As Martin Truex Jr.’s No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota sat on the Sonoma Raceway frontstretch in a painful stall only yards before the checkered flag on Sunday afternoon, it was a vivid and frustrating microcosm of the former NASCAR Cup Series champion’s day and season. So good. So close.

“It’s just one of them years,’’ a frustrated Truex told reporters walking down Sonoma’s pit road afterward. Instead of what looked like a runner-up finish, he was scored 27th.

RELATED: Sonoma results | Cup Series standings 

It was actually a demonstrative theme among several of the sport’s best as the summer “Playoff push” begins. So many of the high-profile names on the starting grid — including multiple former champions — are still racing for their first victory of the season, missing the trophies with close calls and late-race misfortune with 10 races now remaining to set the 16-driver postseason field.

Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney and Team Penske teammate Joey Logano — a two-time series champ — lead a list that includes Truex and another two-time Cup champion in Kyle Busch.

All four of those drivers had solid days on track Sunday — and in weeks previously — but none of them have claimed a win despite strong efforts and now move to the Iowa Speedway debut on the schedule still competing for that first victory. A win isn’t just an automatic Playoff bid — these high-achieving drivers are likely to point their way in regardless — but it is an important morale boost and a signal their teams are championship-forward.

Despite his 27th-place finish at Sonoma – his third finish of 20th or worse in the last four races — Truex is still ranked fourth in the championship, the highest among those without a win.

Logano started his No. 22 Team Penske Ford from the pole position and was encouraged by his chances at Sonoma, even though he’s only had a single road course win in his career (2015, Watkins Glen International). He did lead 16 laps but finished 21st.

His current 16th-place position in the championship standings isn’t good enough to make him postseason-eligible right now because two race winners — Team Penske teammate Austin Cindric and Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez — have race wins despite being ranked below Logano and would supersede his place in the standings.

The two-time series champ, Logano, hasn’t been ranked this low in the standings through 16 races since 2011 when he was 22nd in the championship standings, ironically having also won pole position at Sonoma, then driving for Joe Gibbs Racing.

“Unfortunate end to our weekend in Sonoma, especially with the speed we showed the last two days,’’ Logano said. “Anything can happen on these re-starts, and it was just wrong place, wrong time for us after trying to flip the strategy on everyone up front. Still proud of the effort from the 22 crew to keep after it all day long despite the early setback there.’’

Blaney’s No. 12 Team Penske Mustang ran among the top 10 most of the day at Sonoma and finished seventh; his best outcome in five weeks and coming after a heart-breaking showing in St. Louis a week earlier when it appeared he would hoist a trophy. Instead, the fan favorite ran out of gas while leading with only a lap to go, resulting in his teammate Cindric getting the hardware instead. Blaney is still safely among the Playoff-eligible in 12th place in the points standings.

Busch, in his second year with RCR, looked to finally get a break from weeks of on-track frustration. Although he didn’t lead any laps Sunday, he managed to work his way forward and was contending for a top five when contact with Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain sent him spinning off course in the final laps. Busch still ended up finishing 12th but is ranked 15th in points, and like Logano, would miss a postseason position because of Cindric’s and Suárez’s wins.

MORE: Iowa schedule | 2024 Cup Series schedule

The two-time series champion’s last top 10 was five weeks ago at Kansas Speedway (eighth place), and his best showing of the year is third at Atlanta in the second race of the season. He has won a race in all 19 seasons he’s competed in the series, the longest streak in series history.

“[Crew chief] Randall Burnett and all the guys on the Chevrolet team came up with a great strategy today that put us in position to score a top-five finish,’’ Busch said. “Early in the race, I thought I broke something on the right-front, but we had a damaged wheel. We lost track position, but our strategy kept us in the game.

“A couple of guys there at the end of the race had better tires than we did, but we were going to have a good day. Unfortunately, one of those guys got into us on the last lap and ruined our day. It’s frustrating to not get the finish that we deserved.’’

They will all have another very fresh opportunity at Iowa Speedway this weekend. In two Xfinity Series starts there, Busch has a victory (2010) and a runner-up finish (2009), but it is the first NASCAR Cup Series race ever at the 0.875-mile oval. There is a practice session on Friday, with qualifying on Saturday afternoon and the Iowa Corn 350 Powered by Ethanol on Sunday night at 7 p.m. ET (USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NASCAR officials issued penalties Tuesday for lug nut infractions in the Xfinity Series stemming from last weekend’s events at Sonoma Raceway.

In post-race inspection following Shane van Gisbergen’s victory in Saturday’s Zip Buy Now, Pay Later 250, Austin Hill’s No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet and Ryan Sieg’s No. 39 Ford were each found with one unsecured lug nut.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Weekend schedule: Iowa

This violates Sections 8.8.10.4a: Tires and Wheels of the NASCAR Rule Book. As a result, crew chiefs Andy Street (No. 21) and Matt Noyce (No. 39) were each fined $5,000.

The Xfinity Series will return to Iowa Speedway for the first time since 2019 on Saturday to race in the Hy-Vee Perks 250 (3:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

It was because Junie Donlavey didn’t have the cash to send his NASCAR team west to Riverside, California, that Donlavey Racing instead ventured east across the Atlantic Ocean.

The trip was to the 24 Hours of Le Mans, where the No. 90 Ford Torino entered the world’s biggest sports car event instead of a Cup race on June 13, 1976 at Riverside International Raceway.

