DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Aug. 13, 2024)HEYDUDE, a brand known for stylish and comfortable footwear, is coming together with the No. 1 motorsport in America for the first time to launch the new HEYDUDE x NASCAR collection, available for purchase as of today at https://www.heydude.com/collections/nascar-collection, Rack Room Shoes and select retailers.

The collection features five different designs of HEYDUDE’s classic Wally silhouette selling for $74.99 each, including three that are inspired by beloved drivers Chase Elliott, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Kyle Larson.

Wally NASCAR: Race track ready, the black design features NASCAR written on the silhouette and NASCAR color details throughout the design.

Wally NASCAR Daytona 500: Inspired by the iconic international speedway, the beige shoe features Daytona branding and NASCAR color details throughout the design.

Wally Chase Elliott®: The blue No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts livery best associated with NASCAR’s 2020 Cup Series champion comes to life with plenty of additional detail from the car to the shoe.

Wally Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Combining multiple fan favorites, this bright green shoe is inspired by the iconic Sun Drop scheme the NASCAR Hall of Famer continues to roll out with JR Motorsports.

Wally Kyle Larson: This shoe brings to life the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion’s red, white and blue HendrickCars.com design synonymous with the No. 5 Chevrolet.

“HEYDUDE is an ideal partner to add to NASCAR’s licensing portfolio, and one that will absolutely resonate with NASCAR fans” said Megan Malayter, NASCAR vice president of licensing and consumer products. “The brand’s ability to delivery easy-on, easy-off comfort with designs that allow our fans to stylishly express themselves and their passions is a perfect fit at or away from the race track.”

RELATED: Cup Series schedule | How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

“HEYDUDE is thrilled to come together with one of the most prestigious racing organizations in the world, NASCAR, to celebrate the exhilarating world of motorsports through this unique collection,” said Paul Nugent, Chief Marketing Officer at HEYDUDE. “We know that HEYDUDE and NASCAR fans alike will enjoy this collection that combines iconic NASCAR designs and personalized styles inspired by some of the sport’s top drivers.”

With just three regular season races remaining, Elliott, Larson and the rest of the NASCAR Cup Series roll into Michigan International Speedway for the FireKeepers Casino 400 at 2:30 p.m. ET this Sunday, Aug. 18 (USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Tickets are available for purchase at www.nascar.com/tickets.

A general photo of a HEYDUDE shoe with a Daytona International Speedway logo on its side.
HEYDUDE

Roger Turbush doesn’t want to be known as just a short-track guy.

The 43-year-old competitor has made 15 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts with all but one coming at his home track in New York’s Riverhead Raceway. On Wednesday, Turbush will load up his No. 88 Modified and travel to Thompson, Connecticut, to join the Modified Tour for the Thompson 150 presented by FloSports.com at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

“Riverhead is a bullring. It’s a lot of rough-and-tumble racing. You’ve got to be very strong to do it,” Turbush said. “You’ve got to have a big backbone for it, and I’ve got that. But I want to try somewhere else where we can use some of our speed and setup and see what we’ve got.

“I want to do more. I want to do more than just Riverhead. I want to try it.”

RELATED: Entry list for Wednesday’s race at Thompson

The Turbush family is well known amongst Long Island’s many dedicated racing families. A member of the Turbush family has been active in the local racing scene since the 1950s, when Turbush’s grandfather Charlie raced at tracks like Riverhead, Islip and Freeport.

That racing tradition has been carried on by each subsequent generation. In all, at least seven members of the Turbush family have driven race cars. They include Turbush’s father, Dan, his aunt Lolly, his uncle Buddy, his brother Chris, his cousin Brandon and his nephew Mark Stewart.

Roger Turbush began his racing journey 16 years ago. He was a force in Riverhead Raceway’s Super Pro Truck division, winning his first track championship in 2010. He added subsequent championships in 2012 and 2016.

The 2017 season saw him make the jump to the headlining Modified class. He broke through for his first Modified win at Riverhead in 2019 and always makes a point to join the field when the Modified Tour visits the quarter-mile bullring.

“It took us a little while. We’ve had some good runs here and there,” said Turbush, who earned a career-best third with the Modified Tour at Riverhead in 2021. “I got my first win at Riverhead in 2019. I’ve had some good runs with the Tour. I got third back in 2021 at Riverhead, and I’ve gotten a bunch of top 10s since then.

“I’ve been pretty decent, just obviously not good enough. The last two years we’ve been knocking on doors now. We’re getting closer.”

While most of his racing career has been spent at Riverhead, Turbush has always dreamed of traveling to race. It’s why during his days racing in the Super Pro Truck class at Riverhead he did some traveling with the Northeastern-based ProTruck Challenge.

