NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Bristol Motor Speedway.

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: 711
  2. Dustin Albino: -60
  3. r/NASCAR Community: -67
  4. Cameron Richardson: -114

Race 29 of 36: Bristol

Our pickers had a solid outing last week at Watkins Glen. A 22-point day from Ty Gibbs, picked by points leader Steve Luvender, tightened the race slightly, as second-place Dustin Albino’s selection of Austin Cindric netted 33 points. Cameron Richardson shaved a point off his deficit to the r/NASCAR community in third place; Richardson went with Daniel Suárez (31 points) while the NASCAR subreddit picked Michael McDowell (30 points).

The Bristol Night Race challenges our four pickers next, closing out the Round of 16 in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. In a race known for tempers, bumpers and helmet tosses, how will they approach this one — with only eight drivers left on the board?

Jayski’s Dustin Albino: No. 54, Ty Gibbs

Dustin’s pick last week: No. 2, Austin Cindric (33 points)

Total season points: 651 (second place)

Dustin: While his NASCAR career is still in its infancy, Ty Gibbs’ best track might be Bristol. Last September, he led 102 laps en route to a fifth-place finish. The No. 54 team backed up that performance in March by sweeping the first two stages and leading a career-high 137 laps. Entering the Round of 16 elimination race on the elimination line, Gibbs needs to be at his best in order to advance. Joe Gibbs Racing has a stellar track record in Thunder Valley with Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch, during his time there, leading the way. Gibbs is due for his first victory — it could come as early as Saturday night.
 

NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 24, William Byron

Steve’s pick last week: No. 54, Ty Gibbs (22 points)

Total season points: 711 (first place)

Steve: This one’s a gamble. William Byron has never led a lap at Bristol — the only oval where he’s made multiple starts (10, and 13 if you include dirt races) and never led a lap — but I think it’s a very William Byron thing to identify a weak area and conquer it. Even though Martinsville in April was the site of Byron’s last win, I’m not convinced he’s done making noise this year. I think, despite his underwhelming track record at Bristol, he’s going to close out the Round of 16 with a bang. (As long as that’s not the bang of a fender into the wall.)

NASCAR.com’s Cameron Richardson: No. 42, John Hunter Nemechek

Cameron’s pick last week: No. 99, Daniel Suárez (31 points)

Total season points: 597 (fourth place)

Cameron: Sure, I’m banking on a similar race to the spring at Bristol where Nemechek finished sixth, but the overall numbers for him in all three national series are pretty stellar. He’s completed all but seven laps in 2,700 laps turned combined in his Xfinity and Cup Series starts at the Tennessee short track, with all those finishes coming inside the top 20. While the whole playoff field, minus Joey Logano, needs to tread lightly around the track, Nemechek can come out swinging and go for another top-10 result in his first Bristol Night Race since 2020.
 

r/NASCAR Community: No. 42, John Hunter Nemechek

Total season points: 644 (third place)

The NASCAR subreddit picked John Hunter Nemechek in this week’s community voting thread. Here’s what Redditors had to say: 

u/Extreme-Bite-9123: “We have to use JHN here. He was great in the spring, and we don’t really have anywhere else to use him”

u/michigan_matt: “He finished 6th at Bristol in the spring and was in the top 5 in both stages. His two starts with FRM were top 20s. I think we absolutely have to go with JHN this week.”

u/Dont_hate_the_8: “My gut said Gibbs this week, but stats say JHN. Great run there in the spring.”

u/Sea_Moment_9405: “Nemechek has 3 top 10s this year, and Spring Bristol was one of them. It was his best finish of the year, a 6th place where he scored 13 of his 23 total stage points this season. This is easily his best remaining track so I say we fire him up. There are other options like Ty Gibbs, but I think we could use him at an intermediate or the Roval and still get a good points haul from him.”

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!

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Corey Day’s foray into the stock-car world dropped the sprint-car sensation into Thunder Valley on Thursday.

After making his ARCA Menards Series debut on July 27 at Salem Speedway, the 18-year-old stormed into Bristol Motor Speedway for a doubleheader, competing in the ARCA race before making his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut all in one night.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

A seventh-place finish in the 205-lap ARCA race and 18th in the truck race may not leap off the page, but completing a combined 405 laps at the 0.533-mile bullring of Bristol ultimately provided Day with a full day of learning.

“I’m satisfied. To finish all 400 laps in a day for I guess my second real pavement race is something to be proud of I think for sure,” Day said after the truck race. “So yeah, just happy to get all 400 and learn a lot. We worked on our truck there throughout the race, got way better as the race went on. And as a driver, that’s all you really ask for.”

With support from Hendrick Motorsports and HendrickCars.com, Day had all the right people around him throughout the in-depth training day. There to greet Day after he climbed from the No. 82 Pinnacle Racing Group Chevrolet were Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager Jeff Andrews and crew chief Greg Ives, who was a critical part of Jimmie Johnson’s reign over the NASCAR Cup Series with the famed No. 48 team before crew chiefing Dale Earnhardt Jr. from 2015-2017 and Alex Bowman from 2018-2022.

