The green flag drops on the 10-race NASCAR Cup playoffs at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, but the bulk of betting action in the championship futures market will come after the Quaker State 400.

Ed Salmons, vice president of risk management at the Westgate SuperBook, estimates that, based on past years, 75% of this season’s NASCAR futures handle has yet to show up.

The wait-and-see mentality is particularly understandable this year, as some drivers near the top of the oddsboard are likely to get bounced from the playoffs before the Round of 8. After the drafting style racing in Atlanta, contenders must survive the Watkins Glen road course and the Bristol short track in the Round of 16, then Kansas Speedway, another superspeedway at Talladega and the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course in the Round of 12. There’s plenty of uncertainty lurking in that six-race stretch.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | Ranking the 2024 playoff field in tiers

“I think everyone (is at risk),” Salmons told NASCAR.com this week. “Obviously, the playoff points that you bring forward will be huge, but I think you’re going to get a guy or two you wouldn’t think of making it that will run really well or win a race. I mean, Harrison Burton could win Atlanta, who knows?

“In that first set of six, you’re going to have some stuff going on that you wouldn’t expect.”

Unexpected results may not only save bettors from early heartbreak, they may also create value on the odds board as the playoffs progress.

“I do think more value will arise the further we get into the playoffs in large part due to the schedule,” Jim Sannes, a quantitative NASCAR analyst and bettor, said in a direct message.

That value could show up right after Sunday’s race.

“With the opener being in Atlanta, one of the contenders is going to have issues, which will likely lead to their odds lengthening,” continued Sannes, managing editor of digital media at FanDuel Research. “We could see something similar in Talladega. It might be risky to buy low on someone with two more chaotic races lurking in this round, but as long as that risk is mitigated by lengthened odds, I’m receptive to the idea.”

2024 NASCAR Cup championship odds: Buzz around Reddick, Bell

Tyler Reddick is a bit of an outlier on the futures board. The champion has come from either the Hendrick, Gibbs or Penske garages in six straight years and eight of the last nine, and Reddick is the only driver not from one of those teams priced at 10-to-1 odds or shorter ahead of Atlanta.

In fact, the No. 45 Toyota is among the championship favorites, residing in the neighborhood of Kyle Larson, Christopher Bell and Denny Hamlin.

Here are the odds from three top sportsbooks for all 16 contenders to win the title.

DriversSuperBookDraftKingsBetMGM
Kyle Larson+400+380+375
Christopher Bell+450+450+500
Denny Hamlin+500+400+400
Tyler Reddick+500+550+600
William Byron+800+700+800
Ryan Blaney+800+800+900
Chase Elliott +1000+1100+1100
Joey Logano+2500+1800+2000
Brad Keselowski+2500+2000+2000
Martin Truex Jr.+2500+1800+1600
Ty Gibbs+3000+3500+4000
Alex Bowman+6000+4000+5000
Daniel Suárez+20000+12000+20000
Chase Briscoe +20000+10000+15000
Austin Cindric+30000+12000+20000
Harrison Burton+500000+20000+500000

“He’s probably been the most consistent driver all year,” Salmons said of Reddick. “He doesn’t have the wins that some of the other guys have (tied for 5th with two wins), but it seems like he runs top five almost every week (leads the series with 11 top-fives and 18 top-10s). He certainly seems to fit the profile (of a Cup champion).”

“That’s a team that’s normally in past years made a lot of silly mistakes that have hurt him, and they seemingly eliminated that this year, or at least they have so far.”

The championship, of course, will ultimately be decided at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 10. Yes, he’ll have to traverse a diverse set of nine layouts to make the final four, but the eventual champ has to run well, and probably even win, on the one-mile track in the desert.

Sannes doesn’t model NASCAR futures markets quantitatively, but he agrees that bettors should put significant weight on Phoenix as they’re handicapping the championship.

“In this current format, the eventual champions have all been drivers who have been good at the track where the Championship Race was eventually held,” Sannes said. “That’s why I’d love to get a bit of a discount at some point on Christopher Bell, given how lethal he has been on short, flat tracks this year. He’s the first driver whose odds I’ll check after the superspeedways and entering the Round of 8, before the schedule sets up for tracks that suit him well.”

A Bell title would mean a loss for the SuperBook. There’s been more money bet on the No. 20 to win it all than any other driver, per Salmons.

While he’ll price Phoenix more heavily into his championship odds as the field is trimmed, Salmons said, “I think Phoenix has always factored in, and I think that’s why Bell got so much money — because he’s so good at Phoenix.”

How they’re betting ‘em

Here’s a snapshot of the NASCAR Cup championship futures books at BetMGM and the Westgate:

• Kyle Busch is BetMGM’s largest liability. With the No. 8 missing the playoff cut, the sportsbook is safe.

• Austin Cindric represents the SuperBook’s largest potential loss. “I’ll live with it,” Salmons quipped.

• Hamlin is the SuperBook’s second largest liability, followed by Bell. Salmons has booked 83 futures tickets on Hamlin; the next driver in terms of ticket count has 19. … Hamlin is third on BetMGM’s liability list.