Roger Turbush, driver of the No. 88 Rheem Modified, signs autographs for fans during the Miller Lite Salutes Mike Ewanitsko 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Riverhead Raceway on June 24, 2023 in Riverhead, New York. (Photo: Dakota Moyer/NASCAR)

That allowed him to make his debut at Thompson during the 2014 season, which saw him charge from the eighth starting position to win at the 0.625-mile paved oval.

In four seasons with the series, he won eight times and captured the 2015 series championship. He also won at Thompson two additional times, with his last victory coming in 2017.

However, he’s never raced a Modified at Thompson, and he knows that will be vastly different than the Truck he last raced there seven years ago.

“We don’t expect to qualify (well) because I’ll still probably be getting used to it,” Turbush admitted. “During the race is probably when I’ll get up on it and I’ll start focusing on the cars. I race the cars; I race the competition. In practice you’re not doing that.

“I expect to do a little bit better in the race than I do in practice and qualifying. I expect to qualify in the back. I’m not expecting anything crazy.”

Turbush is not anticipating a win Wednesday. For him and his family-owned team, a top-10 finish at Thompson would be a victory.

Realistically, he thinks a finish inside the top 20 and loading a clean race car in the hauler at the end of 150 laps would make Wednesday evening’s race a success.

“I’ve been there before. I’ve got the feeling (for the track),” Turbush said. “We’ve got a pretty basic setup for it. I think we can definitely get a top 20. I want to get 150 laps under my belt.

“We’ve had a lot of people come together to get to this race here on Wednesday. We’re definitely looking forward it.”

Assuming all goes well Wednesday, Turbush hopes to be back at Riverhead on Saturday night to compete in the annual running of the Baldwin/Evans/Jarzombek 77. After that, his next scheduled race is the third annual Eddie Partridge 256 on Sept. 14.

In a perfect world, Turbush would like to do a bit more traveling with the Modified Tour this year. If he does well at Thompson, then who knows: He might just load up his hauler and take a little trip south near the end of the year.

“I want to span the horizon. I want to do more than just Riverhead,” Turbush said. “I want to try and see what we can do elsewhere. We don’t want to just do one track. We want to try out different tracks. I’ve been trying to do this.

“Another bucket list is New Hampshire. Another is Martinsville. I watch it all the time. We’ve got good cars. I want to see if we can get to where we compare.”

Editor’s note: This story has been edited to reflect NASCAR’s decision to rule Austin Dillon’s victory ineligible for a postseason berth.

RICHMOND, Va. — Austin Dillon’s Chevrolet sported a camouflage paint scheme in this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway. Not much was hidden about the No. 3 machine or its motives during the final lap of overtime; not after a systematic dispatching of Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin by brute force to score its driver’s first win in nearly two years.

After a brash display of offense-first driving, Dillon joined team owner and grandfather Richard Childress in playing some defense as they met the press at the end of the Cook Out 400. The damage control came in response to pointed criticism from Logano — who revved his No. 22 Ford angrily as he smoked past the No. 3 pit stall post-race — and from Hamlin, who bristled at the idea that Dillon “did what he had to do” — something he stated nearly verbatim in his winner’s press conference — to clinch a Cup Series victory. That’s not counting the verdict from the court of public opinion with the fans, who throttled the No. 3 team’s celebration with boos from the grandstands.

RELATED: Austin Dillon scores upset | Richmond results

Part of Dillon’s defense was that his rivals would have acted similarly, had the roles been reversed.

“I’ve seen Denny and Joey make moves that have been running people up the track to win,” said Dillon, now a five-time winner in the Cup Series. “This is the first opportunity in two years for me to be able to get a win. I drove in there and kept all four tires turning across the start/finish line. To me, I’ve seen a lot of stuff over the years in NASCAR where people move people. It’s just part of our sport. You know what I mean? Remember when Joey said ‘short-track racing.’ He knows what it was. In your shoes, what would you do?”

What Dillon ultimately did will be entered in the Richmond track’s history books as one of its most controversial chapters. The tactics took some of the bloom off what was setting up to be a clean, rosy finish in regulation for the 34-year-old driver, who was leading at the end of a banner day until a late caution flag for a crash involving Ryan Preece and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. set up overtime. Dillon had been leading, but when he was outdueled by Logano on the final restart, desperation set in.

Dillon drove in deep into the final set of corners, turning Logano’s Ford sideways into the outside retaining wall then hooking the No. 11 Toyota of Hamlin into the wall after it eked ahead in that aftermath. Dillon then drove on unfettered to the checkered flag, but the sailing was about to get choppy.