Ives, working as Day’s ARCA crew chief Thursday, was happy to see Day simply get on track and be able to learn how to attack inside a stock car around one of the sport’s most thrilling tracks.

“It’s just conditioning,” Ives told NASCAR.com. “It’s reps, it’s restarts. There’s no restarts in the world like these guys do in the ARCA series. That’s where you’re shifting gears. You’re trying to manage the outside, manage the inside, all that stuff. So I feel like he did good job.”

Corey Day drives in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series qualifying at Bristol.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

That experience prepared him for a full night of Truck Series racing. The No. 81 McAnally-Hilgemann Racing Chevrolet never lost a lap in the 200-lap affair and its driver gained confidence throughout the event,

“As the race went on, I got more and more comfortable with my truck and what it was doing center of the corner, entering the corner and exiting the corner,” Day said. “And once you figure that out, you know the comfortable factor is up there. So, yeah, felt good there at the end, and in that run in the middle of the race. Just tough guys even back there in mid-pack.”

The No. 81 truck also came home clean after what typically becomes a full-contact contest around the high banks of Bristol.

“Our nose stayed pretty clean so I got to thank my spotter Tyler (Monn) for that,” Day said. “Just thanks to the whole Bill McAnally Racing team for giving me a truck to come do this. This is a dream come true to be able to come run a truck race at Bristol. You always see these on YouTube or highlights of them because usually the truck race is one of the better races of the week here. So to be able to come do that is a dream come true for sure.”

Day will have three additional starts in with McAnally-Hilgemann Racing to build his stock-car resume, Sept. 27 at Kansas Speedway, Oct. 26 at Homestead-Miami Speedway and Nov. 1 at Martinsville Speedway.

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin is used to facing twists and turns along what was once a promising championship path.

In 2010, he blew a 33-point lead over four-time defending champ Jimmie Johnson going into the final two races of the season. In 2014, he was passed by Kevin Harvick for the lead with eight laps to go in the first championship race of the elimination era. In 2019, he again led the title race with around 100 laps to go, but roughly 50 laps later his car overheated and he ended up finishing a distant 10th. In both 2020 and 2021, he made the Championship 4, only to be beaten by the faster cars of Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson. And, of course, in 2022 he missed the final four because of Ross Chastain’s “Hail Melon” move.

Now, in 2024, he finds himself yet again on the razor’s edge — this time to even escape the first round of the Cup Series playoffs. According to my forecast model, which simulates the rest of the playoffs 10,000 times, Hamlin has just a 54 percent chance of advancing into the Round of 12 despite probably being a top-five driver in the sport this year. So this could be yet another disappointment for NASCAR’s greatest to never win a title — but there is also hope for Denny yet.

Before we get into that, let’s set the stage with the model’s odds going into the final race of the Round of 16 at Bristol.

After last Sunday’s overtime race at Watkins Glen, eight drivers are in a good spot to advance into the next round, with greater than 97 percent odds: Joey Logano (who won in Atlanta), Christopher Bell, Austin Cindric, Alex Bowman, Daniel Suárez, Chase Elliott, Tyler Reddick and Ryan Blaney. Blaney’s high odds come in spite of a near-immediate wreck to begin the race Sunday. He still has a 29-point cushion in the playoff standings, plus a 60 percent chance of finishing ahead of at least four of the eight drivers below him in the standings at Bristol.

Two more drivers have at least a 92 percent chance to move on — Kyle Larson and William Byron — despite their own troubles early in the playoffs. (Larson finished 37th at Atlanta, while Byron was 34th at The Glen after nearly launching over the fence). Both are at least 25 points on the good side of the cutline right now and should be able to move forward as long as they avoid catastrophic finishes at Bristol.

This means we have at least a pretty decent idea about who 10 of the 12 advancing drivers will be after the transfer race Saturday night. We also have a decent sense that Harrison Burton probably won’t advance — the model gives him less than a 5 percent chance, as he needs just his second podium finish of the season to even have a 50-50 shot at advancement.

That leaves five drivers between 25 and 54 percent odds to advance, fighting over what is likely just two open spots.

Among those, the best odds belong to Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Hamlin and Ty Gibbs at 54 percent apiece, followed by Chase Briscoe (52 percent after potentially saving his season with a sixth-place finish Sunday), Brad Keselowski (32 percent) and another JGR driver, Martin Truex Jr. (25 percent in his swan song as a Cup Series regular).

Needless to say, the fight between that quintet under the lights at Bristol is going to be compelling (teammates or not). But what makes Hamlin the most intriguing driver in that crucible is not just his status as NASCAR’s forever-bridesmaid. It’s that his odds of winning the championship, conditional on advancing, remain as strong as just about anyone’s.

It’s just that whole advancing part that still weighs heavily on his overall chances. But the good news for Hamlin is that Bristol is just about the best place for him to stage his last stand.

He has four wins at the track in his career, including each of the past two races held there, and he has the third-best average finish at Bristol of any active driver with at least two career races there. Furthermore, Denny has been the best short-track driver in the Cup Series overall this season, with an Adjusted Points+ Index of 252 — i.e., 152 percent better than average — beating out Elliott (223), Larson (207) and Byron (202) by a wide margin.