• Kyle Larson has drawn the most bets (12.3%) and the highest handle (15.6%) at BetMGM, and is the book’s second largest liability. Not so at the Westgate. “We’re in a really good spot” on Larson, Salmons said.

• Salmons also mentioned Reddick and Blaney as winners for the house.

Marcus DiNitto manages a sports betting partnership with The Sporting News. NASCAR is one of the many sports Marcus enjoys wagering on. Follow him on Twitter; do not follow his picks.

The NASCAR playoffs are finally upon us, and it’s officially an all-out sprint from here to the Cup Series championship for the 16 drivers whose title hopes are still alive.

To help sort out who has the edge amidst all the postseason madness — as well as what each driver needs most in the playoffs — let’s turn once again to our race simulation system. As a refresher, this method looks at a driver’s previous performance (both overall and at each specific track type) to estimate their probability of finishing in each spot each race, then uses those numbers to simulate the playoffs 10,000 times, tracking how often every playoff participant advances at each stage of the postseason and, ultimately, wins the championship.

Here’s the overall big picture of the championship from those 10,000 simulations:

Graphic showing the results of 10,000 simulations of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs with percentage chance of each driver advancing through each round.

Unsurprisingly, Kyle Larson is the championship favorite, as befits the best driver in the world. But it’s worth pointing out that, in the vast majority of simulations (78 percent), Larson didn’t win his second career Cup Series title. Most of the time when that happened, the crown went to either Tyler Reddick, Christopher Bell, William Byron or Denny Hamlin … but they still left some daylight for the rest of the playoff field to make their own bids. So let’s run through each playoff driver’s path to victory, with a focus on which races have the biggest impact on their odds of becoming a champion.

Kyle Larson

What he needs in the Round of 16: Keep the ship steady.

With a 35-point cushion in the playoff standings and a greater than 95 percent chance of making the Round of 12, Larson is in good shape as long as he cranks out some decent finishes at Atlanta, Watkins Glen and Bristol. In simulations where he finishes 30th or better in two of the three races in Round 1, Larson advances 99 percent of the time — and even in sims where he has just one finish of 30th or better out of the three races, he has an 84 percent chance of moving on. The only thing to really avoid is finishing 31st or worse in every race of the round, which would give Larson just a 19 percent chance to advance. Keep an eye on Bristol in particular for one of the sport’s top short-track racers: Larson’s average finish of 14.5 at the Last Great Colosseum in simulations where he advances falls to 34.6 in the sims where he doesn’t.

Looking ahead: As the king of the intermediates, Larson has to take care of business at Kansas in the Round of 12 and Las Vegas in the Round of 8 — both places where he’s won multiple times before. In simulations where he’s active in the third round, Larson’s championship odds rise to 29 percent when he finishes top 10 at Las Vegas, but fall to 17 percent when he finishes 31st or worse.

Tyler Reddick

What he needs in the Round of 16: Take full advantage of the road course.

Similar to Larson, Reddick — who won the Regular Season Championship — mainly needs to keep the disasters to a minimum if he wants to advance out of Round 1. He makes the second round 95 percent of the time when he finishes 30th or better in two of the next three races, and 61 percent of the time even if he does it once, but three finishes of 31st or worse would give Reddick just a 3 percent chance of advancing. Reddick’s biggest pivot-point in the first round is Watkins Glen, which isn’t surprising for arguably the top road-course driver in the sport (certainly among full-timers). Reddick has a field-high 11 percent chance of winning there on Sept. 15, and a 40 percent chance of finishing in the top five.

Looking ahead: Reddick will get another chance to show off his road-racing skills at the Charlotte Roval in Round 2, but the most pivotal race along his path to the Championship 4 comes in the third round at Homestead-Miami — a place he’s never won before, but has three top fives in four career starts. When Reddick advances to the Round of 8 and finishes top 10 at Homestead, he wins the championship 25 percent of the time (versus just 12 percent when he finishes 21st or worse).

Christopher Bell

What he needs in the Round of 16: Keep running strong at Bristol.

There’s a case to be made that Bell has been the best all-around driver in the Cup Series, in terms of his versatility across every type of track. He’s the only full-time driver with an Adjusted Points+ Index at least 60 percent better than the Cup Series average at ovals, short tracks, road courses and drafting tracks. So it’s hard to nail down a particular place as a make-or-break track for Bell. But if we had to pick one, Bristol seems to carry extra importance in the simulations — Bell’s odds of advancing out of the Round of 16 rise to 99.7 percent when he has a top-10 finish there, while they fall to 84.3 percent when he finishes 31st or worse. And Bell has to like those odds; he’s been among the top 10 in each of his past three Bristol outings.

Looking ahead: If he makes the Round of 8, Bell should circle Martinsville on the calendar. In the simulations where he’s still active in the title hunt by then, he has a 22 percent chance of winning the championship when he nabs a top 10 there, literally double his chances when he finishes outside the top 30 (11 percent). And both scenarios could happen, given how all over the place Bell has been at the Paperclip in his career.

William Byron

What he needs in the Round of 16: Capitalize at The Glen and don’t mess up Bristol.