A review of radio transmissions revealed that “wreck him” was part of the No. 3 team’s frantic communications to Dillon during that final span. Childress denied hearing any such directive from spotter Brandon Benesch, and Dillon said that he tuned out what he was hearing in his helmet in the mad scramble to the end — noting both the stakes and how full his hands were with the steering wheel.

MORE: Dillon’s win ruled ineligible for playoff berth; spotter suspended

“Dude, at that point I’m elbows up, holding the throttle down, just trying to get to the start/finish line literally,” Dillon said. “I am sideways off of (Turn) 4 ’cause I’m already three-quarters of the lane up the track, hammer the gas. I’m just looking at the start/finish line. That’s it. I ain’t hearing [expletive] at that point, you know? Your eyes turn red. You see red, you get to the end of the race.

“Daytona, last lap when I won there at the 500, your eyes see red. There’s one thing on your mind: get to the start/finish line first, period. No matter if anybody came on the radio, it doesn’t matter. Like, you have one job to do, it’s to get to the start/finish line first. That maybe can answer your question. A lot of people lose their jobs because they don’t get to the start/finish line first.”

3 team celebrates
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Childress, the Hall of Famer with control over that employment, had his own defense.

“I don’t think anybody — I never heard it on our radio, unless somebody was making it up. I didn’t hear it. Did you?” Childress said, posing the question to No. 3 crew chief Justin Alexander, who also said he didn’t hear it. “Not on our No. 1 (radio) channel, No. 2 channel, no one said that. If you believe in everything you hear on the Internet, I’m not Santa Claus if it ever comes up. Probably somebody just saying it, put it in there.”

Pressed further about Benesch, Childress hedged, but approvingly so.

“I didn’t hear him, and I was on the radio with him,” Childress said. “We’ll see. If he did, he did a damn good job at it. He won the race.”

MORE: Updated Cup Series standings

Regardless of who said or heard what, Dillon cleaned out two of the sport’s top stars in an arcing 1-2 punch that would make a heavyweight prizefighter tip his gloves. That move will be debated for days, and Hamlin did it in real-time after a moment of reflection and a brief consultation with crew chief Chris Gabehart as he leaned up against his No. 11 Toyota post-race.

In his remarks, Hamlin said he knew a questionable move was coming from Dillon and acknowledged the stakes, but he also noted the lack of a deterrent for such last-lap antics. Dillon hadn’t led a lap all year until Sunday’s 400, and he caught lightning at Richmond to vault from 32nd in the Cup Series standings to 13th on the provisional postseason grid before NASCAR levied its penalty Wednesday.

“It’s tough, because this is what the young short-track racers see, and they think that this is OK because they watch the professionals on Sunday that are supposed to act like adults just do dumb (expletive),” said Hamlin. “And it’s just amazing that it’s allowed. I mean, I don’t fault him, because he’s completely desperate, right? He’s 30th in points. He jumps 20 spots in points, or whatever the hell it is. It’s, his season’s saved. Now, he’ll have to pay repercussions down the line for this, but it’s so worth it from his standpoint because there’s no guardrails or rules that say, ‘don’t do that.'”

Logano’s critique was marked by fury and a scathing assessment of Dillon’s Cup Series tenure, now in its 11th full season.

“I beat him fair and square on the restart, and he just pulls a chicken— move,” Logano said, after noting that the win should be revoked. “He’s a piece of crap. The kid, he sucks. He’s sucked his whole career, and now he’s going to be in the playoffs and good for him, I guess.”

RELATED: Logano fined after Richmond

Those criticisms? That Dillon’s heard.

“It’s been rough the last two years,” Dillon said. “For me to see the front and race with two of the best guys in the sport and prove that I can do it when given the opportunity, it was hard for me not to go to, like, get upset in the car. I had to keep my [expletive] together, to tell you the truth. This stuff ain’t easy. I won championships in the Truck Series and Xfinity Series. I’m sure there’s many people out there that have wanted my head to get out of the 3 car for a long time. I’m fortunate I have a great family, great partners at RCR. When given that shot, you just got to take it.”

RICHMOND, Va. — It didn’t take long for the NASCAR Cup Series’ new-look race procedures, which featured two types of Goodyear tires, to have an influence on Sunday night’s event at Richmond Raceway. For Daniel Suárez and the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing team, it changed the trajectory of their whole race.

Suárez’s team was the first and foremost squad to reap the benefits of Goodyear’s red-lettered “option” tires, bolting on the grippier but less durable rubber at the start of Stage 2 in a successful bid to recover track position. The group ran out of the speedier tire when the event went to overtime, and Suárez slipped to a 10th-place finish, but the positives — the team’s first stage win of the year and a season-best 93 laps led — outweighed the offset.