This is why Hamlin shows up as by far the best projected driver at Bristol in my track-scouting ratings ahead of Saturday night’s race. He is set up as well as he possibly could be to deliver a strong performance. And he will need to do just that.

Here’s a breakdown of Hamlin’s odds to advance, conditional on different types of finishes at Bristol:

It’s not exactly a “must-win” for Hamlin (though a win would obviously clinch his spot in the next round). But it is something of a must-top-10. In simulations where Hamlin finishes that high, he makes the second round 93.7 percent of the time. In all other simulations, he advances just 16.2 percent of the time.

In other words, all of the potential of this season — all of the expectations that this would finally be The Year for Hamlin to shed his “Best To Never Win A Championship” label — come down to needing a high finish in a single race at the Last Great Colosseum. If he does that, he’s back among the favorites; if not, it’s another case of wait ’til next year.

Neil Paine is a freelance writer whose work also appears at ESPN.com, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Sherwood News and Substack. He is the former Sports Editor at FiveThirtyEight, and was also a consultant for the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — AM Racing announced Friday that Harrison Burton will join the organization next season, driving its flagship Ford in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

Burton will return to the Xfinity circuit after three seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series with Wood Brothers Racing. That stint yielded his first premier series victory last month at Daytona International Speedway and the 23-year-old driver’s first playoff berth.

Burton said AM Racing contacted him shortly after he landed on the free-agent market this summer.

RELATED: Key players in Silly Season | Bristol weekend schedule

“As soon as really my announcement came out that I wouldn’t return to the Wood Brothers, they expressed interest, and then have kind of shown me the will and want to improve and get better and do things the right way,” Burton said Friday afternoon at Bristol Motor Speedway. “And as time went along, I felt like that was the best opportunity for me to help them build their program, and in doing that, help rebuild myself and my confidence and try and win races in the Xfinity Series.”

AM Racing entered its second season of Xfinity Series competition with Hailie Deegan behind the wheel of the No. 15 entry on a multiyear deal, but the driver and team parted ways in early July. Since then, the organization has rotated a host of fill-in drivers through the seat – including Cup Series regulars Joey Logano and Josh Berry.

The team indicated that it has renewed two partnerships for 2025 — its technical alliance with the rebranded Haas Factory Team and its engine supplier agreement with Roush Yates Engines.

Burton accumulated four wins during his previous Xfinity Series tenure (2019-2021), reaching the postseason in both of his full-time seasons with Joe Gibbs Racing. His arrival with the famed Wood Brothers No. 21 team brought him to the Cup Series in 2022, shifting his manufacturer alliances from Toyota to Ford.

Burton finished 27th and 31st in the standings in his first two Cup Series seasons, and the Wood Brothers announced in July that Berry would replace him in 2025. Burton gave the organization a proper send-off at Daytona with its 100th premier-series victory, clinching his first appearance in the Cup Series Playoffs.

After his breakthrough win, Burton described his status for next season as “fluid,” not knowing which series he might call home in 2025. He said he aspires to return to the Cup Series but demurred at the notion that the move back to the Xfinity circuit was a demotion.

MORE: Cup Series standings | Cup Series schedule

“I mean, it’s a privilege to drive a race car in NASCAR, in any of the top three series,” Burton said. “So obviously, it’s not what I wanted to happen. I didn’t want to lose my job, right? But what I did do is learned a lot from this experience. I feel like I’m a better race car driver than when I was in Xfinity. and AM Racing has confidence in me that I can help them turn their program around and get it where it needs to be as well. They have shared and have shown the want to do that, the want to get better, and are willing to put the work in to do that, and I think with both of us with that same mindset, I don’t see why there’s any reason we can’t.”

Burton is currently 16th in the Cup Series Playoffs standings, 20 points below the provisional elimination line. He’ll aim to keep his postseason eligibility intact in Saturday’s Bass Pro Shops Night Race (7 ET, USA, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), the Round of 16 finale at Bristol Motor Speedway.

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 Saturday’s Bass Pro Shops Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (7 p.m. ET, USA, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

A general view of racing at Bristol.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

1985 Busch 500:

The 1985 night race at Bristol was the first time that ESPN presented the race live. The track featured temporary lighting to help illuminate the track and give drivers the best vision possible.

Bill Elliott had taken the Cup Series by storm, winning the Daytona 500 and nine of the first 18 races on the schedule. The race at Bristol was the final contest before Elliott had an opportunity to win a $1,000,000 bonus from the RJ Reynolds company if he could win at Darlington in the Southern 500.

Despite the hype surrounding Elliott (who had won the previous race at Michigan International Speedway), all eyes were on Richard Petty.

Petty, who left his family-owned team for the 1984 and 1985 seasons, announced he would return for the 1986 season. His final season with his team in 1983 saw Petty finish fourth in points.

In his first season driving for Mike Curb, Petty finished 10th in points, and he arrived at Bristol a disappointing 19th.