Because Byron won at Daytona (the ultimate drafting track) earlier this year and has won multiple times at Atlanta since its reconfiguration, we might think the opening race of the playoffs is the most important to Byron’s chances of moving on. However, pack racing being what it is at Atlanta now, Byron has better odds among the favorites at Bristol and The Glen (where he is an underrated road-course ace). In simulations where Byron had a top 10 at either track, he had a 99 percent chance to advance to the Round of 12, compared with 72 percent when he finished outside the top 30 at either track (and 35 percent when disaster struck at both races). Byron can survive a chaotic day at Atlanta, but he needs to run well at the other two tracks to feel good about his path to the second round.

Looking ahead: Title-wise, Byron’s highest-leverage track along the road to the Championship 4 is Martinsville in the Round of 8. If he’s still in the title hunt by then, his odds of winning the Cup Series crown are 19 percent when he finishes in the top 10, but they’re only 8 percent when he finishes outside the top 20. But Byron also has to get there first, which is where the Roval comes in during the Round of 12. In sims where Byron is still active that round, his odds of advancing to the Round of 8 are 95 percent when he finishes top 10 at Charlotte, but only 56 percent when he finishes 31st or worse there.

Harrison Burton, William Byron and Denny Hamlin race at Martinsville.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Denny Hamlin

What he needs in the Round of 16: Dominate at Bristol, baby!

Still seeking that first championship, Hamlin hits the Round of 16 ranked sixth in the standings after closing the regular season with finishes either in the top 10 or 30th or worse in each of his last seven races. Now he’s looking at a first-round slate that isn’t exactly the most favorable for him — starting with a drafting track and a road course, both track types where Hamlin has been surprisingly mediocre recently. This season, he had an Adjusted Pts+ index 56 percent worse than average at road/street courses and 68 percent worse at plate/drafting tracks, which explains why Hamlin’s early advancement odds are the lowest (82 percent) out of the top seven on our list of favorites. However, Hamlin’s saving grace in Round 1 is Bristol, where he’s the second-leading active winner with four victories. In our simulations, Hamlin advances 94 percent of the time when he finishes 20th or better at Bristol, but only 53 percent of the time when he finishes outside the top 30.

Looking ahead: Faced with a similar breakdown of track types in the second round (an oval, a plate track and a road course), Hamlin needs a strong showing at Kansas to stabilize his chances of advancing to the Round of 8. And then, Martinsville is the most important race for his Championship 4 fate; assuming he is active in the playoffs by then, Hamlin wins the title 21 percent of the time when he goes top 10 at the historic half-mile track where he’s a five-time winner, versus just 9 percent when he’s outside the top 20.

Chase Elliott

What he needs in the Round of 16: Tap into that old road-course magic.

With 85 percent advancement odds overall, Elliott falls into the group that mainly needs to avoid catastrophe in the Round of 16. If he has one or fewer races where he finishes 31st or worse this round, Elliott has a 92 percent chance of advancing; if he has two or more of those, his odds of advancing drop to 31 percent. But the most important place to watch the No. 9 might be Watkins Glen, where his odds of advancing are 97 percent when he finishes in the top 10 and just 61 percent when he falls outside the top 30. Once upon a time, Elliott was NASCAR’s premier road-course driver, but he hasn’t won at one of those since Road America in July 2021. Now would be a good time for him to revisit the form that gave him his first career Cup Series win at The Glen back in 2018.

Looking ahead: Similarly, a successful Elliott title run usually sees him take advantage of the Roval in Round 2, even if it runs somewhat differently than other road courses. When he’s still active in the Round of 12, Elliott has an average finish of 12.5 at Charlotte in simulations where he advances again, versus 24.5 in the sims where he doesn’t. And Homestead is a pivotal race in the Round of 8; Elliott wins the title 16 percent of the time when he scores a top 10 there, versus just 6 percent when he finishes 21st or worse.

Ryan Blaney

What he needs in the Round of 16: End his recent slump.

Blaney is the last of the group of drivers on our list with at least an 80 percent chance to get out of Round 1 (and, relatedly, at least a five percent chance of winning the championship). After a midseason heater that saw him win twice and finish in the top 11 seven times in eight races, he’s gone cold over the past three races with a trio of finishes 18th or worse. Another three straight mediocre races (say, 21st or worse) would give him just an 11 percent chance of advancing to Round 2. But by the same token, keeping those finishes to a minimum would help Blaney keep cruising: In simulations where he scores one or more top 20s in the next three races, he advances 90 percent of the time.

Looking ahead: As a relatively balanced driver by track type, Blaney doesn’t offer a huge number of make-or-break tracks where he absolutely has to do well or else his championship hopes evaporate. However, it’s always worth watching him at Talladega, where he’s a three-time winner — including the race that stamped his ticket to the Round of 8 last year. In simulations where he’s still active next round, Blaney wins the title 10 percent of the time when he finishes top 10 there, versus just five percent when he drops outside the top 20.

Brad Keselowski

What he needs in the Round of 16: Get a top 10 (or two).