RELATED: Richmond results | At-track photos

“Obviously, we had a couple of plans before the race, and that was one of them,” Suárez told NASCAR.com. “We knew that most people were going to put the option tires in Stage 3, and if everyone has the option tire, there is not really an advantage, right? So if we were outside of the top 10, we wanted to put them on earlier to gain track position and hopefully keep it, and it almost worked out like that. If it wasn’t for the last caution, I felt like we were going to finish with a stage win and probably in the top five, and we still finished in the top 10. So, it was a pretty good night. The guys gambled, were thinking outside the box, and I had a lot of fun passing a bunch of cars. So it was a good day.”

The debut of the two-tire compound format in a points-paying Cup Series race added another layer of strategy and intrigue to Sunday’s Cook Out 400, won by Austin Dillon in a slam-bang, overtime finish. Teams were allotted just two sets of the red-letter option tires for the 400-lapper, with yellow-lettered “prime” tires serving as the baseline. Every team in the 37-car field started on prime tires for the 70-lap first stage, where Suárez placed 15th after starting 21st.

Suárez’s No. 99 team was the guinea pig during the stage break, veering off from the strategy mold and lining up 16th for the restart on option tires. Michael McDowell’s No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford further back was the only other team to deploy the reds, setting up 29th after receiving the free pass to return to the lead lap.

Both teams carved through the field, and it took Suárez just 12 green-flag laps to pass Denny Hamlin to charge into the lead — “like Mario Kart with a star,” he said later. McDowell reached the top 10 after 20 laps, putting the short-term benefit of the softer tire compound on display for the rest of the field.

Suárez pitted on Lap 123 to complete a 42-lap run, reverting to the prime tires, but his newfound position among the front-runners was established. He rounded out a Stage 2 win, collecting a valuable playoff point as he enters the Cup Series postseason next month.

“We talked about ahead of time that for the reds to be a big advantage for us, we had to do something different,” No. 99 crew chief Matt Swiderski told NASCAR.com. “So our goal was to put them on when everybody else wasn’t on them, use that to get our track position. We knew it might bite us if there was a caution at the end, but it was the best play to get some track position, get back in the race. We were within a lap and a half of it kind of working out, but getting a stage win for us is big, too. So that was part of the decision, too.”

MORE: Cup Series standings

Goodyear officials were also pleased with the strategy element, which was designed to spice up short-track races after a brief test at the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in May. The effectiveness of the option tires began to fade near the end of Suárez’s run, and Goodyear representatives indicated that the softer rubber held up well for that 40- to 45-lap range.

“The option tire worked exactly as it was intended,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “They fired off immediately and were more than a half-second faster than the prime, which is big on a short track. Also, the options gave up significantly more than the primes over a long run, as intended. At about the 25-lap mark, the lap times evened off, so the options proved fast early while the primes were strong on the long run.

“What was really exciting was how different teams used the option tire at different times to accomplish their own goals. For example, Daniel Suárez put them on early in the race and charged from the middle of the pack to take the lead, while Kyle Busch put them on at the end of Stage 2 to try to get a lap back. Overall, the primes/options tire set-ups highlighted the risk versus reward we were exactly looking for.”

The No. 99 team fastened its final set of option tires with 40 laps to go in regulation, briefly dropping Suárez back to 15th in the pit exchange before he mounted a charge into contention for a top-five result. That opportunity went away when a crash involving Ryan Preece and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. just before the white flag forced overtime; Suárez held on for 10th with fresh prime tires for the final two-lap dash, while others with a squirreled-away option set contended for the victory.

The net positives from the night, however, had Suárez in support of more applications for the two-compound tire format.

“In my opinion, honestly, we should do this everywhere. I mean, why not?” Suárez said. “Nobody had a tire issue. The tire didn’t blow up. It was fast, it fell off. I mean, imagine if we had this tire on a mile-and-a-half, or road-course racing. I mean, why not? I don’t think there is one negative of today’s race. It was exciting as a driver. I bet you guys loved it. The fans love it. More passing, more action. Why not? I think there was a lot of positives from today.”

A speeding penalty during the first full pit stop of the Final Stage sent Christopher Bell’s dominant No. 20 Toyota back down pit road for a penalty and, ultimately, out of contention to win Sunday night’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway.

Bell had led 115 laps prior to the miscue — topping 600 laps led in a season for the first time in his career — and his Joe Gibbs Racing machine was among the best in the field.

RELATED: Race results

The resulting pass-through penalty, though, sent Bell tumbling back through the field. Ultimately, he could not recover.