The race turned out to be another typical Bristol affair as the caution flag waved 14 times for 87 total laps. This followed a delay for rain before the event, which led to the race starting under yellow flag conditions to help assist in drying the track.

Dale Earnhardt dominated the race, leading 343 of the race’s 500 total laps. Tim Richmond and Darrell Waltrip also had strong cars, but Waltrip’s hopes at another Bristol victory were dashed when he was sent to the rear of the field for pitting too early.

Waltrip won at the track nine times, including seven in a row between 1981 and 1984.

Earnhardt took the lead from Richmond with just under 20 laps remaining and held off a handful of battles from Richmond to take the checkered flag. Richmond finished second, followed by Neil Bonnett, Waltrip and Elliott.

Petty came home with an eighth-place finish, which jump-started a strong finish to the season for the driver. He eventually finished the season 14th in points.

A general view of racing at Bristol.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

1995 Goody’s 500:

The anticipation for the start of the annual night race at Bristol Motor Speedway had to be put on hold for just under two hours as rain kept the covers over the NASCAR Cup Series cars past the scheduled start time.

The crowd was amped up as track dryers worked to get the surface ready for racing as they could be seen doing the wave with team members waiting on the pit wall.

When the green flag did finally drop, it didn’t take long for the excitement to start. Contact between Dale Earnhardt and Rusty Wallace sent Wallace around and into the wall right under the start/finish line. Earnhardt was black-flagged by NASCAR and sent to the end of the longest line for his contact with Wallace.

The move didn’t immediately take Wallace out of contention, but he was later caught up in another incident involving Bill Elliott and Jeff Burton. Wallace had five victories at the track (including being the defending winner of the night race) but ended up with a 21st-place finish, 46 laps behind the race winner.

Earnhardt was on a mission to make his way back up through the field, and nothing stopped him from doing whatever it took to have the checkered flag in his sights. He took advantage of a handful of lapped cars to gain on Terry Labonte, the race leader, on the final lap before catching him as the duo neared the line. Earnhardt made contact with Labonte, sending Labonte around and into the wall while taking the checkered flag as the winner.

Labonte’s car limped into Victory Lane while smoke spewed from his No. 5 Chevrolet.

Earnhardt didn’t face much backlash from Labonte but did from Wallace, who interrupted one of Earnhardt’s post-race interviews by tossing a water bottle in Earnhardt’s direction before the two drivers had to be separated.

Wallace vowed revenge in the next race while saying he wouldn’t forget this move. He also mentioned how he wouldn’t forget how the two drivers made contact at Talladega Superspeedway in 1993.

The first seven finishers of the event were all named as one of NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers in 2023: Labonte, Earnhardt, Dale Jarrett, Darrell Waltrip, Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon and Sterling Marlin.

Dale Earnhardt sits in his car.
Craig Jones | Allsport

1999 Goody’s Headache Powder 500:

Sometimes, things just make sense, and the annual Bristol Night Race being named the Goody’s Headache Powder 500 turned out to be one of them, especially for Terry Labonte.

Rookie driver Tony Stewart put his Joe Gibbs Racing Pontiac on the pole for the race and looked to be the most dominant car of the day, leading 225 consecutive laps early on, through the race’s halfway point.

Dale Earnhardt and Labonte then emerged as the front-runners as the two drivers with a history at the track traded the lead back and forth for the final 249 laps of the day. No other driver paced the front of the field besides the two after taking the lead from Stewart.

It looked like it would come down to another classic battle for the win at the track between the two, but Darrell Waltrip turned Labonte with 10 laps remaining. This brought out the caution and allowed Labonte to pit for fresh tires.

The incident set up the restart on Lap 496, with Earnhardt leading Stewart, Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin. Labonte sat fifth right behind Martin, but the question of the moment was if he had enough time to catch Earnhardt with the fresh tires.

It took one lap for Labonte to pass Martin and take third over Gordon on the same lap. Labonte then took second from Stewart before setting his sights on Earnhardt.

The two drivers made contact for the lead as the white flag waved. Labonte sailed into the first turn as the leader before Earnhardt used his bumper to move Labonte and send him around.

His spinning car collected Stewart and Ricky Rudd, while Earnhardt held off a hard-charging Jimmy Spencer to grab the victory.

Earnhardt said in his post-race interview that he didn’t want to turn him around but meant to rattle his cage.

Labonte was upset with Earnhardt, denying that Earnhardt didn’t do it on purpose, saying that nothing he ever does is ever on purpose.

The last-lap crash shook up the finishing order. Spencer came home second, while Rudd recovered from his damage to take third. Gordon was fourth, and Stewart, who was also involved in the incident, was fifth.