Keselowski is on slightly shakier ground than the drivers above, with a greater than one-in-four chance of not advancing past Round 1. However, he can remedy that fairly easily with a strong finish (or two) at any of the playoffs’ opening three tracks. In simulations where Brad K. scores one top 10, he advances 83 percent of the time, and when he has a pair of those finishes, he moves on 99.9 percent of the time. Combine that with his 92 percent advancement odds if he finishes 30th or better each race, and Keselowski doesn’t have a terrible formula for advancement.

Looking ahead: By championship odds, the most important track in Keselowski’s quest for a second career title (and first since 2012) is Las Vegas in the Round of 8. He’s been great on ovals this year, and he has a 14 percent chance of winning the championship conditional on a top 10 there, versus just a four percent chance when he finishes 21st or worse. And of course, don’t discount the importance of Talladega in the Round of 12 for this six-time winner at NASCAR’s most feared track.

Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney and Kyle Larson race at Daytona.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Joey Logano

What he needs in the Round of 16: Get the most out of Bristol.

Logano has a version of the same dilemma as Denny above: He’s been pretty subpar on both road courses (21 percent worse than average) and drafting tracks (66 percent worse) this season, but really good on short tracks (68 percent better), so his Round of 16 chances hinge on getting points at Bristol. When Joey finishes in the top 10 there, his odds of advancing rise to 92 percent, from 71 percent overall; when he finishes outside the top 30, those odds fall to 41 percent. While he also needs to do well at Atlanta and Watkins Glen — his odds of advancing are 45 percent if he has a disastrous finish at either of those tracks, too — a good run at Bristol would do wonders for Logano’s hopes of sticking around in the playoffs.

Looking ahead: We always think of Phoenix as a huge advantage for Logano in the current format, with the place he’s won at three times playing host to the title-clinching race. But getting there proved to be a problem last season. And the make-or-break tracks to determine that after Round 1 this year are, of course, the short track at Martinsville in the Round of 8, plus the trio of ovals where he’s won before: Kansas (3 times), Las Vegas (3 times) and Homestead (once).

Martin Truex Jr.

What he needs in the Round of 16: Cut out the terrible finishes.

A year after being crowned regular season champ, Truex entered his last playoffs as a full-time driver by backing his way in. The 2017 Cup Series champion finished no better than 24th in any of his last five races, including a second-to-last placement at Darlington in a race that determined who made the postseason cut. Needless to say, Truex must turn this trend around ASAP. In simulations where he has two or more finishes of the same ilk (24th or worse) in the next three races, Truex advances just 19 percent of the time. But the good news is that he can be in decent shape by avoiding those bad runs. In sims where he had only one of these poor finishes or fewer, he advanced 81 percent of the time — including 97 percent when he was better than 24th each race.

Looking ahead: Truex had a good season on the short tracks (48 percent better than average), so Martinsville is a race to circle in the Round of 8, and the championship vibes remain strong at Homestead. But to get there with his chances intact, he’s going to have to do well at the Roval; Truex advances out of the Round of 12 at a 75 percent clip when he finishes top 10 at Charlotte, versus just 27 percent when he finishes outside the top 20.

Alex Bowman

What he needs in the Round of 16: Bowl them over at The Glen.

It sometimes gets lost that Bowman is a really good road-racer. He owns one of the best average finishes at road courses of any active driver (14.4), and he has never been below-average by adjusted Pts+ index on road courses since joining Hendrick Motorsports full-time in 2018. This year, he won at the Chicago Street Course — his first career road/street victory — and was the Cup Series’ best regular driver on that track type, with a 261 adjusted Pts+ index. So of course Watkins Glen stands out as an important track for Bowman’s chances of advancing. In simulations where he has a top 10 at The Glen, Bowman moves on 91 percent of the time; when he finishes in the 20s, that number falls to 54 percent, and dips further to 42 percent when he drops outside the top 30.

Looking ahead: Along the same lines, the Charlotte Roval is huge for Bowman in the Round of 12. His average finish there when he advances to the Round of 8 is 11.4, versus 22.0 when he doesn’t advance. And in the Round of 8, Bowman is a threat at Las Vegas — where he won in 2022 and would see his title odds boost to 7 percent with a top 10 this year.

Ty Gibbs

What he needs in the Round of 16: Steady road-racing — and maybe a bonus at Atlanta.

Gibbs is similar to Bowman in his road-racing acumen, with six top 10s — and only two finishes outside the top 12 — in nine road-course starts since 2023. So Watkins Glen will clearly be on Gibbs’ radar this round: His advancement odds jump to 87 percent with a top 10 at The Glen, versus 32 percent if he finishes outside the top 30. However, Atlanta offers Gibbs an even greater chance to help his odds of moving on. In the simulations where he finishes top 10 there, Gibbs makes the second round 89 percent of the time. (Granted, that figure also drops to 41 percent when he finishes outside the top 30.)