The Oklahoma native won Stage 1 for his series-best 10th stage victory of 2024, setting up for what appeared would be a potential 50-point day and victory. While he did recover to score 50 points on the day, he finished sixth and was not at the front of the field when Austin Dillon mashed Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin on the final lap to win.

MORE: Recap wild finish in Richmond

Still, Bell was one of four Toyotas inside the top six at the checkered flag and his speed indicated he remains a title contender as the NASCAR Playoffs inch closer.

Editor’s note: This story has been edited to reflect NASCAR’s decision to rule Austin Dillon’s victory ineligible for a postseason berth.

Austin Dillon’s last-lap bulldoze of Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin sent the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing driver into Victory Lane with a Richmond win, with those he wrecked left furious after the calamity coming to the checkered flag.

“It was chicken-(expletive),” a seething Logano said on USA Network after being turned from the lead in the final corner.

“It’s obviously foul,” Hamlin said minutes later.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

In the end, Dillon’s name will be etched as the winner at Richmond Raceway as he claimed an improbable victory to snap a 68-race winless drought. But he certainly won’t have an easy path the rest of the season, especially with Logano and Hamlin all but vowing retribution.

Here’s what happened: A caution on Lap 399 of 400 set up a green-white-checkered finish Sunday night, a restart in which Team Penske’s Logano soared to the lead from the top lane. Logano held the lead entering Turn 3 on the final lap and was turned up the track by Dillon. The RCR driver then went down the track and hit Hamlin in the right rear of his No. 11 car, enabling Dillon to take the lead out of Turn 4 for his first win in two years.

“He was four car-lengths back, it wasn’t even close,” Logano said. “It’s a bunch of BS. Not even freaking close. Bump-and-run, I get it, but he got in there and just drove through me. It’s ridiculous.”

“… I was three to four car-lengths ahead into (Turn 3). I even backed up the entry. I was like, ‘I’ll just wrap the bottom here, I’m good.’ And he just drives in so hard. Obviously he didn’t make the turn. He hit me, and then the 11 (of Hamlin) was going to win the race, so he had no intentions to race. I beat him fair and square on the restart, and he just pulls a chicken— move.”

While Hamlin wasn’t as outwardly enraged as Logano was on the TV broadcast, the 54-time Cup Series winner — who finished runner-up and was at times dominant on his hometown short track — took issue with being hooked in the right rear, a no-no among racers.

“The problem I had is I get hooked in the right rear again,” Hamlin said after exiting his No. 11 Toyota on pit road. “Obviously, he’s just not going to go far (in the postseason). You have to pay your dues back on stuff like that. … Who am I to throw stones in a glass house, but I’ve never won one that way.

“… If I had to do that to Joey, it’s like, ‘Ah, well, I’m going to have to race him in the playoffs. That’s a championship contender. I’m a contender.’ It’s probably not worth it. But for someone 30th in points, it’s worth it because even if he gets every race from here to the end of season, he gained 20 spots in points for doing that.”

MORE: Dillon penalized, Richmond win ineligible for playoff berth

Dillon refuted Hamlin’s comment of saying he’d never done anything like that to win a race before, saying he’s seen both Logano and Hamlin win in similar ways.

And in the immediate aftermath after climbing from his car, Dillon greeted his family, held his baby and offered his perspective of the long road he’s been on the past two years and how all of that culminated in a five-second barrage that left his competitors — along with their cars — spinning.

WATCH: Elton Sawyer on Richmond finish

“It’s been two years,” Dillon said. “This is the first car I’ve had with a shot to win. I felt like with two to go, we were the fastest car. Obviously had to have a straightaway. Wrecked the guy. I hate to do that, but sometimes you just got to have it.

“… It’s been tough for the last two years, man. I care about RCR, these fans, my wife. This is my first for my baby girl. It means a lot. I hate it, but I had to do it.”

NASCAR Senior Vice President of Competition Elton Sawyer said the sanctioning body would review the final laps, and if necessary, issue penalties.

“You talk about crossing the line, and I would say, looking at that, we were right up against the line,” Sawyer told NASCAR.com’s Alex Weaver. “We’re going to go back and look at all the video, listen to audio, gather all the information, and we’re gonna make the right decision.

“Obviously it’s the last lap. Our DNA has been for years to be aggressive, we just have to make sure we’re doing that in the right way. We’ll download on this, we’ll look at it and make sure going forward everybody has an understanding of how we’ll race. If we see something that rises to a certain level, we’ll for sure penalize them.”

MORE: Cup standings | Cup schedule | How to get notified for 2025 schedule release

On-track penalties of the unofficial variety may await Dillon, too. He hinted that he does expect payback at some point.

