”

Qualifying is set for 11:30 a.m. ET on Saturday (USA Network, NBC Sports App). Austin Hill won the pole position back in April. Mayer won the pole for the last playoff race at Talladega two years ago.

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series begins the final three-race playoff round to set the Championship 4 with Friday’s Love’s RV Stop 225 at Talladega Superspeedway (4:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Last weekend’s Kansas winner Corey Heim arrives at the 2.66-mile superspeedway now boasting six wins on the season — double that of any other competitor, The 22-year-old Tricon Garage driver scored the win in the final race of the opening round last week when race leader, ThorSport Racing’s Ty Majeski ran out of gas on the final lap. Heim finished just ahead of Front Row Motorsports’ Layne Riggs, who had won the previous two races but is not among the playoff field.

RELATED: Talladega schedule | Truck playoff standings

Regular Season Champion, McAnally-Hilgemann Racing’s Christian Eckes, Majeski and Rev Racing’s Nick Sanchez sit safely atop the cutoff mark entering the first race of this all-important round. Rajah Caruth trails Sanchez by eight points just outside the playoff bubble with Tyler Ankrum and Grant Enfinger both minus-11 points and Taylor Gray minus-15 points back.

Enfinger is the only current playoff driver with a previous Talladega win, earning his trophy in 2016. Former series champion Johnny Sauter – the 2013 Talladega trophy winner – will be competing this weekend for Hattori Racing Enterprises. Brett Moffitt is the most recent race winner.

There have been eight different winners in the last eight Talladega races. Heim, Eckes and Enfinger are the only playoff drivers to have scored top-five finishes at the big track.

Among those entered this week, William Sawalich (No. 1 Tricon Garage Toyota) and 18-year-old Connor Zilisch (No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet) are hoping to make their first career superspeedway start. Crowd favorite, veteran Norm Benning, is hoping to qualify for his first race of the season.

Cometic Gasket Qualifying is set for 1 p.m. ET Friday (FS2). Chase Purdy is the defending polesitter.

If you were hoping for a clearer perspective of the postseason field after Kansas Speedway, perhaps the picture isn’t clear enough — no one is safe.

The standings took another turn, with many title hopefuls and race favorites yet again finding trouble and missing out on critical opportunities at Kansas to capitalize on scoring stage points or even lock themselves into the Round of 8. No driver has consistently put a stronghold on the standings, keeping it wide open.

RELATED: Set your Fantasy Live lineup | Weekend schedule

The YellaWood 500 is on deck this Sunday at Talladega (2 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), and you might want to buckle up for another wild ride.

With playoff peril striking almost weekly, it’s hard to pencil in who can run the table nearing the halfway mark to crowning a champion. However, two drivers can feel somewhat confident heading into Talladega: Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott. Racing Insights has predicted the two drivers to finish 1-2, and for good reason — both drivers have seemed to find ways to master the chaos around the Alabama high banks. Not only have they each won multiple times at ‘Dega, but they are the only two active playoff drivers to average more than 30 points scored in the stage era (Blaney, 32.73; Elliott, 31.93).

Secondly, both drivers have had their share of postseason issues, but those haven’t stalled their performance as they rank fourth and fifth in points scored through four postseason races (Blaney, 136; Elliott, 127). In Blaney’s camp, he’s not only the defending champ but the defending race winner. Plus, his reputation at drafting tracks speaks for itself, with eight top 10s in the last 12 races. We know Team Penske turns it on around this time of year and is gunning for a third consecutive championship. As for Elliott, he seems to be tapping into that consistency that led to him 19 straight finishes in the top 20 earlier this year. He’s nabbed top-10 finishes in three of the first four playoff races, has the best average finish among full-time drivers with 11.3 and has the most lead-lap finishes with 28.

If either driver can walk away from Talladega with a clean day and a handful of points — or even win — don’t expect them to let off the gas next week at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, a place both have won at.

DRIVERS TO WATCH

WILLIAM BYRON: Byron saw the performance jump he was looking for last week at Kansas. He now goes to Talladega, a place where he’s had two runner-up finishes. He’s also the only driver with three wins on drafting tracks in the Next Gen era.

AUSTIN CINDRIC: Cindric has scored the most points (181) and led the most laps (168) on drafting tracks this season. He looked comfortable out front leading at Atlanta and he has two top 10s in the last four Talladega races.

JOEY LOGANO: As mentioned earlier, Team Penske emphasizes winning races this time of year. Logano opened the playoffs proving that point by winning at Atlanta. With how chaotic the playoffs have been, don’t count out a savvy veteran navigating it all.

KYLE BUSCH: Rowdy was left ‘numb’ after Kansas. While the entire playoff field is itching to get into Victory Lane, no one wants to win more than Busch right now. In the last 10 races on drafting track he’s tied for the most top-five finishes with four and has the best average finish at 9.9.

BRAD KESELOWSKI: Ah yes, the six-time Talladega winner. Keselowski may be out of playoff competition, but he should firmly be in the mix to play spoiler. He has four top-five finishes over the last seven races at Talladega.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE YELLAWOOD 500

Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula includes current track, current track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to arrive at a projected winner and full race results. 

