Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with Darlington in the rearview and Atlanta (Sun., 3 p.m. ET, USA) up next.

THE LINEUP ️

1️⃣ Some big-name stars missed playoffs, so who will play spoiler?

2️⃣ OK, but who’s got an edge among the title contenders?

3️⃣ Who will draft their way into the Round of 12?

4️⃣ The unlucky ones at Atlanta

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

chris buescher looks on
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

1. Big-name stars missed, but who will play spoiler?

More drivers capable of winning seemed to miss the playoffs than normal, meaning we could see several of them close the deal in the postseason and create drama.

The Darlington dust has settled and the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs field is set, but the story doesn’t end for those left on the outside looking in. Some of the sport’s biggest names are in unfamiliar territory, missing the cut for the 16-driver championship run after Sunday’s Southern 500. Yet, their impact on the 2024 season is likely far from over.

With a handful of surprise entrants — a pair emerging in the past two weeks alone — several superstars and preseason playoff locks were left on the wrong side of the bubble. Ten races remain in their seasons, however, and they’ll be hungrier than ever to make their mark on 2024 and could offer some potential playoff drama should they win.

Chris Buescher, last year’s breakout star with three wins in a five-race span of summer brilliance, narrowly missed the playoffs despite a strong late-season push and several close-but-no-cigar races. His near-miss at Kansas, losing by a mere 0.001 seconds to Kyle Larson, proved costly, not to mention his run-in with eventual Regular Season Champion Tyler Reddick in the season’s first Darlington race. Buescher’s prowess on short tracks and road courses makes him a potential spoiler, especially in the first pair of rounds.

This was essentially a race-winning team that wound up with, well, no wins through the first 26. It feels more likely than not Buescher will snag one the rest of the way.

NASCAR’s all-time winningest driver Kyle Busch’s absence from the playoffs marks a historic moment, ending his streak of playoff appearances that stretched back to before the elimination-style format was even implemented. Despite finishing runner-up in the last two races, Busch couldn’t overcome a midseason slump that saw an uncharacteristic 10 finishes outside the top 10 over 11 races. With his experience, skill and recent speed he’s shown, Rowdy remains a threat at any track, particularly at Bristol, where he’s perhaps the best in the field.

Bubba Wallace was one of the strongest drivers over the summer, but a lack of wins — a stretch that runs back to 2022 — saw his playoff hopes evaporate. He did seem to elevate his game to a degree this year, however, and strong past performances on superspeedways make him a driver to watch at Talladega, where he’s won before. His fifth-place finish at Atlanta, another drafting-style track, in February suggests he could play spoiler there as well, which would be a healthy heaping of bittersweetness for the No. 23 team.

Recent Championship 4 contender Ross Chastain’s dramatic fall from 93 points above the elimination line to 33 points below in just eight races was a shocking turn of events, and one teams will likely reference in future summer strategies with a focus on his lack of stage points. Something seems to be missing from the No. 1 team this year after meteoric ascension in its first few years under the Trackhouse Racing banner, but it’s not to be counted out yet. Known for his aggressive style, Chastain could be a wild card at tracks like Martinsville or Bristol, where close-quarters racing often leads to fireworks, but he’s capable of winning anywhere.

Past Daytona 500 winner Michael McDowell, fresh off his Indy road course win last year, seemed to have plenty of speed with three poles in the first 15 races, but couldn’t seal the deal this season on the tracks where he’s most viewed as a threat. There are still a pair of road courses and two drafting-style races, and he’d love to give Front Row Motorsports a fond farewell before shifting to Spire Motorsports next season.

McDowell’s Front Row teammate Todd Gilliland and Legacy Motor Club’s Erik Jones, while further down the standings, have shown flashes of competitiveness, with both viewed as dark horse playoff contenders over the summer before their hopes ran dry. Still, the arrow is likely pointing up on each for the rest of the season and beyond, and Gilliland’s improving road-course skills make him one to watch at Watkins Glen, while Jones could surprise at a track like Martinsville, where success is even more in the driver’s hands. (Toss short-track ace Josh Berry in there too, while we’re at it.)

As the playoffs unfold, these drivers have nothing to lose and everything to gain (not to mention a lengthy consecutive seasons of winning streak on the line for Busch). With no playoff points to worry about, they can take risks that playoff drivers might avoid, a vast departure from mostly racing to get above the elimination line in recent weeks.