His newfound rivals appear to be all too ready to return the favor.

“I just got out of the car,” Logano said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do yet, but I know it’s ridiculous, and you can’t stand for it. I can tell you that much. I don’t know what I’m supposed to do next. Obviously, I’ll think about it, but you can’t let (expletive) like that happen.”

Editor’s note: This story has been edited to reflect NASCAR’s decision to rule Austin Dillon’s victory ineligible for a postseason berth.

RICHMOND, Va. — It took a controversial full-contact finish but Austin Dillon claimed his first NASCAR Cup Series victory in two seasons in Sunday night’s Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway.

Coming to the checkered flag during the final lap of NASCAR Overtime, Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevy hit the rear bumper of the race-leading No. 22 Team Penske Ford driven by Joey Logano, crashing Logano’s car into the SAFER barrier. Then Dillon immediately moved low on track and hit Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota as he was driving by. That contact allowed Dillon to take the checkered flag only a few feet ahead and claim the all-important win just before the yellow flag was displayed.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

As Logano and Hamlin drove their dented, smoking cars to pit lane, the 34-year-old North Carolinian Dillon did victory doughnuts and spoke about the win and the move he used to gain it. He reminded reporters later that this was short-track-style racing and that he’s seen both Logano and Hamlin make similarly aggressive moves to win a trophy.

“I don’t know man, it’s been two years and this is the first car I’ve had a shot to win with,” Dillon said when asked if he thought it was a fair move for the win.

“I felt like with two to go, we were the fastest car. Obviously we had to have a straightaway. Wrecked the guy. I hate to do that, but sometimes you just got to do it.

“I got to thank the good Lord above. It’s been tough for the last two years man. I care about RCR, these fans, my wife. This is my first [win] for my baby girl. It means a lot. I hate it, but I had to do it.”

“When given that shot, you’ve got to take it,” Dillon added.

SHOP: Buy winner’s gear

It’s Dillon’s first win in the last 68 races and fifth of his career. His last trophy came in the final regular-season race of 2022 at Daytona International Speedway.

Noted his grandfather, team owner and NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Childress, “He knew what he had to do and they (Logano and Hamlin) would have done it to him.”

After speaking briefly with reporters alongside his car on pit road, an angry Logano went immediately to the NASCAR officials team hauler.

“It was chicken [expletive] — there’s no doubt about it,” the two-time series champion Logano said of Dillon’s move. “He was four car-lengths back, not even close. Then he wrecks the 11 [Hamlin] to go along with it.

“I mean I get it, bump and run,” Logano continued, “I’ve done that, but he just drove through me, it’s ridiculous.”

Logano’s crew chief Paul Wolfe was frustrated as well.

“It’s just a joke to call that racing. … Something like that, that’s not racing,” Wolfe said. “We all put too much in this … that’s not professional what happened tonight.”

Hamlin, who led the most laps (124) on the night, was equally as frustrated.

“There are no penalties for rough driving so it opens up the opportunity for Austin to just do whatever he wants,” said Hamlin, who was scored second.

“I got hooked in the right rear again. I was just minding my own business and he hooked me in the right rear and put me in the fence. I don’t know. The record book won’t care about what happened. He’s going to be credited with a win.”

POST-RACE REACTIONS: Logano: ‘It’s a bunch of BS’ | Hamlin: ‘The record book won’t care’

Finishing just behind Hamlin were 23XI Racing teammates Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain was fifth. These positions were important with only three races remaining now to set the 16-driver playoff field.

Playoff eligibility changed throughout the race — sometimes dramatically so.

Wallace’s top-five run was enough to move him from a seven-point deficit outside the postseason’s 16-driver bracket to just inside the top 16. He has a three-point advantage in that second-to-final playoff position now over both RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher, who finished 18th Sunday night, and Chastain. Buescher and Chastain are tied in points, but the tie-breaker goes to No. 17.

Martin Truex Jr., who led the championship standings for much of the early season and held a 108-point advantage inside the standings at the Richmond green flag, took a big hit in the points. His No. 19 JGR Toyota had to retire early with engine problems, taking a last-place finish in Sunday’s 37-car field. Now, the 2017 series champion holds only a 78-point advantage above the playoff elimination line — ranked 13th, still the highest-ranked driver without a win. Joe Gibbs Racing’s Ty Gibbs is 14th with an 18-point cushion above the elimination line, followed by Wallace, Buescher and Chastain.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Bell, who led 122 laps and won Stage 1 — a series best 10th stage win — finished sixth, followed by Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson, Spire Motorsports’ Carson Hocevar, Hendrick’s Chase Elliott and Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez rounding out the Richmond top 10.