FinishCar NumberDriver
112Ryan Blaney
29Chase Elliott
324William Byron
48Kyle Busch
511Denny Hamlin
648Alex Bowman
723Bubba Wallace
81Ross Chastain
92Austin Cindric
1099Daniel Suárez
1145Tyler Reddick
1220Christopher Bell
135Kyle Larson
1417Chris Buescher
156Brad Keselowski
1614Chase Briscoe
1722Joey Logano
187Justin Haley
1954Ty Gibbs
2019Martin Truex Jr.
2134Michael McDowell
2238Todd Gilliland
2351Corey LaJoie
2410Noah Gragson
2543Erik Jones
264Josh Berry
2777Carson Hocevar
2841Ryan Preece
2947Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
303Austin Dillon
3131Daniel Hemric
3271Zane Smith
3321Harrison Burton
3415Cody Ware
3562Anthony Alfredo
3642John H. Nemechek
3713AJ Allmendinger
3816Shane van Gisbergen
3978BJ McLeod
4044J.J. Yeley

Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with Kansas in the rearview and Talladega (Sun., 2 p.m. ET, NBC) up next.

THE LINEUP

1️⃣ What, exactly, did we learn in the Kansas madness?

2️⃣ Is Chase Elliott going to leave Alabama as the title favorite?

3️⃣ Up-close look, detailed explanation of aero enhancements to Next Gen car

4️⃣ How many points do you traditionally need to advance to the Round of 8?

5️⃣ Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

Chad Cushing | For NASCAR Digital Media

1. What, exactly, did we learn in the Kansas madness?


Ross Chastain stole a shot at the Round of 8 from the playoff dozen, so where does that leave things heading into the season’s most unpredictable race?

As the dust settles on another Kansas Speedway thriller, championship contenders find themselves grappling with the results of a race that simultaneously clarified and muddled the playoff picture.

To start, the playoff field remains wide open — with no drivers locked into the Round of 8 yet after non-playoff driver Ross Chastain took the checkered – and perhaps more so than in recent years. Nothing seemed to go as expected at what was supposed to be the “normal” race of the Round of 12, with the three favorites in Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson and Tyler Reddick combining for a 19.67 average finish in the race after topsy-turvy days for each. A pair of potential wild cards now loom, as continued volatility carried over from the Round of 16 to set the stage for what promises to be a thrilling and potentially chaotic showdown this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.

MORE: Kyle Petty breaks down ‘chaos’ from Kansas Speedway | Playoff peril rears up once again

The struggles of the aligned Joe Gibbs Racing and 23XI camps at Kansas were particularly eye-opening, given no manufacturer has arguably had a better handle on a track in the Next Gen era than Toyota at Kansas. It’s fair to wonder at this point if the perennial title contenders have the juice to even land one of its three remaining drivers — Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin and Tyler Reddick, all of whom have appeared destined for Phoenix at points this season — in the Championship 4.

Reddick described post-race and again in a Tuesday availability with media that he was scratching his head over the sudden performance issues that the Regular Season Championship winner — from not that long ago — is experiencing. This is especially notable given the 2023 RSC winner and fellow Toyota driver Martin Truex Jr. also imploded quickly in the playoffs after a strong first 26 races and found himself bounced early.

And things aren’t likely to improve this weekend, either.

JGR’s difficulties on drafting tracks in the Next Gen era continued unabated this year, with not a single one of its drivers cracking the top 10 at Talladega in the spring and exactly zero drafting-style wins since the car was introduced. Even Bell, for instance, who has been perhaps the most consistent driver the past two months, boasts an average finish of 21.0 at Talladega for his worst performance at any track where he has more than two starts.

On the flip side, Ford seems to have cracked the code for superspeedway success in 2024. Blue Oval drivers have claimed all five poles on drafting tracks this season and led an astounding 63% of the 1,078 laps raced. This dominance could be a game-changer at Talladega, where track position and raw speed are crucial, opening the door for a dark-horse contender. This points to someone like Austin Cindric, in particular, having a legitimate Round of 8 chance after many had him as an easy out in the Round of 16. The No. 2 driver has upped his game in the playoffs, and leads all drivers in points earned and laps led on drafting tracks in 2024.

Similarly, fellow Ford driver Chase Briscoe, playing with house money in a lame-duck season for Stewart-Haas Racing and often overlooked in championship conversations, has quietly built an impressive Talladega resume and could surprise this weekend. With top-15 finishes in six of his seven starts there, Briscoe has more top-15s at Talladega than at any other track. Could this be the weekend he breaks through and throws the playoff standings into even further chaos?

It’s almost not even worth prognosticating, given how murky this race looks in general and the nature of the playoffs thus far. The Talladega pole-sitter has yet to finish better than 17th in the Next Gen era, and where we’ve seen eight different winners in the last eight races there. This streak of different winners ties the longest in Talladega history, underscoring the track’s reputation as the ultimate equalizer.