The 2024 NASCAR season has already been unpredictable, and with this much talent on the outside looking in, the playoff races promise even more excitement. From short tracks to superspeedways, road courses to intermediates, the non-playoff drivers are poised to leave their mark on the championship fight, potentially altering the course of what’s already shaping up to be a uniquely memorable postseason run.

bubba wallace and ross chastain share a look
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2. OK, but who’s got an edge among the title contenders?

Everyone appears to be gunning for top contender Kyle Larson, but even *he* is no guarantee to advance out of the Round of 16.

And now for the guys that did make it.

The 2024 NASCAR Playoffs are set to kick off with a bang at Atlanta Motor Speedway, marking the first time since 2008 that the iconic track hosts a postseason race. Known for its high-speed drafting since a recent reconfiguration and unpredictable outcomes — you know, like the literal closest three-wide finish in history — Atlanta is poised to set the tone for what promises to be an electrifying postseason.

Sunday’s race will be anything but predictable, particularly after the topsy-turvy nature of the past two races turned the playoffs on its head. Atlanta’s reconfiguration into a drafting-style track has made it one of the most challenging venues on the circuit, with an average of nine cautions per race and a record 48 lead changes in February. Opening the 10-race championship run with it could seed a high degree of uncertainty from the jump.

Though he didn’t win the Regular Season Championship, Kyle Larson enters the playoffs as the top seed and is generally regarded as the driver to beat this year in search of title No. 2, yet he faces a daunting challenge right out of the gate at Atlanta. No. 5 ranks last among the 16 playoff drivers in average points earned per race since the track’s reconfiguration … but perhaps there’s a reason for that. More to come in the chart below.

Despite leading 49% of all laps by Chevrolet drivers this season, an early hiccup — potentially not even of his own doing — could derail things for him in just the first race.

The driver who did win the Regular Season Championship, Tyler Reddick, is making his fourth straight playoff appearance but for the first time it would be a disappointment if he were to miss the Championship 4 rather than a surprise if he did make it. No. 45 leads all drivers in top-five finishes (11), top 10s (18) and has the best average finish at 11.15, shaping up to battle his fellow dirt maven Larson for championships for years to come.

It’s a stacked field throughout, however, and four of the six drivers with multiple 2024 wins raced for the championship at Phoenix in 2023, with one of them (Christopher Bell) looking to be the only driver in the series to make it there for three years running. The No. 20 Toyota driver still seems to be improving, too, and a first title this year feels entirely within reach.

But then again, you gotta wonder … one of these year’s has to be Denny Hamlin’s right?

Maybe it’s this one.

kyle larson gets in his car at atlanta
Alex Slitz | Getty Images

3. Who will draft their way into the Round of 12?

Kim Coon and Ryan Flores get you ready for the Round of 16 playoff opener at Atlanta Motor Speedway and tell you why it could be even tougher than Daytona or Talladega when it comes to superspeedway chaos.

4. The unlucky ones at Atlanta

If there’s anybody due for a change of fortune, it’s … championship favorite Kyle Larson, who has seemed to find every wreck in recent tumultuous races at the track.

DriverStartsDNFs by Accident
Kyle Larson54
Austin Dillon52
Chris Buescher52
BJ McLeod52
Noah Gragson52
Tyler Reddick52
William Byron52

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

Power Rankings: Will Daniel Suárez be the first Round of 12 driver?

Paint Scheme Preview: 2024 Atlanta summer race

Five thought starters that prove the 2024 NASCAR Playoffs will be a rare breed

NASCAR betting: 2024 Atlanta summer race odds

@nascarcasm: NASCAR Beefdown, 2024 Playoffs — who’s got beef?

Kyle Petty hot take: 2024 Southern 500 ‘one of the most dramatic races I’ve seen in a long time’

How the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Grid Challenge works

Reddick edges Larson by one point for regular-season title

Larson on ‘bummer’ of losing Regular Season Championship by single point

Briscoe joins select group who’ve won regular-season finale to make playoffs

2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs field set

Analysis: Briscoe delivers at Darlington in heartfelt Southern 500 triumph

Three Up, Three Down: Drivers in focus leaving Darlington

@nascarcasm: Fake texts to Darlington winner Chase Briscoe

Updated championship odds following Darlington

cars race at atlanta
Alex Slitz | Getty Images

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ryan Blaney brings the confidence of a NASCAR Cup Series Champion into this year’s playoff run.