Looking ahead: Naturally, the Roval will also be a big part of Gibbs’ playoff playbook, just like with Bowman. Gibbs was third behind Bowman and Reddick in adjusted Pts+ index on road/street courses this season, an impressive 109 percent better than the Cup Series average. And then keep an eye on Gibbs at Homestead if his chances are still alive by then — a top 10 would boost his title odds to eight percent conditional on making it to the Round of 8.

Daniel Suárez

What he needs in the Round of 16: Rediscover his consistency.

Sitting 11th in the playoff standings, hovering right above the elimination line by a point, Suárez can’t really afford many — if any — bad finishes from this point. If he has two or more finishes outside the top 20, he advances to the next round only 29 percent of the time; if he has one or more finish outside the top 30, he advances 41 percent of the time. Basically, Suárez can’t have any clunkers, and he would also benefit greatly by a high finish or two. (In simulations where he scores at least one top 10 in the next three races, he advances 86 percent of the time.) The issue is whether Suárez can really count on that kind of thing after a regular season where he only had one stretch with consecutive top-10 finishes.

Looking ahead: The only track type where Suárez has been above-average over the past two seasons is at plate/drafting tracks, so Talladega is a key site for him in the second round. In the simulations where he made the Round of 8, Suárez had an average finish of 13.7 at ‘Dega, versus 23.6 in the sims where he was eliminated.

Chase Briscoe, Austin Cindric and Chase Elliott race at Daytona.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Chase Briscoe

What he needs in the Round of 16: Find his short-track skills.

A week removed from a playoff-clinching victory at Darlington, Briscoe immediately finds himself in rough shape with just a 60 percent chance to move on — second-worst among all playoff drivers. The problem is that none of the first-round tracks is especially well-suited to Briscoe, who was below average this season at road, short and drafting tracks. He was good on ovals (28 percent above average), to be sure, but the next oval on the calendar is Kansas in the Round of 12. The good news for Briscoe is that he was a lot better at short tracks (62 percent better than average) just a season ago, and he’ll need to tap into that here. In simulations where he advances, Briscoe finishes at an average of 14.8 there, versus 24.1 when he doesn’t. And when he scores a top 10, his odds of making the next round rise to 87 percent.

Looking ahead: Things get better for Briscoe if he’s able to make it past the first round, as the schedule features more ovals where he has done better this season. When he finishes top 10 at Kansas, he has a 72 percent of advancing to the Round of 8.

Austin Cindric

What he needs in the Round of 16: Play to his strengths.

Cindric had a 79 adjusted Pts+ index during the regular season versus 106 for Briscoe — but Cindric has better odds of making it out of the Round of 16 (62 percent versus 60) because the track selection lines up better with his history. Throughout his career, Cindric has been far better at drafting tracks and road courses than at ovals and short tracks, so he’ll get a couple of bites at the apple in Round 1 to try to take advantage of his strengths. If Cindric finishes in the top 10 at either Atlanta or Watkins Glen, his odds of making the second round rise to 89 percent, and leap further to 97 percent if he can place among the top 15 at both tracks. The odds of that happening are only 16 percent, but it’s an example of how Cindric might be able to keep his title bid going despite an up-and-down season.

Looking ahead: The odds get a lot longer for Cindric after the Round of 16, but if he does make it through he’ll get another boost at Talladega (plate track) and the Charlotte Roval (road course). In the simulations where Cindric advances through the first round and finishes top 10 at both Talladega and the Roval, he would have a 98 percent chance to make the Round of 8.

Harrison Burton

What he needs in the Round of 16: Drive the wheels off the No. 21.

With an adjusted Pts+ index of 55 during the regular season — meaning he was 45 percent worse than the average Cup Series driver — Burton supplanted Chris Buescher from 2016 as the worst playoff driver of the 16-car postseason era. His odds of advancing from the Round of 16 (44 percent) are an order of magnitude worse than anyone else in the field. But that doesn’t mean it’s impossible for him to move on … he just needs to have a string of uncharacteristically strong finishes. For instance, if Burton finishes top 10 at Atlanta, he would instantly see his odds of advancing rise to 79 percent. Doing the same instead at Bristol or Watkins Glen would see even greater rises (to 81 or 82 percent, respectively). While it couldn’t be paired with two other horrible finishes, a strong run at one of the next three races would at least give Burton a solid chance to move on.

Looking ahead: Since Burton has such vanishingly small odds of advancing more than a round or so, much less winning the championship, I thought it might be fun to look at what happened in the three simulations (out of 10,000) in which he did win the title.

