RICHMOND, Va. — After a 45-minute practice and a smattering of qualifying laps in Saturday’s preliminaries, the introduction of tire-compound choices to NASCAR Cup Series racing at Richmond Raceway remains a strategy head-scratcher.

Cup Series teams will have two types of Goodyear rubber to choose from in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (6 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — seven sets of baseline “prime” tires (six for the race, plus one transferred from qualifying) and two sets of “option” tires. The yellow-lettered primes are more durable over a longer run, while the red-lettered options have more short-term grip and more rapid wear.

RELATED: Sunday’s starting lineup | Weekend schedule

When teams choose to bolt on the option tires could decide both stage wins and the overall victory. How the race plays out with caution periods will be crucial to the decision-making process.

“Well, it is like every race: You tell me when the cautions are going to come out, and I’ll tell you the strategy you should use,” cracked Chris Gabehart, crew chief of Denny Hamlin’s pole-winning No. 11 Toyota. “Unfortunately, my caution Ouija Board is broken right now. I hope we fixed it over the two-week break. Certainly, I think you are going to leave them laying for the end of the race for the most part — now I won’t say — there may be some cars that need some points that might try to put a set on to steal a stage win or something like that, some of those cut-off cars potentially, but I think to win the race, you will have to leave them for the end of the race.”

MORE: Hamlin looking to close again

The tire-choice procedure was first used at the NASCAR All-Star Race in May at North Wilkesboro Speedway, but Sunday’s 400-lapper will be the first application in a points-paying event. Another key difference between the two events: Sunday’s race will be held on a worn, abrasive surface, a change from the freshly paved asphalt at the Wilkesboro track.

On Saturday, teams had both types of tires available for practice, but were required to qualify on the yellow-sidewall prime tires. Even with an expanded practice to learn about the tires’ nuances, question marks remain.

“I don’t have the answers yet. We have a lot of information to go through, I know that,” said Chris Buescher, who qualified seventh in the No. 17 RFK Racing Ford. “We need to look at our runs, our teammates’ runs, others, when they put reds on, when they put yellows on. There’s a lot of questions. The heat of the day, very sunny versus tomorrow’s night race. That made a big difference in North Wilkesboro with the reds. We blistered them in practice, I think a handful of teams did, and had no issues and ran in the entire race on reds, right? So I don’t think that’s going to be allowed here with the Richmond surface in the shape it is, but like I said, we have a lot of deciphering to do.”

The most recent Cup Series race at Richmond back in March was marked by three longer green-flag runs — 91 laps, 54 laps, and a late 159-lap stretch. The outcome, however, boiled down to a late-race yellow flag that eventually extended the race by two overtimes, and Hamlin got the jump on teammate Martin Truex Jr. in the final two-lap dash to the checkered.

MORE: Strategy shake-up from tire options

How will teams pick their spots Sunday? Saving a red-lettered set for a sprint to the end would be optimal, but a longer-run finish would defeat that stockpiling gambit.

“I mean, that’s the risk you always take, right, with tires,” said defending Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney, who starts 11th. “I mean, gosh, how many times have folks tried to stay out and they end with a sticker set in their pits, hoping for a caution, and they don’t get it, and it ruins their day. So that’s just the risk you take, and like I said, it’s going to be interesting to see if you’ve got one set left, and there’s 100 laps to the end. Are you going to throw on your final set? I don’t know. It just depends how much they fall off the cliff. … That’s why the crew chiefs get paid big bucks tomorrow.”

Leaving Richmond with an unused set of option tires in reserve could potentially leave a sour taste, said Truex, a three-time Richmond winner in his final Cup Series season. That bitter possibility, Truex says, is all part of the plan that NASCAR officials had when they decided to introduce another unknown into this weekend’s race procedures.

“Well, that’s the hard part. But you know, then if you don’t have them or if guys do, you’re going to get smoked,” Truex said, referring to a saved set of reds. “So it’s just one of those … that’s the reason they did it. They’re going to put us in that position of, nobody knows what’s going to happen. … It’s not uncomfortable. They just like for things to happen that nobody sees coming. They don’t want us to be prepared for everything. They don’t want us to have the opportunity to know exactly what’s going to happen.”

See where your favorite NASCAR Cup Series driver will pit for the Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway on Sunday (6 p.m. ET, USA, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

RELATED: Starting lineup | Weekend schedule | At-track photos | Get notified for 2025 schedule release

This next four-race run to close out the regular season is especially crucial for 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace and Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain. Wallace is the first driver outside the Cup Series playoff elimination line, ranked 17th but only seven points behind Chastain.