The Team Penske driver stormed to a title in 2023 as the No. 12 seed, fitting for the driver of the No. 12 Ford. But there are fewer questions about the capabilities of him and his team entering the 2024 postseason, set to kick off Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

MORE: Cup Series Playoffs standings | Atlanta schedule

His championship charge a season ago included wins at Talladega Superspeedway and Martinsville Speedway along the way, with finishes of sixth, second, first and second lining the route to the Bill France Cup. But that all followed a lackluster regular season in which Blaney’s only victory came in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, for his last top-five finish before his Talladega triumph in the Round of 12.

Blaney’s 2024 campaign has been markedly more impressive, with wins at Iowa Speedway and Pocono Raceway for seven top fives and 11 top 10s in 26 races, his top-five and wins total each just one tally short of his 2023 numbers with 10 races still to run this year.

“I said a couple months ago I thought our group was in a great spot,” Blaney said Wednesday at Cup Series Playoffs Media Day. “Mentally, performance-wise, whether that’s on pit road or on the race track, I feel like we’re really good. I thought at this time last year, we were kind of scrounging to figure out how figure out how we were going to perform how we need to because we were off a little bit. And this year, I think we’re in a much better spot. So, hopefully, we can continue to bring that same pace and continue to learn on the pace that we’ve been bringing the last few months.

“But yeah, this group is in a way better spot. I think us as a whole too — like us as Team Penske as a whole, we’re in a much better spot as well. So, hopefully, all that means a lot for all three of our cars and the 21 (Harrison Burton) to make a good run at it.”

The team’s mentality is intentional. With the trophy still in the No. 12 group’s clutches, Blaney wants his competition to fear him as a threat to win every week.

“That’s what I’ve told my guys: I want to scare every other team,” he said. “Like, I want you guys to be so good that everyone is nervous about us when we unload.  That’s the kind of the mindset that we’ve tried to have because I think that’s a great mindset for everyone on the team to have. Like, you want everybody worrying about you because you can be that dangerous, and I think we definitely are.”

That outward tenacity is not something Blaney prominently displayed prior to his championship run. But with a title in his back pocket, the 30-year-old has proven he can climb the mountain, changing his perspective coming back to the playoffs one year later.

“I definitely think you’re more confident in trying to get back to Phoenix,” Blaney said. “It’s not as simple as just ‘do what you did last year,’ though. But I feel like once you have that experience and you persevere through the three rounds to get there, I think it just really motivates your team and just gives them a level of confidence of like, hey, we know we can do this. We’ve been there before, and now let’s try to figure out a way to do it again and accept all the challenges that are going to be thrown at you and things like that and use your experience to your advantage. So hopefully, we can bring that same intensity that we did to the playoffs last year again.”

Joey Logano has been teammates with Blaney since 2018. The Blaney he sees today is not the same Blaney he saw a season ago.

“Yeah, he’s a different person — in a good way, not in a bad way,” said Logano, a champion in 2018 and 2022. “It’s not like it like went to his head and became a jackass or anything like that. He’s still a good dude, but you can tell that over the last couple years, he’s become more confident, not only off the race track, but you see it on the race track, where he’s putting whole races together now, and all those type of things, right? That’s why he won the championship last year. He’s able to do all that.

“I mean, that’s part of experience. That’s part of what takes time to learn and do. But, yeah, he’s grown up. Our little Ryan’s all grown up.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — With the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs beginning this weekend in Sunday’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET on USA Network, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the 16 drivers who have qualified to compete for the 2024 championship met with the media Wednesday at the Charlotte Convention Center to share their expectations and hopes for this elimination-style championship run.

Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion and current reseeded points leader, said he didn’t necessarily see a specific “driver to beat” among the competitors.

MORE: Full Cup playoff standings | 2024 playoffs are one of a kind

Furthermore, the 30-year-old Californian, who leads the series with four wins this season, said he fully expects a “dark horse” to advance at least out of the first three-race round featuring races at Atlanta, the Watkins Glen International next week and the famed Bristol Motor Speedway half-miler on Sept. 21.

“You definitely have favorites and guys who are really fast every week, but it’s NASCAR and Next Gen racing,” Larson said. “It’s always crazy, and there’s always a couple heavy (favorite) guys that get knocked out somewhat early that could very well be deserving champions.

“So, it’s hard to predict who’s going to be in the final four. There’s definitely some good teams that have the best shot currently, but a lot of stuff can happen and there’s usually a team or two that turns things up a lot in the playoffs and executes really well and makes it pretty far — maybe not the final four, but pretty far.”