Larson continues to lead the standings — now with a five-point advantage over Reddick and a six-point lead on his teammate Elliott. Hamlin is fourth, only 21 points back.

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Not only was the race noteworthy for its dramatic ending and the shake up in the points standings; it was a test run of the new option tire that allowed teams to have a choice of Goodyear rubber in-race. It certainly created a new element of strategy and suspense.

Suárez who tried the new tires early, for example, made up 15 points and took the lead immediately after his pit stop to change them.

“The option tire worked exactly as it was intended,” said Goodyear’s Director of Racing Greg Stucker. “They fired off immediately and were more than a half-second faster than the prime, which is big on a short track. Also, the options gave up significantly more than the primes over a long run, as intended.

“What was really exciting was how different teams used the option tire at different times to accomplish their own goals,” he added.

With all the storylines, dramatic finish, and important new tire element, Reddick offered the understatement of the evening, “Wild way to end the night.”

The series moves to the Midwest next week for Monday’s Firekeepers Casino 400 at the two-mile Michigan International Speedway (11 a.m. ET, USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). RFK Racing’s Buescher is the defending race winner.

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Cup Series garage at Richmond concluded without issue, confirming Dillon as the race winner.

Martin Truex Jr.’s engine expired early in the Final Stage of Sunday evening’s Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway, bringing an end to the No. 19 driver’s day after completing 250 of 400 laps.

After starting on the front row for the 400-lapper around the Virginia short track, Truex scored much-needed stage points after the early exit with eight tallies in Stage 1.

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“It hiccupped once going down the backstretch, and then it started missing,” Truex said about any warning to his engine failure. “It’s like it broke a valve spring or something and then it kind of self-disintegrated, self-destructed really quickly. I don’t know. One of them days.”

A sour pit stop with an issue on the left-rear wheel in Stage 2 catalyzed the quick downward spiral for the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing team and Truex was unable to grab points in Stage 2 after a fierce battle with Chase Elliott.

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Truex entered Sunday’s race 13th in the playoff standings with a comfortable 108-point margin to the elimination line. Sunday’s 37th- and last-place finish marks Truex’s first DNF of 2024. The retiring 2017 Cup Series champion entered Richmond having completed 5,817 of 5,824 laps this season.

“I think James (Small, crew chief) had the right strategy to put the tires on when he did,” Truex said. We just had an issue on pit road with the left rear coming off. We went from being one of the fastest cars on the track to not having a very good car with a very small change. We just missed an adjustment race-track wise, but we were still going to be okay. It is a shame. Last race here full time and it would have been nice to get another win.”

Four of the last five winning strategies at Richmond Raceway included seven or more pit stops, taking four tires on each stop. The two recent winners each drove under 10 laps after their last stops, suggesting some similarities in achieving victory. But there’s a difference this time in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (6 p.m. ET, USA, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) — the option tire.

Teams will get six sets of prime tires, two option tire sets — a softer, faster tire compound — and standard wet weather tires if needed. The choice in grip will enhance the strategy calls, especially with four more chances left to earn a spot in the Cup Series Playoffs.

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Denny Hamlin heads into Sunday as the betting favorite, just ahead of his Joe Gibbs Racing counterparts Christopher Bell and Martin Truex Jr. The updated Racing Insights projections give Bell, the No. 20 driver, a slight edge over Hamlin, the hometown driver.

Even with all the tire and strategy changes shaking up the competition, JGR drivers remain the top picks in projections. The team’s consistency is unparalleled at Richmond, amassing 19 wins across six different drivers — with 10 of those wins coming in the last 17 races. Hamlin is the most recent victor at the track, and 10 of his 54 career wins came in his home state of Virginia. As for Bell, he’s won the most stages this year and is two laps shy of leading 600 laps for the first time in a season. He’s put together one of his best regular seasons and is charging to the playoffs with a full head of steam. Finally, there’s Truex and Ty Gibbs, who each have a healthy gap over the elimination line but could win at any time to clinch.

DRIVERS TO WATCH

MARTIN TRUEX JR.: Five drivers have won a race in their final full-time season. Sunday is likely Truex’s best chance to make it six. He’s finished seventh or better in 10 of the last 11 Richmond races and was on the verge of winning there in the spring. He has the consistency to lean on and the talent to win there.

CHASE ELLIOTT: Elliott is not only 12 points behind his teammate Kyle Larson for the Regular Season Championship but also 12 markers back for the most points earned on short tracks in 2024. His fifth-place finish at Richmond in the spring sets the stage for a potential win, which is crucial if he wants those 15 regular-season bonus points for the playoffs.