The Richmond three-quarter miler hasn’t necessarily been a shining star on either of the driver’s resumes. Chastain has a pair of top-10 finishes in 11 starts with a best showing of third place (2023). Wallace has 12 Richmond starts but has never had a top 10. His best showing of 12th place came in this race last year.

Both drivers are optimistic and focused on their playoff hopes for the next month, which includes races at various tracks, including the Richmond short track, Michigan two-miler, Daytona Beach superspeedway and Darlington, a 1.366-miler.

RELATED: Richmond starting lineup | Playoff standings

“Definitely don’t feel safe until you’re locked in,’’ said Wallace, who was more than 100 points out of 16th place just a handful of races ago. “We have four very good opportunities to do that. Ran really well here in the spring. … four real good opportunities to make some headway but you know, also four good opportunities to take us out of contention so have to show up and it’s time to put it back into gear.’’

Chastain has qualified for the playoffs the last two seasons, finishing runner-up to champion Joey Logano in 2022 and ninth last year.

MORE: How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

“Approach for me is a constant evolution,’’ explained Chastain, who said he enjoyed the previous two weeks off not thinking about racing. “Really no two weeks are ever the same. If I find something that’s going to help me better physically, then I do it. My weeks and my preparation are really never the same.

“We can’t try any harder now than we did before the break,’’ he added.

RICHMOND, Va. – Daniel Suárez capped an eventful two-week break with a bit of news. After a gala wedding in Brazil and a victory in a NASCAR Brasil Series race just days later, his Trackhouse Racing team announced Friday that he’ll return to the No. 99 Chevrolet for the 2025 Cup Series season.

The contract extension, Suárez said, actually came first. Announcing the details was a matter of timing.

“It’s been done for a little while,” Suárez said before Saturday’s qualifying at Richmond Raceway. “We just … it’s been a lot going on in my life, career, personal life, and we just wanted to wait for the right moment.”

Another timing component, it turns out, was also significant. The single-year length of the deal was intentional for both driver and team, with Suárez indicating that the Justin Marks-founded organization has grown rapidly since its 2021 debut but that performance gains are needed.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos: Richmond

Suárez qualified for the Cup Series Playoffs by winning a photo-finish thriller at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the second race of the season. He has just one top-five result in the 20 races since. In reaching the new agreement, Suárez said the contract includes incentives that could increase the length of the agreement if certain performance goals are met.

“There is a lot of things in the contract that activate longer if we both decided that is the right thing to do,” Suárez said before qualifying 21st for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (6 p.m. ET, USA, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). “There is a lot of things in Trackhouse that are adjusting and changing. Performance-wise, we’re not exactly where we want to be — not just in the 99 but in Trackhouse as a company, and we have to make sure that we fix that before we want to go any longer. This goes really both ways.

“I think that 2022, we started extremely strong in Trackhouse with the Next Gen car, 2023 was strong, and 2024 hasn’t been as good as we were expecting. So we have work to do. We believe that we know where we’re heading, and we have already some things in our back pocket that we’re working on behind the scenes. But we have work to do, so hopefully that work gets reflected on track.”

That decision, he said, was mutual.

“It was Trackhouse and also myself, because, like I said, I want to win. They want to win, too,” said Suárez, who has been with the team since its competition debut. “But like I said, we have some things in our contract that if tomorrow, things start heading in the right direction the way that we’re working, that contract is going to change very quickly by itself, so we want to make sure that we are clicking and competitive the way we want. I don’t want to run 15th. They don’t want to run 15th. But it’s not a secret, this year has been a struggle for Trackhouse performance-wise.”

MORE: Weekend schedule: Richmond | How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

Suárez made his own solid performance achievements during the two-week break for the Summer Games, winning in the NASCAR Brasil Series during its Aug. 4 meet. Besides having the distinction of winning races in the Cup Series, Mexico Series and now in Brazil, Suárez said that the spirited crowd left an impression on him.

“It was unbelievable what I experienced over there,” Suárez said. “We all know how big the sport is, but I don’t think many people have experienced it in person. I saw a NASCAR Brasil race with 40,000 people in the grandstands, and the first thought that came to my mind was what the Cup Series would do here. It would be unbelievable. So I had an amazing experience over there, and hopefully, one day, we all can experience that together.”

Suárez also tied the knot with longtime girlfriend Julia Piquet in her Brasilia hometown – the centerpiece of a packed two-week break.