One of Larson’s season-long primary challengers is 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick, who claimed the Regular Season Championship Sunday night in Darlington by a single point over Larson, despite battling through severe nausea throughout the grueling 500-mile race.

Reddick said Wednesday that despite how sick he felt, he never planned to get out of the car mid-race.

“Someone would have had to pull me out,” he asserted.

As with Larson, Reddick said he doesn’t expect his team’s approach to change whether they are considered championship favorites or not. But two-race winner and newly crowned Regular Season Champion Reddick is considered a Championship 4-worthy competitor.

“Maybe the numbers show that, but I don’t think we’re carrying ourselves around like we’re the baddest group around; we just do a good job of each individual on the team doing their part during the week,” Reddick said. “We just show up to the race track and have a good amount of focus and do a really good job of just getting the results we need, even on the days we have issues.

“That’s been the nice thing about this year, a number of times — countless times it feels like — we’ve had things not go our way, but we’ve been able to fight through it and still get the results.”

He added, “There’s really no reason to change up what you’ve been doing all year. That’s when you get yourself in trouble.”

Larson has won at eight of the 10 playoff tracks, accounting for 12 of his 27 career wins. Fellow Californian Reddick has two of his seven career wins at playoff tracks, including Talladega Superspeedway earlier this year.

Martin Truex Jr. said Wednesday that a ride for the 2025 Daytona 500 is in the works, and that his crew chief will have a familiar name: Cole Pearn.

Truex first revealed the news on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, confirming the details in a later rotation during Wednesday’s NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Media Day rounds at the Charlotte Convention Center.

RELATED: Cup Series Playoffs standings | Atlanta weekend schedule

“That’s right. I didn’t know it was that big of news,” laughed Truex, who announced in June that the 2024 Cup Series season would be his last as a full-time driver. “I thought people knew already, so I might have let the cat out of the bag prematurely.”

Truex, 44, has been bullish on piecing together a ride in the Feb. 16 season opener at Daytona International Speedway ever since his announcement, telling the Dale Jr. Download that a Daytona 500 ride was “almost a guarantee.” Joe Gibbs Racing teammate and 23XI Racing co-owner Denny Hamlin offered Truex a ride on the spot in the hours after his announcement.

“I think it’s all but done, but until they say the word, and it’s always up in the air,” Truex said ahead of the Aug. 24 race at Daytona International Speedway. “So it should work out.”

On Wednesday, Hamlin confirmed talks remain ongoing but that nothing has been finalized at this time.

“Yeah, 23XI and JGR are kind of looking at the options and trying to figure out what’s the best avenue for it,” Hamlin said, “but certainly having Martin in the 500 is going to be exciting.”

Pearn was crew chief for Truex’s team for five seasons (2015-19), and the pair won 24 races during that span, including the Cup Series title in 2017. He stepped away after the 2019 campaign, returning just twice — once as a spotter for the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing team at the Charlotte Roval in 2021, and again in a one-week deal as a fill-in engineer at Sonoma Raceway in 2022.

Coercing Pearn back from retirement once more didn’t take much, Truex said.

“In just talking, it just kind of popped out,” he said. “Like, ‘would you be interested in doing that?’ ‘Yeah, I think so.’ So just talking. It’s gonna be fun.”

Pearn is not much a stranger to the current Joe Gibbs Racing program, remaining a consultant in recent years and “keeping his fingers on everything,” Truex added. Their relationship today does not differ much from when Pearn was atop the pit box either.

“We don’t talk very often, but when we do, it’s just like old times,” Truex said. “He can pretty much read me like a book. He knows exactly what I’m thinking. I don’t know, it’s just, he’s a special guy. He’s different than anyone I’ve ever known. He knows everything. He knows the answer to everything. And he tells you things, you’re like, how’d you know that?”

While details remain unsettled on Truex’s part-time endeavors in 2025, there are a pair of numbers he’d like to choose between: Nos. 56 and 78. Truex drove the No. 56 Toyota for Michael Waltrip Racing from 2010-13. However, Truex Jr. wheeled the No. 78 car from 2014-2018 with Furniture Row Racing, winning the NASCAR Cup Series title in 2017 with those digits donning the door.

“It’s probably either going to be 78 or 56, 78 being our championship number which is a special one for me, obviously,” Truex said. “And then my number was always 56, so we’ll see.”

Truex and current crew chief James Small enter the 2024 playoffs as the No. 16 seed in the 16-driver postseason field, with the No. 19 Toyota just one point beneath the provisional elimination line.