Labonte had to settle for an eighth-place finish.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Rajah Caruth arguably ran his best race of the season since winning in March. Yet the Spire Motorsports driver could only focus on how close he was to victory Thursday night at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Caruth finished third at the 0.533-mile short track in the second race of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Playoffs, 1.118 seconds shy of Layne Riggs for the win and a mere 0.022 seconds behind Corey Heim at the checkered flag for the runner-up spot.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

The much-needed effort marked his first top-five finish since Nashville Superspeedway in June, his first career stage victory, and his first laps led (nine) since North Wilkesboro Speedway in May. Most importantly, he and the No. 71 Spire team leave Bristol 35 points above the elimination line in the Round of 10, entering the Sept. 27 elimination race at Kansas Speedway (8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) in excellent position to advance as one of eight Round of 8 drivers.

None of that was much solace to the 22-year-old driver, who simply wished to run the final laps all over again. With two restarts in the final 30 laps, Caruth opted to run the bottom line more often than the top in both runs where others made speed.

“I had a chance to win, and I just — I don’t feel like I executed that well,” Caruth said. “I should have just ran the top like I know I should. I’m just — oh, there’s the end there.”

He paused to rewatch the final set of corners, diving from top to bottom behind Heim to get to Heim’s left-side door in a drag race to the stripe. While Riggs won, Heim was second, Caruth third and Christian Eckes fourth.

“I wasn’t gonna fence him (Heim), but we were close,” Caruth continued. “But yeah, just fun racing with Corey and Christian. They’re the perennial contenders, so to be in the mix of those guys all night was really good. Just replaying what I could have done different those last two or three restarts.”

Once the sting of Thursday’s loss fades, perhaps Caruth will be able to reflect upon his performance more fondly. In the four races between his Nashville and Bristol top fives, the No. 71 Chevrolet finished 10th (Pocono), eighth (Indianapolis Raceway Park), 17th (Richmond) and 18th (Milwaukee). To peak again in the playoffs shows Caruth and Co. might be on the upswing at the right time heading to Kansas.

Asked when that sting might dissipate, Caruth was frank as he watched Riggs celebrate in Victory Lane: “I don’t know.”

“Just wanted to win. I mean, that’s it,” he said. “I don’t know how else to really describe it. Just wish that was us. But really happy for Layne. You know, he deserves it. He puts in the work and happy to see him succeed.”

Officially clinching their spots in the Round of 8 Thursday night were Eckes, Heim and Nick Sanchez, who finished fifth at Bristol. Caruth heads to Kansas fifth in the standings, 23 points behind Ty Majeski and ahead of Tyler Ankrum (plus-25), Taylor Gray (plus-23) and Grant Enfinger (plus-seven). Daniel Dye (minus-seven) and defending champion Ben Rhodes (minus-12) head to the Midwest beneath the elimination line.

BRISTOL, Tenn.—Layne Riggs relished his role as spoiler so much that he returned for an encore Thursday night at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Riggs isn’t competing for the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series championship, but that didn’t prevent him from winning the playoff opener Aug. 25 at the Milwaukee Mile.

On Thursday, Riggs passed runner-up Corey Heim for the lead on Lap 121 of 200 in the UNOH 200 Presented by Ohio Logistics and held it the rest of the way to score his second career victory and his fourth straight top five.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

“Oh, my gosh, we’ve just learned so much with the trucks,” said the driver of the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford. “My team, [crew chief] Dylan (Cappello), he’s bad-ass…

“To be running fifth, 10th and all of a sudden to go back-to-back in the playoffs—man, I wish I was in the playoffs so bad. I think we’d be a real threat to win the championship.”

Heim had to settle for second place, but there was a silver lining for the driver of the No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota. Heim scored enough points on Thursday to advance to Round of 8, as did fourth-place finisher Christian Eckes and fifth-place Nick Sanchez.

“Every time we got a heat cycle on the tires, it seemed like we got tighter and tighter,” said Heim, who fell one spot short in his defense of last year’s victory at Thunder Valley. “Just didn’t quite have it, but solid points day in the playoffs—that’s what you need, so I will keep moving forward.

“I’m looking forward to my favorite place [Kansas Speedway] next week.”

Heim won a drag race for the runner-up spot over Rajah Caruth, who elevated his standing in the playoffs with a win in the first stage and a solid run the rest of the way.

Caruth vaulted from 10th to fifth in the standings with the third-place run and now stands 35 points above the current cut line with next Friday’s elimination race at Kansas (8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) left to determine which eight drivers advance to the next round.

“We executed the race—just two spots short,” said Caruth, who glanced toward Riggs’ truck doing celebratory burnouts on the frontstretch. “Man, I wish that was us,” Caruth added wistfully.

Reigning series champion Ben Rhodes fought an ill-handling truck and finished 27th, two laps down, and fell to 10th in the standings, 12 points behind Grant Enfinger in eighth.

Daniel Dye tangled with Kaden Honeycutt on the frontstretch on Lap 157 and finished 37th, six laps down. Dye heads for Kansas seven points behind Enfinger.

Eighteen-year-old Sprint Car star Corey Day finished 18th in his Truck Series debut. After winning his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut last Saturday at Watkins Glen, polesitter Connor Zilisch spun in Turn 4 on Lap 109 and came home 19th.

Matt Crafton ran sixth, followed by Chase Purdy and playoff driver Ty Majeski, who started from the rear after his team made unapproved adjustments to the No. 98 Ford. Stewart Friesen and playoff driver Tyler Ankrum completed the top 10.