  • In Sim No. 110, Burton won at Watkins Glen while Byron and Blaney were both eliminated in Round 1, then Hamlin and Elliott followed suit in Round 2 as Burton finished 16th at Kansas and 15th at Talladega. Burton made the Championship 4 over Bowman, Truex and Keselowski with an eighth-place run at Martinsville. Finally, he placed second at Phoenix as the rest of the contenders (Bell, Gibbs and Larson) finished outside the top 16.
  • Sim No. 2,961 was less chaotic at first than Sim 110, as each of the top nine regular-season drivers advanced, but it also saw Briscoe, Burton and Bowman advancing (at the expense of Logano, Suárez and Truex), thanks in part to Burton finishing third at Bristol. Blaney and Keselowski dropped off in Round 2 as Burton won his way forward at Talladega; the Round of 8 saw a shakeup with Byron, Hamlin and Elliott eliminated as Burton held steady with finishes of 18th, 12th and 15th. In the championship race, Larson and Reddick ran outside the top 10, but Burton outdueled Bell (who was third) to finish second and claim the title.
  • Finally, in Sim No. 7,558, Keselowski was the only member of the top 12 in pre-playoff points to exit in Round 1, opening the door for Burton with his seventh-place finish at Atlanta. There were some shockers in Round 2 as Bell, Reddick and Hamlin all fell by the wayside, but Burton finished 13th at Kansas and eighth at Talladega to move on. At the precipice of the Championship 4, Burton overcame a 24th-place finish at Vegas with a pair of top 10s at Homestead and Martinsville, and Byron dropped off following a trio of finishes outside the top 25. And in the title race, disaster struck Blaney, Elliott and Larson — none finished higher than 36th — leaving room for Burton to place 12th for the championship.

Clearly, a lot of fantastical things (though statistically possible ones, in 10,000 alternate universes) needed to happen in order for him to win the title. But yes, Harrison Burton: I’m telling you there’s a chance. Now let’s see if any of those simulated universes — or the other 9,997, for that matter — end up playing out when the real cars hit the track.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The complexion of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs field this season features a wide cross-section of experience and backgrounds, but it also includes a handful of drivers who made the most of opportunistic regular-season wins to clinch postseason tickets that otherwise might have been out of reach.

Perhaps no one knows this more than Chase Briscoe, who swooped in for a dramatic, season-saving win in last Sunday’s Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway, impeccably timing his first victory of the Cup Series campaign to reach the postseason for the second time in his career. The last time that happened in 2022, Briscoe felt like his No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing team was lightly regarded as a title contender. So when his name and the label of “underdog” are breathed in the same sentence, he takes it more as motivation than a slight.

“I love being the underdog. I feel like I’ve been the underdog my whole career, and I love feeling like my back is up against the wall,” Briscoe says. “So yeah, I love when people doubt us, don’t think we can do it. It definitely fires me up, motivates me. The last time we were in the playoffs, everybody said we’d be the first team out, and we were four laps away from making the final four. So I know what our team’s capable of, I know what I’m capable of. When everything is executed perfectly, there’s no reason why we can’t be the ones holding up the trophy at the end.”

Briscoe earned his spot among the 16 drivers holding court Wednesday at NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Media Day, just four days before the 10-race postseason opens with Sunday’s Quaker State 400 (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Atlanta Motor Speedway. But he’s also one of four drivers who finished the regular season outside the top 16 in the Cup Series standings before the points were reseeded. Briscoe was 17th before the playoffs re-rack, with Daniel Suárez 18th, Austin Cindric 19th and Harrison Burton 34th.

RELATED: Cup Series Playoffs standings | Atlanta schedule

All four propelled their teams onto the playoff grid with victories, perhaps none more timely than Briscoe’s mad Darlington dash to the checkered flag. The Southern 500 win was a rallying moment for the Stewart-Haas Racing organization, which will cease its Cup Series operations at season’s end but now has a title shot to pursue in its final 10 races.

Briscoe compared his season to the unlikely college basketball run of North Carolina State, which defied the odds in winning the ACC Tournament then plowing through the March Madness brackets for a Final Four appearance this year. For a motorsports-centric comparison, the 29-year-old driver has taken a page from team co-owner Tony Stewart, who reached the 2011 playoffs on a winless skid, but then strung together five wins in 10 weeks to claim his third Cup championship.

“It’s been really cool, just the dynamic at the shop, right?” Briscoe said. “If a Stewart-Haas car didn’t win Sunday night, Tuesday morning when everybody came in after Labor Day, it would have probably been the the gloomiest, darkest shop in the entire industry, and now we’re probably the most electric, fired-up shop — at least the most fired up I’ve ever seen Stewart-Haas.”

“I feel like it’s one of those things that we all internally feel like we can honestly go win the championship, and that’s crazy probably coming from a guy that wasn’t even in the playoffs till two days ago, but I think internally, everybody believes it. We’ve seen Tony do it in 2011 and we’re kind of going with that same mindset of, ‘we can win the Southern 500, why can’t we win more?’ ”

Suárez finished one spot behind Briscoe in the standings before reseeding, and he returns to the site of his playoff-clinching win at Atlanta, where he fended off both Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch in a brilliant, three-wide photo finish in February. His postseason fate was secured, but the performance level lagged for Suárez and his No. 99 Trackhouse Racing team through the spring.

Suárez re-signed with the team last month, but reiterated that both sides were eager to turn the on-track tide. A swing of three consecutive top-10 runs near the end of the regular season helped provide a small measure of optimism.

“We found some stuff in the last couple months,” Suárez said. “A few months ago in May, we were struggling very bad. I believe that we’ve definitely gotten the right direction. With that being said, we are not winning races yet. We still have work to do. Right now, we can compete consistently in the top 10, but we know that to make it to the Championship 4, that’s not going to be enough. We have to continue to push and continue to learn.”