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HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (Sept. 4, 2024) — Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) announced Wednesday that incoming broadcast partner of the NASCAR Xfinity Series, The CW, will partner with drivers Sheldon Creed and Ty Gibbs to promote their upcoming slate of NASCAR Xfinity Series races in 2024.

The deal will kick off with a primary scheme on Sheldon Creed’s No. 18 Toyota GR Supra in the Focused Health 250 at 3 p.m. ET on Saturday at Atlanta Motor Speedway (USA, NBC Sports App, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Rasio). Ty Gibbs will represent The CW on his No. 54 Toyota Camry XSE the following weekend on Sunday, Sept. 15th at 3 p.m. ET in the Go Bowling at the Glen at Watkins Glen International (USA, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Xfinity schedule | Driver standings

“We’re honored to help usher in a new era of the Xfinity Series with The CW,” said Steve de Souza, executive vice president of Xfinity Series and development for JGR. “We’re looking forward to assisting our great fanbase in making the transition to our new partners at The CW. There’s no shortage of compelling story lines and great racing in our series, and we’re all looking forward to the enthusiastic and dedicated coverage that our new partners will bring to every race.”

It was announced earlier this year that The CW has secured the exclusive broadcasting rights of all NASCAR Xfinity Series races, practices, and qualifying sessions beginning in 2025 and extending through the 2031 season. The deal marks the first time in Xfinity Series history that every race will be available on free, over-the-air broadcast television with additional content available through The CW’s digital platforms.

In addition to the seven-year deal, The CW has also secured the rights to the final eight races of the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series season. Beginning with the Food City 300 at 7:30 p.m. ET on Sept. 20 at Bristol Motor Speedway, race fans can tune in to The CW to follow the road to the Xfinity Series Playoffs. From there, The CW will be the home of Xfinity Series racing all the way through the crowning of the 2024 champion on Nov. 9 at Phoenix Raceway.

Joe Dilly’s summer vacation in 2016 was barely halfway through its first day when he’d already reached the ocean. The 14-year-old youngster had gone swimming in the saltwater at Ocean Isle Beach on the North Carolina coast, and when his family broke out a football, he was among those throwing spirals from the shallows.

Mischief, maybe a prank was Dilly’s first thought when he felt a sharp tug below the surface.

“I feel like a really hard pull under the water, kind of like someone grabs your foot to scare you,” Dilly recalls. “That’s exactly it, like it didn’t hurt — just a really strong pull. I’m looking around, and I don’t see anything.”

Dilly knew soon enough, though, that something was wrong, and a cousin saw a tall fin cresting the top of the water. Dilly quickly hobbled to the shore, admittedly “a little freaked out,” and saw blood everywhere as he reached the sand. A numbing feeling began to set in.

“I kind of knew it was a shark,” Dilly says.

So was born the mother of all conversation starters for the front-tire changer on Team Penske’s No. 22 Ford for driver Joey Logano. When FOX Sports introduced the No. 22 team’s over-the-wall crew to a TV audience during the April 21 broadcast of the Cup Series’ most recent race at Talladega Superspeedway, Dilly noted his rookie status in his five-second bio but threw in almost casually: “Also, shark attack survivor.”

The only thing missing was a record-scratch sound effect. “You know you’re a bad man when a shark bites into you and spits you out,” cracked FOX analyst Clint Bowyer. “Did you hear that guy?!”

Now 21 and in his first full season of Cup Series competition, Dilly and a veteran group of crew members are bracing for the playoffs that start with Sunday’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Team Penske has won the last two championships, with Logano’s second title in 2022 preceding Ryan Blaney’s first in last season’s campaign.

Weekly Team Rosters

RELATED: Atlanta weekend schedule | Cup Series standings

Dilly counts himself fortunate to have no long-term effects from his aquatic encounter eight summers ago, just the scars from near his toes to around his ankle. The wound, requiring more than 100 stitches to close, nicked one tendon but left others unblemished. Shark experts examined photos taken from the hospital, saying later that the bite marks were consistent with those made by a blacktip shark, which average nearly five feet in length. As pit-stop practice wound down last week at Team Penske’s campus, Dilly joked with his teammates that it must have been a great white.

Jake Seminara, Dilly’s opposite number on the rear-tire changes for the No. 22 team, was among those not buying it. The 38-year-old native of Steubenville, Ohio, has nearly two decades in the sport and two Cup Series championships to show for it, and he’s provided a valuable influence for Dilly and the rest of the crew. There’s a gap in age and experience between the two tire changers, but crew chief Paul Wolfe has enjoyed watching how they’ve blended into a cohesive group.