NOTE: Post-race inspection was completed without issue in the Craftsman Truck Series garage, confirming Layne Riggs as the winner.

After two races in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, Austin Cindric enters Bristol Motor Speedway second in points, 43 points above the elimination line.

As everyone expected.

While a bit tongue-in-cheek, Cindric’s body of work through the opening races at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Watkins Glen International has been outstanding enough to secure 79 combined points, propelling the 2022 Daytona 500 champion into strong footing heading into Saturday night’s showdown (7 ET, USA, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), which will mark the first elimination race of the 2024 postseason.

MORE: Cup Playoffs standings | Bristol schedule

Cindric, 26, doesn’t concern himself with outside opinion, only aiming to execute the best performance from himself and his team each weekend. And as Watkins Glen proved messy for the majority of the playoff field, Cindric left as one of just two postseason contenders with top-10 finishes, providing him with a surprising amount of comfort from elimination before the race even begins.

“What I can’t do is control what happens to other cars in the playoffs with all the factors,” Cindric told NASCAR.com this week via teleconference. “But I think if you would have asked me if it’s realistic that we could get stage points in both races and finish top 10 in both races to start the playoffs, I would have said yeah. So I think we’re absolutely operating within what we’re capable of as a team — let alone I do drive for Team Penske so I feel like the expectation is certainly to be able to go out and perform. And so far, you know, the first two races, our team’s done a pretty good job at bringing fast race cars and being to execute well enough to get some solid points and some solid finishes.”

The 2020 Xfinity Series champion has been through this playoff gambit before at the Cup level, but that was in 2022 — his rookie campaign — after winning the Cup Series’ single biggest regular-season race. This year, he was reunited with crew chief Brian Wilson, who led Cindric’s Xfinity teams at Team Penske and took the reins of the No. 2 Ford for the final 10 races of 2023. Their success was notable at the Xfinity level with 13 wins and a title to their names, but success wasn’t guaranteed at the Cup level. The Next Gen vehicle differs considerably from the Xfinity platform, and Ford introduced a new body for its Dark Horse Mustang in 2024.

None of those challenges have derailed their relationship, Cindric said, adding that the duo picked up where they left off in Xfinity. The goal instead became identifying how to use what made them successful in the past and transforming that into productivity and excellence at the Cup level.

“How do we apply that in what is an exceptionally competitive (series) and a level up?” he said. “Racing in the Cup Series, that has been part of this journey, right? But also at the same time, giving Brian and my team a lot of free rein to to go out and go do their jobs, man. Like, don’t be afraid to fail. That’s been my narrative the whole time. And I think Brian has always been someone that’s provided me a great environment to to really give my feedback and have an open forum to to say how I feel about certain things and educate me on things that I don’t understand.

“I feel like I’ve learned a lot this year — more, probably, than what I have in all my other previous Cup starts. And I think that’s been really productive for us, because once I feel like I can get a handle on how things are working and how we got there and you know why things are the way they are, I feel like that’s when you can start to make steps forward.”

Austin Cindric drives during NASCAR Cup Series practice at Watkins Glen.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

The groundwork for that was laid as soon as the 2023 campaign came to a close, with Cindric working in the sim in tandem with engineers through December and January to be better prepared once February rolled around.

“I would say my approach this offseason (was) probably the most extreme I’ve taken my approach,” Cindric said. “But my mentality is no stone unturned, no distractions, no excuses to why I can’t be successful. And if things don’t work out, things don’t work out. But I feel like I’m in an environment, I work with people, I feel like I believe enough in myself that all these reasons why I feel like I can be successful at the highest level, and I want to see that. I don’t want to miss that opportunity, and that’s certainly a motivator, but otherwise, it’s just kind of the competitor in me as well. Like, I don’t really have an ‘off’ switch.”

In the midst of his third full-time season in the Cup Series, Cindric likely has a long runway ahead of him. But to get where he and everyone else want to be — celebrating on the championship stage as Cup title winners — Cindric knows the path requires adaptability.

“There’s a lot of variety in our schedule. And I think to really think of yourself as a champion in NASCAR this day and age, you have to be good at all types of race tracks,” Cindric said. “And we race on a lot of different types of race tracks, and in order to advance through the playoffs, you have to be good at all types of race tracks. So I think the way to be a champion is to make it through and survive through all types of race tracks.”

That will include surviving Bristol.

Only Christopher Bell, plus-46, enters with a better points cushion than Cindric, with Cindric’s teammate Joey Logano locked into the Round of 12 thanks to his Atlanta triumph. Twelve drivers advance past Saturday’s 500-lap feature, with the bottom four drivers in points ousted from championship contention. That Cindric has such a significant buffer is, well, significant: the Mooresville, North Carolina native has raced three times on the concrete at Thunder Valley to finishes of 20th, 32nd and 31st.

But context matters. His 32nd-place finish last fall was the product of a Lap 69 crash with AJ Allmendinger, who bounced off the Turn 4 wall directly into Cindric’s path and launched the No. 2 Ford skyward, if ever so slightly. His 31st-place run in March was in large part thanks to the severe tire wear that no one expected ahead of the race weekend.