JOEY LOGANO: Logano’s 2024 campaign took off after a runner-up finish at Richmond this past spring. He ranks third in most points scored on short tracks in 2024 and has four straight top 10s at Richmond. While he’s already locked into the playoffs, he’s still a candidate for a multi-win season.

JOSH BERRY: The short-track specialist can shake up the playoff picture on Sunday. Berry’s average finish on short tracks in a Cup car is 11.4. He will also have Rodney Childers atop the pit box, who has prepared cars to finish 15th or better in 19 of the last 20 Richmond races.

CHRIS BUESCHER: Still looking for a trip to Victory Lane, Buescher is 17 points to the good and there’s still time for him to catch fire before the playoffs. Over his last five races at Richmond, Buescher has earned a win and three top fives and should be in the mix on Sunday.

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RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE COOK OUT 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
120Christopher Bell
211Denny Hamlin
319Martin Truex Jr.
445Tyler Reddick
59Chase Elliott
612Ryan Blaney
722Joey Logano
84Josh Berry
924William Byron
105Kyle Larson
116Brad Keselowski
1223Bubba Wallace
1317Chris Buescher
141Ross Chastain
1554Ty Gibbs
1648Alex Bowman
1799Daniel Suárez
1814Chase Briscoe
198Kyle Busch
2077Carson Hocevar
213Austin Dillon
2238Todd Gilliland
2334Michael McDowell
242Austin Cindric
2510Noah Gragson
2641Ryan Preece
2747Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2843Erik Jones
2951Justin Haley
307Corey LaJoie
3116Ty Dillon
3242John Hunter Nemechek
3321Harrison Burton
3471Zane Smith
3531Daniel Hemric
3615Riley Herbst
3766Parker Retzlaff

RICHMOND, Va. — When Christopher Bell got the call that his crew chief, Adam Stevens, would be away from the track for a little more than NASCAR’s two-week break for the Olympics, his reaction was marked by surprise. Taking in the news that Stevens had injured both knees in a diving board accident while on family vacation, Bell also took a pause.

“I mean, I guess he said that he was jumping, and it just literally snapped both of his knees. So that’s insane,” Bell said Saturday at Richmond Raceway, site of Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (6 p.m. ET, USA, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). “I’d never heard of that, but then come to find out, my car chief Chris Sherwood — actually my crew chief now — his wife said that she’s seen that before, but it makes me terrified of jumping off a diving board, that’s for sure.”

There may be no twists and flips on the 10-meter platform for Bell, but he’ll take a leap into Sunday’s 400-lapper without Stevens — his crew chief since 2021 — atop the pit box for the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota team. Replacing him in the interim will be Sherwood, who is a familiar face for Bell and who subbed for Stevens during a Cup Series weekend in 2021 at Watkins Glen International.

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There’s a confidence level there with Sherwood, Bell said, that dates back to before his arrival on JGR’s Cup Series roster. There’s also the knowledge that Stevens will have a guiding role from back at the team headquarters.

“Honestly, there’s not a better guy out there for the job than Sherwood, just because I’m very comfortable around him,” said Bell, who starts fifth Sunday. “He was my mechanic on my Xfinity cars at JGR back in 2018, 2019, so we have a long history. And Adam is still, he’s going to be basically doing his job. The communication will be through Sherwood because Adam can’t be here. But yeah, I feel confident that we’ll be just fine.”

Some of that optimism stems from his penchant for racing on Richmond’s 0.75-mile layout. He’s a three-time winner in just five Xfinity Series races here, and though he’s yet to break through at Richmond in the Cup Series, his average finish is an admirable 7.5 in eight starts.

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Tempering those positives is the strategy-sensitive nature of Richmond, where a new wrinkle debuts this weekend with the introduction of tire choices for the first time in a points-paying Cup Series event. “You’ve got to bring that one up, too, don’t you?” Bell laughed when reminded of the extra strategy layer. Still, he’s hopeful that a solid day — from a results standpoint and in the team’s communication — is achievable.

“This is definitely one that we have circled to be a track where we run well, hopefully score a lot of points at,” Bell says. “The thing that’s very interesting about Richmond is that it is a place that’s filled with late pit-strategy calls, right? And with Adam not being on the pit box, if there’s any sort of delay from the information he’s getting in Huntersville, North Carolina, to what we’re actually doing here in Richmond, they could be a little tricky because this place, the name of the game is executing your pit strategy, whether you’re short-pitting or long-pitting, and there’s a lot of last-minute decisions that have to be made here at Richmond.

“I think every week that we miss with Adam, it should get easier and easier as we get into a routine, but I don’t know. I mean, I feel confident that we’re going to be strong, and hopefully, we don’t miss a beat.”