“He was a rookie coming in, and typically you wouldn’t see a guy with his experience level move up to a Cup car as quickly as he did,” Wolfe says of Dilly. “But he came in and we kind of put him through our training process and he got up to speed really fast. It’s really amazing. I think just the athletic side of it, he was able to adapt, and now you have a guy like Jake who’s been in the Cup garage for, I don’t know, 20 years or however long he’s been here, and you put some fresh guys like that with him, they’re able to balance each other out and help him progress a lot quicker.”

Both Dilly and Seminara were introduced to the sport by their fathers. Dilly’s father, Bryan, has worked at Penske for 25 years and was a car chief when Ryan Newman and Brad Keselowski drove for the organization. The younger Dilly would accompany his dad to races close to their home in Mooresville, North Carolina, growing up. He played one year of college football as a linebacker at North Greenville (S.C.) University, but spent his breaks training at Penske. When the opportunity arose on the racing side, he jumped.

Seminara, like Dilly, had also been immersed in stick-and-ball sports, but his welcome-to-NASCAR moment came in 1999 when his father took him to Pocono Raceway for his first race. He saw live pit stops, thought “I can do that,” and made it his mission as he finished high school to reach that goal. Seminara moved to North Carolina in 2004 — “people called me crazy,” he says – and split his time learning fabrication and mechanic duties, attending pit-crew school and working as a barback while fostering the right connections to make it all happen.

Jake Seminara, rear tire-changer for the No. 22 team, readies for a pit stop at Richmond Raceway
Jake Seminara, rear tire-changer for the No. 22 team, readies for a pit stop at Richmond Raceway (Alex Daus | NASCAR.com)

A year and a half later, Seminara reached the Cup Series on Mark Martin’s team for car owner Jack Roush, then pitted Kyle Busch’s Joe Gibbs Racing entries for 10 years before joining Team Penske in 2018. The full-circle twist: Less than a decade after he watched Bobby Labonte win the first race he attended, Seminara was executing pit stops for the same No. 18 JGR team. “I found that kind of ironic,” he says now.

Seminara has seen pit-stop techniques and equipment evolve, and has been a part of seven-person, six-person and five-person crews as the rules have changed throughout his career. He says the crew members with longer tenures who have adapted quickest still make up the best teams on pit road, but he’s also taken time to mentor Dilly and the newer guard, shaping the next generation.

“I think everyone else on the team has won two championships, and he’s won one race, so he’s very fortunate, I think, to follow and learn,” Seminara says. “I feel like we can kind of steer him and teach him the way we think things should be done, but it’s up to him if he wants to do that. But we told him, eventually, one day, five, six, seven years down the road, you’re going to be the older guy, so you’re going to be teaching these younger guys.”

One of the most consequential pit-road changes came when NASCAR’s Next Gen car was introduced in 2022, with a single, center-mounted wheel fastener replacing the five-lug system. While many veterans were forced to adapt to a new method for tire changes, Dilly was the first Team Penske crew member to train solely on the single-lug technique. “They never let me even touch a five-lug gun,” Dilly says.

“He didn’t have to unlearn anything, right?” Wolfe said. “I think that was somewhat of an advantage for him. You’ve got these guys like Jake that have been changing five lugs for how many years and get that muscle memory, and a new guy coming in doesn’t have to forget what he did for 15 years and can start fresh. He’s obviously a very talented guy, and he’s done a nice job. It’s one thing to be able to do it in pit practice and have the speed that we look for, but then when you bring him to the big time, bring him to the race track and he’s still able to perform under the pressure was exciting to see and obviously the reason why he’s still on our car.”

The “big time” that Wolfe references is about to shift to its prime time in the 10 playoff races that lay ahead. Logano reached the Cup Series’ biggest prize just two seasons ago, but was eliminated after a rocky first round last year. This season, he slots in as the ninth seed in the 16-driver field, having clinched title eligibility with a late June win at Nashville Superspeedway.

MORE: Five playoff topics to ponder | Join: Playoffs Grid Challenge

For the No. 22 crew, the mechanics and general approach to pit service in the postseason may be unchanged, but the stakes are higher and margin for error even slimmer. Seminara has been through the playoff rigors before, but the hunger for his third championship burns inside.