“Honestly, we had the time of our lives. We are very, very blessed and very fortunate,” Suárez said. “We had a great time. Honestly, from beginning to end, I don’t think I could have asked for anything different. Great, great time with family, with close friends.”

With Goodyear providing an option tire for the first time ever in a points-paying race, all 37 teams entered into Sunday’s Cook Out 400 had 45 minutes of practice. Nine teams, led by Austin Dillon, elected to hit the track on the option tire compound as soon as the track opened. Most teams began the session with the prime Goodyear tire. Some teams, like all of Hendrick Motorsports and pre-weekend favorites Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano, waited for the track to cycle heat into it to get a baseline on a surface more comparable to race conditions and then put the option tire on later in the session.

With all those variables, it’s a tall task to know what the best fantasy lineup will be for Sunday, particularly with teams getting two sets of option tires for the race, which help short-run speed. I’m not making any changes to my starting lineup as all six drivers advanced to the final round of qualifying.

RELATED: Set your Fantasy Live lineups | How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Denny Hamlin

Starter 2: Martin Truex Jr.

Starter 3: Joey Logano

Starter 4: Christopher Bell

Starter 5: Chase Elliott

Garage pick: Chris Buescher

NEXT IN LINE: Bubba Wallace, Josh Berry, Kyle Busch, Kyle Larson

RISING: Stating that the last season-and-a-half for Austin Dillon has been disappointing would be a gigantic understatement. Richard Childress Racing is among the three tier-A Chevrolet organizations in the field, and it hasn’t translated to consistent competitive race conditions. Dillon was quickest in practice at Richmond, however, with the caveat being he began the session on the option tires. He backed that speed up in qualifying on prime tires, making the final round of qualifying for the first time on a non-superspeedway since last October at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The No. 3 car has six top-10 finishes in the last 11 Richmond events.

While Toyota has only won one of the last four Richmond races, it has always seemed to favor the manufacturer. Wallace is still looking for his first top 10 at the track, though he was in position to nail down a top five until causing a late caution in the spring race. Wallace had the fastest car in practice on the standard Goodyear tire and cracked the top 10 in qualifying for the third straight race at Richmond (eighth)

FALLING: Earlier this week in Fastlane, I was wary about Chastain this weekend. Nothing changed after practice and qualifying, despite the No. 1 car ranking as the best on 10-lap averages during practice. Much of that is because Chastain was among the first cars on the track in practice with the option tire. Qualifying might be a better gauge for this weekend, and Chastain timed in 22nd best. Entering Richmond just seven points above the elimination line, Phil Surgen, crew chief of the No. 1 Chevrolet, might need to get off strategy to best the team’s result on Sunday.

With the choices teams have this weekend with tires, qualifying might not be as significant as most race weekends. Brad Keselowski missed the bottom lane on corner entry during both of his qualifying laps, barely hanging on to his No. 6 Ford. Last year, Buescher won this event from the 26th starting position, making Keselowski’s 29th-place effort in qualifying look not as bad. He is among the best in the series at Richmond, with a pair of victories and 1,280 laps led. The poor starting spot does mean that he will likely miss out on stage points, though, making him a miss for my lineup.

FEATURED MATCHUPS:

Kyle Larson vs. William Byron: As noted in Fastlane, Hendrick Motorsports has struggled in recent years at Richmond, earning just a pair of wins at the track since 2008 (Alex Bowman in 2021; Larson 2023). Neither driver here stood out in practice or qualifying as Larson’s three-race pole streak on short tracks came to a screeching halt. Byron bettered the No. 5 car in qualifying by a row, but I’ll stay with Larson as the 2017 Xfinity Series champion has one finish better than seventh in 12 Richmond starts.

Denny Hamlin vs. Martin Truex Jr.: We knew this heavyweight bout between Joe Gibbs Racing teammates was going to be a tossup, and it’s even more of a draw now. Hamlin surprised himself by winning the pole after the No. 11 car was the slowest in the opening round to advance to the final round. Truex was impressive on standard tires in practice, so I’m going to give the slight advantage to the No. 19 Toyota, rebounding from an overtime meltdown in March.

Joey Logano vs. Chase Elliott: Both champions were the lone drivers from their respective powerhouse organizations to crack the final round of qualifying. Elliott looked to have a car capable of contending for the victory, but Logano is always in the mix at Richmond. And, albeit a completely different short track that is freshly repaved, Logano dominated the All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway on the option tire. I’ll take my chances with the No. 22 car.