“There’s a lot of unknowns going into this weekend, and a lot of it centers around tire wear and the state of the race track,” Cindric said. “And  just the way the spring race looked, like you mentioned, catching everyone off-guard, as far as the the bulk of tire wear. I mean, since I’ve started racing in stock cars, racing in Bristol, like I’ve never seen anything like that in my life — and I think you have to go into this race in the playoffs expecting that to be the case. So how do you adapt? You asked me about adaptability before. This is a prime example of the teams that are going to be able to adapt.

“Like, OK, everyone got caught out. You have your excuse, right? No one expected this to come. But how do you adapt to it? How do you understand what happened, what you went through, and how to maximize the situation — or is it even going to be the same? Are you going to have to be adaptable in the week leading up to the race? Are you going to have to be adaptable in the hours leading up to the race? What is it going to be? I think you’re going to learn after practice a lot. There’ll be plenty of triggers to really show you know what to expect. So I think that makes this weekend definitely the biggest wild card in this round.”

Few may have expected Cindric to be in this position heading into an elimination race. But the 26-year-old is simply enjoying the ride while trying to maximize every opportunity he gets.

“My only goal set for the year was to make the playoffs. Everything else is a bonus,” he said. “Every everything else is you feel like you’re playing with house money. When you’re in the playoffs, you have a new lease on life. I walked in with just as many if not a little bit more playoff points than the rest of the guys. So we’re in a great position. Just need to go make the most of the opportunity. I think we’re going to learn a lot about ourselves.”

The 2024 points season for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series comes to a close this weekend, and several championships will be decided along the way.

Connor Hall continues to lead the Division I national standings as he pursues a second straight championship. Four more national champions — Divisions II through V — will be determined this weekend, as will the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I Rookie of the Year.

Below is a closer look at each of the championship battles in the aforementioned divisions.

RELATED: Weekly Series championship standings

Zack Ore
Zack Ore captured the Sportsman division championship at Bowman Gray Stadium this season and is one weekend away from the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division II championship. (Erick Messer/Bowman Gray Stadium)

Division II

At the top of the Division II standings is Bowman Gray Stadium’s Zack Ore. The champion in Bowman Gray’s Sportsman division for the 2024 season, Ore leads the Division II standings with 430 points thanks to five victories in 25 features this season. He’s closely followed by Autodrome Granby regular Donovan Lussier and Bowman Gray’s Chase Robertson, both of whom are 14 points behind. Lussier has five victories this year while Robertson has four.

With no events scheduled at Bowman Gray or Autodrome Granby on the final weekend of competition, this championship battle is likely over.

Bryce Allen
Bryce Allen captured the Sport Mod championship at Adams County Speedway this season and leads the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division III standings entering the final weekend of competition. (Photo: CK Imaging/Adams County Speedway)

Division III

Adams County Speedway Sport Mod champion Bryce Allen has all but locked up his first NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national championship in Division III entering the final weekend of competition.

With nine wins in 16 starts and 464 points scored, Allen has a comfortable, 48-point advantage on Berlin Raceway Sportsman division champion Ryan Holtzlander. Neither track has events scheduled this weekend.

Nathan McNabb
Nathan McNabb, the champion of the 4-Cylinder division this year at Michigan’s Berlin Raceway, is one of three drivers in contention for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV championship. (Photo: Berlin Raceway)

Division IV

Perhaps the tightest championship battle across all NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national championships comes in Division IV, where three drivers are separated by four points entering the final weekend of competition. Berlin Raceway’s 4-Cylinder division champion Nathan McNabb and Adams County Speedway’s Hobby Stock champion Adam Hensel are tied with 390 points each. Right behind them is Bowman Gray Stadium Stadium Stock champion A.J. Sanders, who is only four points out of the lead.

No events are scheduled at Berlin or Adams County this weekend, meaning McNabb and Hensel are likely done scoring points. However, Sanders has competed at Bowman Gray, Florence Motor Speedway, Wake County Speedway and Kingsport Speedway this season in search of points. This championship is still too close to call.

Zach Bristol
Zach Bristol locked up the Hornet division championship at Evergreen Speedway one weekend ago, but he still has a chance to win the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division V national championship. (Photo: Evergreen Speedway)

Division V

The fight for the championship in Division V is also tight entering the final race weekend of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series points season. Adams County Speedway Compact champion John Berg holds a slim, two-point advantage entering the weekend. Behind him is a fast-closing Zach Bristol, who has four wins this year as the champion of the Hornet division at Washington’s Evergreen Speedway.

Adams County Speedway is off this weekend, meaning Berg can’t score any points toward the championship. However, Evergreen Speedway is racing this weekend, and the Hornet division is scheduled to participate. That means Bristol has a chance to potentially surpass Berg in the battle for the Division V championship.