“For me, it’s totally ramped up, but the butterflies will definitely get more intense,” Seminara says. “I think if you’re not getting nervous at this point, I don’t feel like you’re being competitive. For me, just this part of the year, you have to be flawless. You can make a mistake and you’re out of the playoffs, and then your season’s done and you just ride around for the next four, five, six, seven weeks. We got eliminated in the first round last year. It was terrible, and then you literally think, ‘Man, I’ve got seven more weeks of this. We’re irrelevant, basically.”

Seems there’s a high bar for stress already established for the tire changer who has survived a brush with a predator from the deep blue sea. Dilly says there’s no true comparison between the relative dangers of the ocean and the perils of popping over the wall into onrushing traffic, but the handful of close calls early in his young career haven’t slowed him.

“We kind of make fun of him, but I couldn’t imagine being bit by a shark,” Seminara says. “We always joke with him about it, right? No, I’ve never had anything traumatic to me happen like that, so I can’t put myself in those shoes.”

The bigger question is whether he’s been back in the water since. Dilly smiles and says his trips to the beach now come with an abundance of caution.

“I go to the ocean, but I go fishing now. I’ll go to my knee to cast, and I kind of walk out real quick,” he says. “Not the biggest fan of swimming anymore. If I can’t see my feet, I’m not a fan.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Sept. 4, 2024) — Between the action-packed racing of America’s No. 1 motorsport each weekend, NASCAR Studios will provide fans additional entertainment and insights throughout the 2024 NASCAR Playoffs with the launch of three new shows: NASCAR Inside the Playoffs (truTV and Max), NASCAR Daily (YouTube) and Drop the Jack (YouTube and podcast platforms).

“NASCAR fans are the most passionate in the world and we want to deliver them quality options for additional entertainment, insight and analysis,” said John Dahl, NASCAR senior VP of content. “These new shows are a great complement to our existing options for NASCAR fans today, with popular media talent, industry insiders and rising voices eager to entertain and educate race fans however they prefer to consume content.”

“This is going to be so much fun,” said Shannon Spake, who adds to a remarkable national broadcasting resume that spans more than two decades and multiple sports for networks including SPEED, ESPN and FOX Sports. “I get to talk about the sport I have been a part of for 20 years in two totally different settings, alongside some of my greatest friends and most respected peers in the industry. The fans have been so good to me over the years, and I’m excited to take them further inside the action of the postseason while staying up to speed on some of the fun and entertaining things unfolding away from the track.”

A rundown of the three new shows is below:

NASCAR Inside the Playoffs

  • Thursdays, 7-8 p.m. ET on truTV and streaming on Max — Debuts Thursday, Sept. 5

NASCAR’s partnership with TNT Sports gets a head start before 2025 broadcast rights begin with the new weekly studio show NASCAR Inside the Playoffs, which will dissect the evolving postseason action through an unfiltered lens. The show is hosted by beloved veteran broadcasters Shannon Spake and Steve Letarte, along with up-and-coming media talent Dylan “Mamba” Smith. A rotating fourth voice of current and former drivers will join each week, beginning with two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch in the first two episodes. Jordan Bianchi, NASCAR reporter for The Athletic, will join to cover breaking news.

NASCAR Daily

  • Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. ET on YouTube and podcast platforms — Debuts Monday, Sept. 9

Balancing breaking news with entertaining conversation, Spake will infuse her perspective while welcoming regular guest appearances from drivers, industry personalities and other contributors in episodes running approximately 10 minutes every weekday morning. The show will also introduce a rotation of recurring segments that put a spotlight on different aspects of NASCAR and the fan experience, including checking in on the latest social media chatter, and a weekly sports betting segment featuring analyst Erica Renee Davis.

Drop the Jack

  • Thursdays, 3 p.m. ET on YouTube and podcast platforms — Debuts Thursday, Sept. 5

A new addition to the NASCAR podcast universe, Drop the Jack provides some of the Cup Series’ best pit crew athletes and other industry veterans a platform to engage in compelling conversations about the full spectrum of life at and away from the race track. Mamba Smith — a former full-time aspiring NASCAR driver turned rising media personality — will help guide these entertaining and emotional discussions with pit crew athletes Derrell Edwards, Michael Hicks, Jorden Paige and Paul Swan along with special guests.

Execution of all three shows will run through the new NASCAR Productions home in Concord, North Carolina. NASCAR opened its new 58,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art production facility earlier this year as it continues to invest significantly in original content and live production capabilities for the league and its stakeholders.