Daniel Suárez smiles as he fields questions during NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Media Day
Jacob Kupferman | Getty Images

On-track performance aside, it’s been a whirlwind year for Suárez, who won races in NASCAR’s Mexico- and Brazil-based series, got married, achieved dual citizenship, and helped to usher in the Cup Series’ international move to his home country next year in Mexico City.

“Just very, very blessed and very fortunate with a lot of amazing things that have happened to myself this year, winning races, in my personal life, in my professional life, over NASCAR closing the deal to go to Mexico City,” Suárez said. “That’s a dream. For me, that’s been one of my dreams since I came to America, so a lot of amazing things. I’m very, very grateful. I’m very lucky to be in this position. With that being said, on the competition side, you always want more. It doesn’t matter if I have had five wins or 10 wins or one win. You always want more, and we have to continue to work. The next 10 weeks are the most important 10 weeks of the year, and I’m planning on giving everything we’ve got to give it a heck of a run.”

Cindric’s playoff path came by virtue of his victory at World Wide Technology Raceway, and he was the first of three Team Penske drivers to clinch playoff berths in the month of June. That was only his second top-five finish in the regular season, but his campaign starts anew this weekend.

“Honest, I don’t really feel a ton of pressure. I feel like we’re playing with house money,” Cindric said. “The points reset, we’re right in the middle of everything. We’re seeded 10th, two points to the good. I couldn’t really ask for more, based on the season we’ve had. So I’m excited for it. It’s a great opportunity, and anything from here, I feel like is a bonus, and I’m not saying that just to sound content, like we have an opportunity to go all the way, and that’s exciting.”

Cindric joked that he had set two personal goals at the start of the year — qualifying for the playoffs and breaking 100 in his golf game. He said Wednesday that he’s 1-for-2 so far, shooting a 101 just two weeks ago, but that he sees similarities in his approach to both sports.

“I feel like both my golf game and my playoffs, my mentality to get to the next step is to have limited mistakes,” Cindric says. “I feel like the first two rounds of the playoffs are all about not taking yourself out of it. I feel like if you get to the Round of 8, that’s where you’ve got to find the next gear. That’s where you’ve got to try and win a race to expect to be in the Championship 4. It’s no different than with my golf game. I have the ability to make contact with the ball and make the damn thing go straight. Just every once in a while, I’ll take a chunk of earth out before I ever even touch the ball.”

MORE: Best Media Day quotes | Five playoff topics to ponder

No one might resemble the underdog mentality more than Burton, who rose from below the top-30 mark in Cup Series points into playoff eligibility with his stunning drive to victory at Daytona in the regular season’s next-to-last race. That win was his first, and the 100th for the venerable Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 team.

Burton and the Wood Brothers will part ways at the end of the season, and Josh Berry will step in for the No. 21 Ford team in 2025. But the 23-year-old driver has ambitions to finish out his three-year tenure strong, and he doesn’t bristle when tagged with an underdog designation.

“If I was not a part of this team, I would say the same thing, right?” said Burton, who will make his 100th Cup Series start Sunday at Atlanta. “I mean, you can’t help but look at where we were in points, look at how our season had gone, look at the fact that I was on my way out of my job. They were making changes because the performance wasn’t there — and I love them, they love me as a person, but we didn’t perform the way we needed to. But now, we have this great opportunity to reset all that. We have a great opportunity to kind of be born again, and it’s like, ‘OK, whole new season right here. Let’s go.’ That is a rare opportunity in sports — a rare opportunity in life, really — to get to do that. So I’m going to make the most of that. I know my race team is making the most of it.

“I was at the shop on the way here, and I got to go there for a little bit and those guys are just fired up, and that’s so fun. It’s so fun to be a part of a team that’s fighting for something like we are. We’re going to use that energy in a positive way.”

With the playoff field set, the hunt for the Bill France Cup is officially on and it all starts Sunday with the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, USA, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

With so much talk about the first round being a “wild-card” round, the trend of underdogs finding Victory Lane in the last few weeks could continue. Plus, last time the Cup circuit was in Atlanta, it was nothing short of spectacular. The question is: what kind of encore do we get after the last showing in the Peach State?

RELATED: Set your Fantasy Live lineup | Weekend schedule

Racing Insights sees the cream rising to the top in the Round of 16 opener, with seven playoff drivers in the projected top 10. Reigning champ Ryan Blaney is picked as the early winner. Given he fell short of a win by just 0.003 seconds back in February, it’s not a shock to see him as a favorite. Plus, his numbers on drafting tracks speak for themselves. On average, Blaney has scored 42 points per race at Atlanta since the reconfiguration, which is the most among playoff drivers. He also has scored the third most points on drafting tracks this season (116), behind William Byron (129) and Austin Cindric (135).

The next 10 races promise to be a postseason rarity in NASCAR history, and if the last two regular-season races are any telling of what we can expect in Atlanta, it’s going to be madness.