Ryan Blaney vs. Alex Bowman: Neither driver is particularly fond of Richmond, even though Bowman has visited the Winner’s Circle somewhat recently. Blaney has shown pace in qualifying before and then tanked in the race results. Three of the last four Richmond races have resulted in finishes of 17th or worse for Bowman. I’ll flip this matchup from earlier in the week, knowing how strong Team Penske’s short-track program has been this year.

Cook Out 400

(⏰ Sunday, 6 p.m. ET | USA Network | NBC Sports App | MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | NASCAR 101

Location: Richmond, Virginia
Track length: 0.75 miles
Race purse: $7,925,121
Race distance: 400 laps | 300 miles
Stages: 70 | 230 | 400

Starting lineup: Hamlin on pole at Richmond
Pit stall assignments:
See where drivers will pit
Defending winner: 
Chris Buescher, July 2023

Key things to watch

Saturday sessions

Denny Hamlin was the slowest of the 10 drivers to advance to the pole round Saturday evening, but it was the pole-round hot lap that mattered for the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota as a 118.162 mph circuit around the Virginia short track earned Hamlin his 43rd career Cup Series pole. Hamlin’s teammate Martin Truex Jr. will join him on the front row, with Josh Berry, Chase Elliott and Christopher Bell rounding out the top five for Sunday’s starting lineup.

Austin Dillon was the surprise of Saturday’s practice and qualifying sessions. On the option tire, he put down the fastest single lap in the 45-minute session at 118.953 mph and was fourth in 10 consecutive lap averages. He backed up his rapid pace in practice with a sixth-place starting spot for Sunday night’s 400-lapper. Hendrick Motorsports struggled in practice, with all four Chevrolets outside the top 25 in 10 consecutive lap averages. However, Elliott was able to earn a top-five spot in qualifying, with William Byron (13th), Kyle Larson (15th) and Alex Bowman (17th) all starting inside the top 20 for the race. | Saturday recap

Big story line

Tight regular-season title, playoff bubble battles leave little margin for error this weekend

An extended practice session with the option tire will help Cup Series drivers get back into their competitive mindset after the two-week Olympic break, but it’s a rare lengthy pause in the schedule most aren’t accustomed to. Tack on the unknown of how the option tire will fare for a full 400-lapper, and it opens the door for a big shift in the playoff picture.

After his Brickyard 400 victory, Kyle Larson re-took the Cup standings lead over Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott by 10 points. However, Hendrick has struggled in the summer race at Richmond recently, which could open the door for Tyler Reddick to jump both of them when the checkered flag waves Sunday as he sits just 15 points below Larson. Denny Hamlin took home the Richmond win in the spring, but the No. 11 Toyota driver has been in quite the slump and has faded back to 43 points at the top of the table behind his on-track rival.

Just 49 points separate 14th-place Ty Gibbs and 17th-place Bubba Wallace on the playoff bubble with four races to go. Martin Truex Jr. has provisionally wrapped up a spot with a comfortable 108-point gap, making it a four-driver fight for three spots. Chris Buescher (+17) and Ross Chastain both (+7) need to have a big weekend in Virginia before either driver finds themselves below the elimination line. Luckily for Buescher, August could be a huge month for the No. 17 RFK Racing driver as he won at Richmond, Michigan International Speedway and Daytona International Speedway last year. Could he go on a similar run? Wallace has yet to score a top 10 at Richmond, but he led 80 laps in the summer race last season and was on his way to a top five in the spring before contact with Larson brought out a caution and a slow pit stop parachuted him to 13th in overtime.

History tells us…

In-season breaks have favored Chevrolet recently. The sample size is small, but if you look at the recent history of races coming back from a week or more off during the season, you see one manufacturer at the top in the last four instances — Chevrolet. Three of those took place at Nashville Superspeedway, with Larson, Elliott and Chastain grabbing the checkered flag in those respective events. Following the last Olympic break in 2021, Larson led 27 laps en route to a Watkins Glen victory. Looking deeper into those races, Chevy drivers swept the podium in that 2021 Nashville race, finished 1-2 in the ’21 race at The Glen and had four of the top-six spots in the ’23 event at Nashville. It may mean absolutely nothing heading into Richmond, but it’s a trend worth keeping an eye on, especially as Chastain tries to solidify a playoff berth.

He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…

JOSH BERRY. Berry will have a lot of eyes on him this weekend as he and crew chief Rodney Childers could get aggressive with Richmond being their best shot to steal a playoff spot. There’s good reason why the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford could be a contender for the win as Berry was fast in the spring despite finishing 11th. According to NASCAR’s loop data, Berry completed 62 quality passes (passing a car in top 15) in the spring race, which was tied for second-most and spent 90% of the race inside the top 15.