The 10-race, 16-driver NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs begin Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET on USA, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

There never will be another championship run like the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

That definitively can be said even with the likelihood the final 10 races of the season will produce the typically indelible moments that have come to define the crowning of a champion in NASCAR’s premier series. Controversy, drama and pressure have been hallmarks of the Cup playoffs for 20 years, and this year probably will be remembered for the same.

RELATED: Playoff standings | Playoff schedule

But before the green flag falls at Atlanta Motor Speedway, these playoffs already are one of a kind.

They will feature a unique mix of drivers, races and tracks that are highly unlikely ever to be assembled in this manner and order again. A curious blend of impending departures (Martin Truex Jr., Stewart-Haas Racing), intriguing debuts (Harrison Burton, Ty Gibbs) and riveting one-offs (Atlanta Motor Speedway, Watkins Glen International) that will add an unpredictable sheen to the championship fight.

Here’s a look at some spicy ingredients that set the table for the 2024 playoffs being such a rare breed:

First-round mayhem

For 10 years, the opening three races of the playoffs mostly have been a straightforward affair of intermediate tracks that seem built for weeding out lesser teams. Darlington Raceway and Kansas Speedway are known for rewarding drivers and teams with few weaknesses.

But Darlington and Kansas are absent in 2024, as the first round is transformed into an underdog’s paradise with a drafting track and road course for the first time.

Start with the Sept. 8 opener at Atlanta Motor Speedway, whose 2022 reconfiguration into a miniaturized version of Daytona or Talladega has produced razor-thin margins (the Feb. 25 race was the closest three-way finish in NASCAR history) and upset bids.

Then it’s the first playoff race ever at Watkins Glen, another haven of surprising outcomes that also has featured its share of first-time winners (Steve Park, Marcos Ambrose, AJ Allmendinger, Chase Elliott). The Sept. 15 event also will mark the first time its race falls outside of its traditional early to mid-August weekend since 1986 (when the 2.45-mile road course returned to the Cup schedule after a long layoff).

And of course the Sept. 21 elimination race at Bristol Motor Speedway is a high-banked short track always capable of delivering fireworks.

This year’s first round is an X-factor delight but with a quick expiration date.

Atlanta and Watkins Glen are in the playoffs together this year, but both already have been returned to the regular season next year in the recently announced 2025 schedule.

Goodbye to all that

Chase Briscoe’s stirring win in the Southern 500 ensured that Stewart-Haas Racing will get at least one more shot at a title in its final season before shutting its doors. It’s the last playoff ride for a team that once was a perennial contender: two championships in the past 15 years and five Championship 4 appearances with Kevin Harvick.

Also a championship-race stalwart (five appearances between 2015-21), Martin Truex Jr. will cap his Hall of Fame-worthy career with a final run at a second Cup title that has been elusive (with three-runner-up finishes since the 2017 championship).

Upset upstarts

It would be hard to find a more inconceivable playoff debut than for Harrison Burton, who went from outside the top 30 in points to championship contender in the course of two magical laps at Daytona International Speedway. But what makes it even more astounding is that the first playoff appearance for Burton comes with little assurance he will have a chance to repeat. Wood Brothers Racing has already moved on with its No. 21 ride next season, and Burton has no confirmed 2025 plans, which will make the 2024 playoffs a major audition for the next ride.

The 2024 playoffs also will be the first for Ty Gibbs, and after a season that was an improvement in virtually every category over his 2023 rookie year, the first career Cup win for the 21-year-old could happen over the final 10 races.

Perfect attendance

They are the best teams in the Cup Series, but it still means something when Team Penske, Joe Gibbs Racing and Hendrick Motorsports can qualify for the playoffs at a 100 percent rate. Since Penske’s expansion to a third car in 2018, this will mark only the second time that the 11 cars from those three powerhouse organizations all have made the championship field.

Missing but still present

It seems safe to say that these will be the last playoffs in a long while (let’s say at least the next decade) that won’t include at least one of these names: Kyle Busch, Ross Chastain, Chris Buescher and Bubba Wallace.

But in the uniquely inclusive manner of the NASCAR postseason, there’s a solid chance at least one will leave their mark in Victory Lane this year. The last three Cup seasons each have featured at least one non-playoff driver winning during the final 10 races. With Busch on a recent surge, and Buescher and Wallace achingly close to wins and devastated at missing the playoffs while their teammates qualified, expect one of the final 10 checkered flags to fall their way.

MORE: Playoffs Grid Challenge | Shop for playoff gear

Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is the host of the NASCAR on NBC Podcast and has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.