Hunter Morgan
Hunter Morgan has won four times this season at Tennessee’s Kingsport Speedway, giving him the edge in the battle for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I Rookie of the Year. (Photo: Kingsport Speedway)

Division I Rookie of the Year

A pair of young rising stars are locked in a heated battle for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I Rookie of the Year. Leading the way is Hunter Morgan, who is in his first season of competition in the Late Model Stock Car class at Tennessee’s Kingsport Speedway. His four wins this year have helped him earn 344 points this season, giving him a 14-point advantage on Bowman Gray Stadium Modified division rookie Riley Neal.

While the Bowman Gray Stadium season is over, that hasn’t kept Neal from attempting to gain ground on Morgan. Neal has competed at Hickory Motor Speedway, Kingsport Speedway and Langley Speedway in recent weeks as he attempted to gain ground on Morgan.

The third edition of the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup, a special three-race miniseries held at New Hampshire’s Monadnock Speedway as part of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule, concludes Saturday with the running of the Winchester Fair presented by USNE Power (6 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

Entering the event, Patrick Emerling leads the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings, which are based on NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour points earned during the three-race miniseries. He’s followed closely by Matt Hirschman, the winner of the inaugural Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup in 2022.

Below is a closer look at all of the contenders chasing $6,000 in bonuses for the top three in the final Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings.

(Editor’s note: Jake Johnson, who has 77 points in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings, and Brian Robie, who has 70 points, are not entered in Saturday’s Winchester Fair presented by USNE Power and thus are not eligible to win the championship.)

Patrick Emerling
Patrick Emerling (Photo: Jeffrey Barnes/NASCAR)

Patrick Emerling: 83 points

Entering the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup finale at Monadnock Speedway, Patrick Emerling leads the standings with 83 points thanks to consecutive third-place finishes in the Granite State Derby and the Duel at the Dog 250. He led 35 laps in the Duel at the Dog 250 in July, the first laps he’d ever led at Monadnock.

Overall, across 10 starts at the quarter-mile track, Emerling has two top-five and four top-10 finishes.

Matt Hirschman
Matt Hirschman (Photo: Bryan Bennett/NASCAR)

Matt Hirschman: 80 points

Just three points behind Emerling is Matt Hirschman, who enters the finale of the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup second in the standings. He won the pole for the Granite State Derby and finished fifth, which he followed with a fourth-place finish during the Duel at the Dog 250.

In seven career starts at Monadnock, he’s earned four top-five and seven top-10 finishes. He’s also led 70 career laps with a best finish of second in 2022.

Ron Silk
Ron Silk (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

Ron Silk: 79 points

The current NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship leader is third in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings. Ron Silk enters the Winchester Fair presented by USNE Power with 79 points thanks to finishes of 10th and second in the first two events.

He’s also led laps in both races, including 50 during the Granite State Derby and 51 during the Duel at the Dog 250. In 12 career starts at Monadnock, Silk has seven top-five and 10 top-10 finishes.

Austin Beers
Austin Beers (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

Austin Beers: 77 points

Next in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings is Austin Beers, who enters the finale with 77 points in the bank thanks to finishes of second and 10th in the first two races.

In five starts at Monadnock, Beers has registered three top-five and five top-10 finishes, including a pair of runner-up results. Despite that, Beers has never led a lap at Monadnock.

Craig Lutz
Craig Lutz (Photo: Bryan Bennett/NASCAR)

Craig Lutz: 75 points

No driver has led more laps at Monadnock Speedway this year than the next driver in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings, Craig Lutz. The driver of the Goodie Racing No. 46 has led 105 laps at Monadnock this year, including 99 in the Duel at the Dog 250.

His results – fourth and 12th – don’t reflect how well he has run at Monadnock this season. Overall, Lutz has one top five and two top-10 finishes in seven starts at Monadnock.

Justin Bonsignore
Justin Bonsignore (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

Justin Bonsignore: 75 points

Justin Bonsignore is the winningest driver in NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour history at Monadnock Speedway, but this year he hasn’t quite been able to figure out the New Hampshire quarter-mile oval like in years past.

The five-time Monadnock winner has earned finishes of sixth and seventh in 2024, but that has kept him in the hunt for the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup crown. In all, Bonsignore has five wins, 10 top fives and 13 top-10 finishes at Monadnock.

Trevor Catalano
Trevor Catalano (Photo: Jaiden Tripi/NASCAR)

Trevor Catalano: 74 points

Perhaps the biggest surprise of the 2024 season came at Monadnock Speedway during the Duel at the Dog 250 when Trevor Catalano utilized pit strategy to take the lead and hold off Ron Silk to score his first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour win. The victory came in just his second start at Monadnock.

That, combined with a 17th-place finish in the Granite State Derby, has the youngest member of the trio of Catalano brothers racing with the series right in the thick of the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup battle.

Tommy Catalano
Tommy Catalano (Photo: Jeffrey Barnes/NASCAR)

Tommy Catalano: 67 points

Another member of the Catalano family, Tommy Catalano, is next in the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings with 67 points thanks to finishes of 12th and ninth.

Overall, Tommy Catalano has two career top-10 finishes at Monadnock spread across five starts at the New Hampshire track.