While 25-1 odds are nothing to scoff at, it does put him at the same level as Chastain and Kyle Busch on the oddsboard, two drivers who have struggled mightily this summer. | Richmond odds

Speed reads

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.

• Not going anywhere: Daniel Suárez returns to Trackhouse Racing for 2025 season | Read article
• Staying golden?: Kyle Busch searching for rejuvenation at Richmond | Read article
• Play ball:
Major League Baseball to host Braves, Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway in 2025 | Read article
• Stay aware: How to get notified for 2025 schedule release | Sign up!
• Rules update: NASCAR adjusts wet-weather tire procedure on ovals | Read article
• Busch good to go: No. 8 Richard Childress Racing driver to race despite wrist sprain | Read article
• LaJoie out: Corey LaJoie announces he will not return to Spire Motorsports in 2025 | Read article
• Phenom on the rise: Connor Zilisch to compete full-time in Xfinity Series for JR Motorsports in 2025 | Read article
• Power Rankings: Ryan Blaney within striking distance of regular-season crown | Photo gallery
• Turning Point: Welcome back to racing — what lies ahead? | Read article
• Racing Insights:
Full finishing order projections for Sunday’s 400-miler | Read article
• Field of 16:
How the playoff picture shakes out with four races left in regular season | Read article
• 36 for 36: Check out this week’s survivor pool picks | Read article
• Fantasy Fastlane:
Keep it simple this weekend | Photo gallery
• Fantasy Update:
Options galore at Richmond; Austin Dillon impresses | Read article
• NASCAR Classics: Head into the video vault with vintage Richmond replays | Read article
• Paint Scheme Preview:
Fresh designs primed for Richmond | Pick your favorite

Fast facts

Race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

Only one of the last 12 Richmond winners was under the age of 30.
In the last seven Richmond races neither the stage 1 or 2 winner went on to win the race.
The last three Richmond races were won by three different manufacturers.

RICHMOND, Va. — Kyle Busch said he sprained his left wrist in a late-race crash during the NASCAR Cup Series’ most recent event at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but that he will not need a relief driver on standby for Sunday’s race at Richmond Raceway.

“Grip it and rip it,” Busch said.

Busch arrived for post-qualifying interviews Saturday with a bandage wrap on his left wrist, saying that the steering wheel snapped around when his No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet crashed in the July 21 Brickyard 400.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | At-track photos: Richmond

“Without two weeks off, I would not have been able to race,” Busch said, saying that nothing was broken. “I’m good. I’m pretty good now.”

Busch is set to start 12th in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (6 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). It’s his best starting spot since he qualified seventh at Iowa Speedway, six races ago on June 16.

The two-time Cup Series champion has struggled this season, sitting 112 points back of the elimination line in the provisional playoffs picture with four races remaining before the 16-driver field is set. He has failed to finish in five of the last eight races, sinking to 18th in the series standings.

MORE: Latest playoff projections | Busch’s path to success

Busch said changes are afoot to mark improvement at the Childress organization. The No. 8 team has brought in a new engineer in Ben Lynch, who had worked with the No. 3 Chevrolet group for teammate Austin Dillon. Busch just missed making the final round of qualifying Saturday, and Dillon set the pace in Cup Series practice before locking up the sixth starting position – his second-best qualifying result this year.

RELATED: Busch searching for rejuvenation

“So far, so good. Good start, but just trying to mix things up, change things up, and find a direction that we can continue to improve the whole program, and seems as though this weekend was a good kickoff to that,” Busch said, before being asked about which areas he’d like to see RCR focus on for the remainder of the season.

“I don’t know that you’re going to find everything that you’re missing right now without making complete, key new hires from outside, which they’re also working on,” he added. “And so I could be more optimistic, probably, of next year’s stuff than how we finished this year, but we know we need to finish strong, and we’ve got to do it with what we’ve got.”

RICHMOND, Va. – Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. will lead the field to the green flag for Sunday night’s NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway (6 p.m. ET, USA, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

The fast lap of 118.162 mph in the No. 11 JGR Toyota landed Hamlin, 43, his third Busch Light Pole Award of the 2024 season. It’s his fourth career pole position at the 0.75-mile Virginia short track for Hamlin, who grew up in the Richmond area and is the hometown favorite this weekend. It is the 54th career pole position for the five-time Richmond winner.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos

Asked after the session about his work, Hamlin grinned and noted, “We were the slowest car in the first round, but the team made great adjustments and that’s the bottom line to it.