We’ll take a closer look later on at what each driver needs for points the next two races, but there are some clear hierarchical tiers of driver performances at Talladega in the stage era.

Reigning champ Ryan Blaney leads the pack with an average of 32.73 points per race — which is more than plenty, as you’ll see below — followed closely by Chase Elliott at 31.93. On the other end of the spectrum, Kyle Larson (19.54) and Daniel Suarez (19.13) have struggled to find consistent success at the superspeedway.

Speaking of Larson, his Talladega troubles are particularly noteworthy and more, well, troubling than the rest of the playoff field. The 2021 champion is currently mired in a 14-race streak without a top-10 finish on drafting tracks — the longest active streak in the Cup Series and one you would not expect from arguably the best driver in the world. With only three top-10 finishes total in 19 Talladega starts, Larson faces an uphill battle to maintain his playoff position and could see a surprise Round of 12 exit after being on top of the world a short time ago at Bristol.

Obviously, not a ton will translate from the 1.5-mile Kansas to the behemoth that is Talladega, so what did we learn, exactly?

That 16 drivers enter the playoffs, from long shots to dark horses to “sure things.”

And none of them are safe.

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2. Is Chase Elliott going to leave Alabama as the title favorite?


All year long the 2020 champ has felt ready to strike. With no clear front-runner at the moment, he could emerge as top dog.

Now, having said all that, there’s a strong chance we return to our roots of how the decade started as it nears its midpoint — and that’s with No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott being not just one of, but the championship favorite.

Though he did finally crack back into Victory Lane earlier this year after a supremely frustrating 2023, Elliott has felt like a snake patiently waiting in the weeds all year for his time to strike.

That time is now.

The 2020 champ has been nothing short of phenomenal at Talladega since the introduction of the Next Gen car, scoring an impressive 31 more points than any other driver. This consistency is further underscored by his remarkable streak of eight consecutive lead-lap finishes at the track — which is not only the longest active streak but also highlights his ability to stay competitive in a race where survival often takes precedence. It’s one that echoes the dominance of NASCAR legends past, as the longest stint since Ryan Newman’s nine straight between 2017 and 2021, and closing in on Dale Earnhardt’s record of 11 consecutive lead-lap finishes there between 1987 and 1992.

MORE: Chase Elliott talks ‘fighting back’ after engine setback at Kansas

In races where drafting is an art form and proper positioning is crucial — and even his world-class teammate struggles, as alluded to above — Elliott has consistently demonstrated an uncanny ability to navigate through chaos, much like his Hall-of-Fame, cool-under-pressure father. We saw this play out in the 2022 fall race, where he executed a last-lap pass to clinch the win by a mere 0.046 seconds. While his 13.63 average finish at the track ranks on the lower half of his own track averages, the chaotic nature of Talladega’s finishes drag everyone’s numbers down there — and that 13.63 number is actually best among not just playoff drivers, but all active drivers with six or more starts at the mercurial facility.

Simply put, when crew chief Alan Gustafson puts a car under him capable of winning, No. 9 just knows how to get it done.

Of course, trophies are never handed out before the checkered flag, let alone the green flag, and it’s entirely possible Elliott gets caught up in a wreck on Lap 1.

But if he’s able to finally emerge and become the first driver locked into the Round of 8, gaining an edge on the field that he hasn’t had in years, you can probably pencil him into the Championship 4 from there.

The Round of 8 tracks set up better for some other remaining drivers — for instance, Elliott has just one win at the three venues in that round and his 18.6 average finish at Las Vegas is his worst at any non-superspeedway — but not one soul in that garage wants to give the longest-tenured driver/crew chief pairing in the sport an extra week to prep while they’re fighting for their lives at the Charlotte Roval in a week and a half.

Elliott’s long journey back to the top of the sport may finally be reaching its crescendo, and it sure is gonna sound like a sireen.

Getty Images

3. Up-close look, detailed explanation of aero enhancements to Next Gen car

Dr. Eric Jacuzzi walks through the aero enhancements NASCAR is implementing for superspeedway races, starting this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.

4. What each driver needs over the next two races to advance

No driver that scored 110 points in the Round of 12 — including their Playoff Points — has missed advancing to the Round of 8. Here’s what each driver needs over the next two races to hit that number.

RankDriverPoints neededAverage needed per race
1.William Byron3618
2. Ryan Blaney4221
3. Christopher Bell4221
4.Kyle Larson5226
5.Denny Hamlin5929.5
6. Alex Bowman6231
7. Chase Elliott6633
8.Joey Logano6633
9. Tyler Reddick7035
10.Daniel Suárez8040
11.Chase Briscoe9145.5
12.Austin Cindric9547.5

5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

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NASCAR betting: 2024 Talladega playoff race odds

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Alex Bowman ‘in a good spot’ following Round of 12 opener at Kansas

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Denny Hamlin recovers for a top 10 at Kansas despite pit road blunders

Ryan Blaney, Christopher Bell salvage top 10s after Kansas miscues

Blaney recovers after early troubles: ‘About time we caught a good break’

Playoff Pulse: Kansas shakes up standings with wild-card tracks ahead