DRIVERS TO WATCH

WILLIAM BYRON: It’s been quiet since Byron rattled off three wins in the season’s first eight races, but the No. 24 can come alive this weekend. The 2024 Daytona 500 champ is a two-time Atlanta winner with four career drafting track wins.

BRAD KESELOWSKI: Speaking of drafting track wins, here’s a driver with seven of them. Keselowski was involved in the big wreck on Lap 2 last time out but notched a pair of top 10s in the two Atlanta races before that.

DANIEL SUÁREZ: The Trackhouse Racing stunned everyone, going three-wide to earn his playoff bid in a mesmerizing finish. Suárez is no stranger to finding speed at Atlanta. He’s finished first and second in the last two races there and has three top fives at the track since its reconfiguration — tied for most.

JOEY LOGANO: It was last year’s Atlanta spring race that Logano won the pole and led 140 laps en route to a win. He should be in the mix this week as he will no doubt want to make up for his early exit in last year’s playoffs and challenge for a third title.

AUSTIN CINDRIC: Really, all of Team Penske should be on watch this weekend. Let’s not forget the organization won half the races during the eight-week stretch from Cindric’s breakthrough win at World Wide Technology Raceway to the Brickyard 400 as it gained steam over the summer. Cindric also led 32 laps en route to a fourth-place effort last time at Atlanta.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE QUAKER STATE 400

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
46Brad Keselowski
599Daniel Suárez
645Tyler Reddick
717Chris Buescher
820Christopher Bell
923Bubba Wallace
108Kyle Busch
1111Denny Hamlin
122Austin Cindric
1322Joey Logano
141Ross Chastain
155Kyle Larson
1648Alex Bowman
1719Martin Truex Jr.
1854Ty Gibbs
197Corey LaJoie
2034Michael McDowell
214Josh Berry
2243Erik Jones
2338Todd Gilliland
2414Chase Briscoe
2551Justin Haley
2647Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2777Carson Hocevar
2831Daniel Hemric
2910Noah Gragson
3041Ryan Preece
3121Harrison Burton
3271Zane Smith
3342John H. Nemechek
343Austin Dillon
3515Kaz Grala
3678BJ McLeod
3744J.J. Yeley
3816Shane van Gisbergen

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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But the fun doesn’t stop there. You can score Instant Win prizes including NASCAR Cup Series grandstand tickets, Officially Licensed Diecasts, NASCAR Fan Rewards™ points, race-used sheet metal and more!

Spark your interest yet? Enter daily during the NASCAR Playoffs™ for a chance to win the electric F-150® Lightning® FLASH™ + the Ford Charge Station Pro.

*NO PURCHASE OR MOBILE DEVICE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. Ends 11/10/24. Must be a permanent legal resident of the (50) U.S. or DC of legal age of majority (& at least 18 years of age). Void where prohibited. Click here for Official Rules, which govern, & complete details. The depiction of the Prize Vehicle in any advertising or promotional materials may not reflect the actual design & features of the actual Prize Vehicle delivered to the Vehicle Prize Winner. All vehicle prize details are at the sole discretion of Ford. Instant Win Prize images are for illustrative purposes only. Actual prizes may vary. NASCAR, LLC, NASCAR Digital Media, LLC, and Ford Motor Company are not Sponsors of this Promotion. NASCAR® and NASCAR Cup Series™ are trademarks of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC. Ford® and Ford F-150® Lightning® Flash™ are registered trademarks of Ford Motor Company.

From the triumph of crossing the finish line to the exhilaration of an epic burnout, no one knows what it feels like — and what it takes — to win like Chevrolet and Goodyear.

Since 1954, these American icons have gone unmatched on the NASCAR race track; racking up more victories and more championships than any other OEM pairing. And now we’re inviting fans to join the celebration of racing’s most winning duo for a chance to notch a big win of their own.

During the NASCAR Playoffs™ fans can enter for a chance to win a VIP experience at the 2025 Daytona 500®. There they’ll start a brand-new season in serious style, with exclusive access, a ride in the pace car, and so much more.

We’re also taking fans into the record books with dynamic, interactive content that showcases the decades of wins and history-making moments Chevrolet and Goodyear share. From Legendary drivers to innovation in technology, fans can explore how these two brands have been at the forefront of NASCAR excellence for generations.

It all adds up to a winning experience for fans; with unparalleled excitement as we cap one more season of high-stakes racing, and look ahead to all the Chevrolet plus Goodyear wins that are still to come.

*NO PURCHASE OR MOBILE DEVICE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. Ends 11/10/24. Must be a permanent legal resident of the (50) U.S. or DC of legal age of majority (& at least 18 years of age). Void where prohibited. Click here for Official Rules, which govern, & complete details. Prize images are for illustrative purposes only. Actual prizes may vary. NASCAR, LLC, NASCAR Digital Media, LLC, General Motors LLC, Daytona International Speedway, LLC d/b/a Daytona International Speedway, and The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company are not Sponsors of this Promotion. NASCAR® and NASCAR Cup Series™ are trademarks of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC. Goodyear® is a registered trademark of The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company. Daytona International Speedway®, Daytona 500® and their respective logos are registered trademarks and are used with permission. All rights reserved.