“Was I surprised it held up? Yes, I was,” Hamlin said of being the first to turn in a lap in the final session.

“He [crew chief Chris Gabehart] told me if we backed up my [first round] time we’d have a shot at it. Certainly a great job by this whole FedEx Camry team. Certainly unexpected given the practice and first-round qualifying we had.

“We just made the correct adjustments that we’re going to have to make in the race as well. I think we’re headed in the right direction.”

It is the first front-row start of the season for Truex, a three-time Richmond winner who is still racing for his first trophy of the year. He’s ranked 13th in the playoff standings, 108 points up on the field with the top-16 drivers advancing to the 10-race championship battle.

MORE: Paths to success at elimination line

Stewart-Haas Racing’s Josh Berry and Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott will start from the second row, followed by JGR’s Christopher Bell and Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon, who is making only his second top-10 start of the season.

Defending race winner, RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher qualified seventh and will start alongside 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace. Team Penske’s Joey Logano and 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick rounded out the top 10 who advanced to the final qualifying session.

Current Cup Series championship leader, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson will start 15th.  The track’s winningest active driver Kyle Busch (six wins) will roll off 12th.

RELATED: Fight is on for regular-season title

“I love winning here and to have five [wins] is certainly exciting and I feel like they have each been a little different,’’ Hamlin said, adding, “It feels good to come here and still be able to perform 20 years later.’’

A 45-minute practice session before qualifying allowed teams to try out the special “option tire” that NASCAR has made available this week. Teams have been given six sets of “prime tires” and two sets of “option tires” for use during the race.

Goodyear’s “prime” tires are a harder rubber compound with typically less grip but will last longer. The new “option” tire has a softer rubber compound offering more grip and speed but will not last as long.

“I think both the option and primary tire behaved about as we expected,’’ said Goodyear’s Director of Racing Greg Stucker, adding, “So far in the conditions we have now, we like what we see.’’

The drivers were also complimentary.

“I understand why we’re doing it and I think it was a good idea,’’ Hamlin said of the option tire.

Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon topped the leaderboard at 118.953 mph in the 45-minute practice session. Bubba Wallace (118.859 mph), Christopher Bell (118.760 mph), Martin Truex Jr. (118.707 mph) and Zane Smith (118.702 mph) rounded out the top five.

MORE: Practice results | How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

Carson Hocevar (118.530 mph), Chris Buescher (118.457 mph), Michael McDowell (118.229 mph), Daniel Suárez (118.203 mph) and Ty Gibbs (118.043 mph) completed the top 10.

Contributing: Staff reports

NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Richmond Raceway. 

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

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

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

Current Standings:

  1. Steve Luvender: 554
  2. Dustin Albino: -63
  3. r/NASCAR Community: -72
  4. Cameron Richardson: -101

Race 23 of 36: Richmond

Before the Olympic break, Kyle Larson took top honors in Indianapolis, earning the win in the Brickyard 400. As far as the 36 for 36 picking panel is concerned, it was a mixed bag. Cameron Richardson’s dreadful summer luck continued when his William Byron pick crashed out early, earning just eight points. Dustin Albino went with Brad Keselowski, who finished 21st, while the r/NASCAR community pick of Zane Smith earned 20 points from the No. 71’s 17th-place finish. Steve Luvender extended his points lead by picking Chase Elliott, whose 10th-place effort racked up 36 additional points.

It’s now officially the run-up to the playoffs — just four races remain — and our pickers’ remaining options are dwindling. And now, with an option tire available at Richmond, there’s an entirely new layer of unpredictability.

Dustin’s pick last week: No. 6, Brad Keselowski (16 points)

Total season points: 491 (second place)

Dustin: That was a needed two-week break here. Just about anything that could go wrong did go wrong for my picks, spanning the previous two months. Add Brad Keselowski running out of fuel while leading the Brickyard 400 to the laundry list. I’m going with a short-track stud at Richmond, though. Berry has transitioned nicely to the Cup Series on short(er) tracks, leading 25 laps at Bristol and finishing on the podium at New Hampshire. He made a spirited early charge through the field in March at the 0.75-mile track, dropping to 11th at the checkered flag. It’s an incredibly small sample size, but Berry has an average finish of 6.5 in two Richmond starts, including a runner-up finish while driving in place of Chase Elliott last year.

NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 4, Josh Berry

Steve’s pick last week: No. 9, Chase Elliott (36 points)

Total season points: 554 (first place)

Steve: I vowed earlier in the season to save rookie Josh Berry for the second half of the season when things would have time to click for the No. 4 team, and I believe Richmond is the right time. Statistically, Richmond is Berry’s best track in terms of average finish, where he’s run more than one race, and he’s also quite the short-track racer. Combine this with the added strategy element of option tires, and I think we’ve got a recipe for a good evening … a Berry good one. (Sorry, I had to.)

NASCAR.com’s Cameron Richardson: No. 10, Noah Gragson

Cameron’s pick last week: No. 24, William Byron (8 points)

Total season points: 453 (fourth place)

Cameron: Only two short tracks remain after Richmond, so I’m all in on going 4/4 with Stewart-Haas picks on tracks a mile or smaller. Briscoe (Phoenix), Berry (Richmond spring) and Preece (Martinsville) all delivered strong points days in their respective races, and I’m putting all my chips into Gragson this Sunday night. Gragson was 12th in the spring under the lights at the Virginia short track, and while his recent outings and shorter tracks like Iowa (16th) and New Hampshire (27th) didn’t pan out well, SHR seems to put together a fast setup whenever the organization visits Richmond.

r/NASCAR Community: No. 22, Joey Logano

r/NASCAR’s pick last week: No. 71, Zane Smith (20 points)

Total season points: 482 (third place)

Joey Logano got the nod from Reddit’s r/NASCAR community this week. From the voting thread

u/Quasar_24: “I can get on the Joey bandwagon. The 22 team is really good at recognizing low tire falloff and abusing it for insane track position.”

u/Extreme-Bite-9123: “They are also going to have the same tires they had at Wilkesboro here, the track where Joey led all but one lap, and that one lap is a technicality.” 

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

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

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — Every weekend during the NASCAR Cup Series season, drivers strap in and prepare to tackle the high-octane, adrenaline-fueled challenges of the track. But have you ever wondered what it truly takes to master a circuit when competition levels are closer than ever?

Part of the answer lies in the cutting-edge realm of simulation. This sophisticated technology allows drivers to navigate virtual yet hyper-realistic versions of tracks, honing their skills and strategies in a risk-free environment. By immersing themselves in these digital landscapes, teams gain invaluable insights and practice, transforming prior uncertainties into advantages before they even hit the race track. So while the roar of the engines and the thrill of competition unfold on race day, much of the groundwork is laid in the quiet precision behind the curtain of team headquarters. 

23XI Racing recently opened its doors to NASCAR.com to discuss how it best utilizes simulation data and applies it to its Nos. 23 and 45 Toyotas, driven by Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick.

MINDS BEHIND THE SCREENS

Keegan Leahy’s journey began in Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, where he majored in physics and atmospheric science as he eyed a career in meteorology. With a foundation built on unraveling the complexities of weather patterns and physical forces, Leahy now channels his expertise into the virtual racing world, where he dove into iRacing back in 2013.

That endeavor paid dividends in just a few short years, catching the attention of Denny Hamlin as he sought to start an eNASCAR team for the 2020 season. Their relationship strengthened throughout the year during the COVID-19 pandemic. While the sport was on hiatus, NASCAR drivers were paired with iRacers for the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series, with Leahy paired with Hamlin, driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and then budding co-owner of 23XI Racing.

So when Hamlin launched his NASCAR Cup Series team into reality in 2021, he also made sure to put in a good word for Leahy. He was able to convert those iRacing skills into something even more valuable as the team’s simulation driver, joining 23XI in its inaugural season in 2021. In his current role, Leahy has been tasked with turning the digital race track into a canvas for precision and innovation both behind the wheel and behind the screen.

leahy, kamui kobayashi talk
Courtesy of 23XI Racing

RELATED: 23XI’s Wallace on verge of advancing to playoffs

On the flip side is Marcos Telles, a mastermind in modeling the software for 23XI’s simulation work. A native of Brazil, Telles began his studies in São Paulo in mechanical engineering. Upon graduation, he continued his work in the Porsche Cup Brasil for three years before making a major life change and moving to Germany. Though he shifted continents and time zones, the crux of his work remained the same, focusing on the exact same Porsche Cup cars, only this time battling for the Porsche Sports Cup Deutschland.

“It was a really cool transition because I was actually doing the same championship, same tires, same cars, same everything, same rules even,” Telles said. “But I had to learn how to live alone, how to go to the market, how to wash my clothes, and how to speak German, because I didn’t know the words.”

Telles’ long and winding path through motorsports eventually led him to 23XI Racing in March of 2022. His skills brought him to the United States, knowing very little about the NASCAR scene and its drivers, yet bringing fresh knowledge to the sport, thanks in large part to the Cup Series’ then-new Next Gen vehicle that was similar to the sports cars he was accustomed to. 

“This is a completely different new world that I can learn from,” Telles said. “At the same time, I can bring everything I know from my world to them because they never saw that.”

Leahy and Telles exemplify the fresh outlook 23XI attempts to bring to its execution. Both are internationally-born individuals with no prior real-word experience in NASCAR, yet the team was willing to bring them into its organization to utilize their best attributes to help drive the program forward on-track.

HOW SIMULATION DRIVES 23XI’S PREPARATION

During the weeks leading up to a race, drivers dedicate time to prepare their bodies and minds to chase a win. However, there is limited time to practice on the track. 

This is where the art of simulation becomes critical. 

Tracks within the NASCAR Cup Series schedule have been scanned into the simulation, down to the millimeter of precision. There are millions of different combinations that can be made to the car, from tire models to shocks to aero packages, specializing from short tracks to superspeedways. Through these combinations, both Leahy and Telles work to make sure every model of the simulation is as realistic as possible. 

“The amount of options we have to go through to find the optimum of every single parameter is just huge,” Telles said. “That’s why we use the simulation a lot — that’s one of the reasons. Of course, we cannot test, so basically what we do is everything based off a simulation.”

A portion of the simulation data is pulled from historical material from races and tracks. There are, though, a few cases in which this isn’t entirely possible, like when a track has been repaved or a new circuit has been added to the schedule. In advance of those events, Goodyear tire tests allow each manufacturer to collect data to provide teams an expectation ahead of race weekend. Telles said most anything can be done in simulation, but that comes at a cost.

“We can add stuff on top of what we have,” Telles said. “We can add new ideas and develop things, but the more precise you want to be, the harder it gets.”

On-track testing, while limited, allows 23XI Racing to accumulate the remainder of the data. There are at least a thousand channels per wheel on the test car, each with sensors to track data. Attributes such as brake pressure and car speed are calculated, as well as the speed and temperature of each individual wheel, alongside many other characteristics of the car like surface temperature, bolt temperature, tire pressure and more. 

With such detailed information to pull from, Leahy and Telles then collaborate to create the most realistic simulation for that respective race weekend.

MORE: Richmond schedule

“I’ll spend a lot of time, very early on in our process, making sure the car drives similarly to how it does in real life,” Leahy said. “That involves taking last race’s data, last race’s car and driving in our simulator and making sure it lines up to real data. Make sure lap times are right, make sure we are running the right lines, make sure I’m using throttle, brake and steering very similarly to how Tyler (Reddick) and Bubba (Wallace) were doing last year. We call that correlation. From there, we can run stuff like setup options and try different stuff out in the sim. By the time we run through a lot of that, the car should be pretty close to what we show up with to the race track.”

TEAMWORK MAKES THE DREAM WORK  

Such devoted efforts into simulation data are necessary for the team to help adequately prepare the drivers, creating a mutually beneficial relationship between Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick and the simulation team.

While Leahy test pilots the simulation, both 23XI drivers confirm his feedback, hopping into the simulator themselves to dial in the feel each competitor is searching for.  

“Once the grunt work is done, Tyler and Bubba can jump in, and the car should be pretty close to what we show up with at the race track,” Leahy said. “They can drive it, get their feedback about how the car drives, potential setup changes and also get a bunch of laps in for practice.”

A few other members of the Nos. 45 and 23 car teams work closely with the simulation. Telles runs hand-in-hand weekly with crew chiefs and engineers to ensure the best solutions are being created within the simulation, as well as providing the best version possible to the teams. 

With many intelligent minds in a room, discussions regarding modeling of a car and its setups can be difficult. Telles said there are many different points of view between himself and the race engineers, which can provide a level of disagreement. But at the end of the day, everyone is fighting for the same goal.

“We’re not arguing to be right; we’re arguing to go faster,” Leahy said. 

Those spirited debates only drive the team forward, evidenced in results. Heading into Sunday’s race at Richmond Raceway (6 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), Reddick sits third in the regular-season points standings with Wallace just seven points out from a playoff spot.

23XI Racing utilizes simulations in a way that can prepare them for the weekends to come. As the playoffs lurk around the corner, the team will capitalize on both Leahy’s and Telles’ skills to guide them to success through their simulation work.