If that seems quite the fanciful expedition, welcome to the life story of a charmed car owner who got by mostly on gumption and good cheer for more than 50 years in NASCAR.

“We didn’t have money to get to Riverside, and we wound up in Le Mans,” Donlavey said with a laugh in a 2002 interview with the Richmond Times-Dispatch — the anecdotes and quotes from which mostly remained unpublished until this story. “That was a real experience.”

The No. 90 was dubbed ‘Le Monster’ when it debuted at Le Mans in 1976.

This weekend’s running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans certainly will trigger memories of last year’s Garage 56 project that put a Camaro ZL1 in the 2023 endurance racing classic. The joint effort between Hendrick Motorsports, NASCAR, Chevrolet and Goodyear was a smash hit, drawing an enthusiastic global fan reaction and spurring renewed manufacturer interest in Cup.

RELATED: At-track photos: Le Mans | Full recap of Garage 56’s 24-hour run

With many getting their first glimpse of a Next Gen car, a crowd packed the city square where the Garage 56 Camaro went through pre-race inspection. Fans snapped photos and cheered for a megawatt lineup that included Le Mans winner Mike Rockenfeller, Formula One champion Jenson Button and seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson.

NASCAR’s first visit to the famed Circuit de la Sarthe nearly 50 years earlier was a more subdued affair for Donlavey’s merry band of 15 (most of them volunteers) from Richmond, Virginia.

With Bill France engineering Le Mans entries for two stock cars, NASCAR financed overseas transport for the No. 4 Dodge Charger (driven by Hershel McGriff and his son Doug) and Donlavey’s No. 90 Ford (driven by Americans Dick Brooks and Dick Hutcherson and Frenchman Marcel Mignot).

MORE: Full coverage of Garage 56 journey

“They took one car off the West Coast and one from (the East Coast),” Donlavey said. “NASCAR let me take a dozen crewmen over there and gave me a certain price for their tickets.”

But one of his volunteer team members also ran a travel agency and made the funding go much further.

“We took that money and broke it down, and we got 15 people over there for that amount,” Donlavey said. “We went to London for two days and two nights, Paris for two days and two nights and then Le Mans for eight or nine days. And my wife and four or five other ladies went.

“That one trip was all I wanted. It was worth it. We didn’t have 10 cents and couldn’t even get to Riverside. We still had a ball.”

•   •   •

Donlavey’s car completed 104 laps before a gearbox failed roughly halfway through the 24-hour race. The McGriff car retired after two laps because its engine wasn’t configured for the right octane.

But their V8 engines left an indelible mark with a roar unfamiliar to many European fans and media. Their celebrated response mirrored the spellbound reaction to the throaty rumble of last year’s Camaro.

“We had headlines in the paper,” Donlavey said. “They called our cars, ‘The Le Monster.’ ”

The No. 4 Dodge Charger certainly stood out to the Le Mans crowd.

His Le Mans outing is among many ways that the late team owner touched NASCAR despite a career with only one victory in 863 Cup starts from 1950-2002.

Sunday, June 9, marked 10 years since the passing of Donlavey (who would have been 100 in April), but his presence still is felt.

Next February, Ricky Rudd will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in another reminder of Donlavey’s impact on developing stars. Rudd ran the 1979 season for Donlavey, and the 22-year-old turned enough heads to help land a full-time ride at DiGard Racing.

MORE: 2025 Hall of Fame class revealed

“When he left us, he went straight on up,” Donlavey said of Rudd. “Kenny Schrader was the same way. One thing that puts fun in the game is if you have a rookie and watch him get better and better. That’s the payoff more than the money you get.”

Schrader was the 1985 Cup Rookie of the Year with Donlavey Racing, which also won the award in 1980 with Jody Ridley (who gave the No. 90 its only win the next year at Dover) and in 1970 with Bill Dennis, who was the team’s hometown star from Richmond. (With Dennis behind the wheel, Donlavey’s team won three consecutive Permatex 300 season openers from 1972-74 at Daytona in Late Model Sportsman, the precursor to the Xfinity Series.)

Donlavey, belovedly nicknamed “Chief” by his loyal followers, provided up-and-coming opportunities for Brooks, Sonny Hutchins, Ernie Irvan and Robby Gordon. He also fielded cars for many NASCAR Hall of Famers, including Joe Weatherly, Bobby Isaac, Fred Lorenzen, David Pearson, Benny Parsons and Buck Baker.

But because he “wasn’t used to country clubs, big bucks and all that stuff,” Donlavey operated his team as a feeder system rather than aspiring to become a powerhouse.

“To give someone a chance to get involved in this game, that meant more to me than worrying about winning a race,” Donlavey said. “I have everything that I needed. I came through the Depression years. We never knew it. Mama always had food on the table. What more did you want?

“So, to have an excess of a couple of million dollars in the bank, what good would it do if you don’t use it?”

•   •   •

One of Donlavey’s favorite stories of cultivating talent (while also scaring the daylights out of them) involved Gordon, whose NASCAR career began racing the No. 90 at Daytona and Richmond to start the 1991 season.

An off-road superstar weighing a career in IndyCar, Gordon tested at Daytona International Speedway for Donlavey and told the car owner during a break that he was unimpressed by the pace with restrictor plates on the 2.5-mile oval.

“He made the statement like, ‘These are nothing to drive right here, I could read a magazine coming down the backstretch,’ ” Donlavey said. “We were changing carburetors, and I told them leave the (restrictor) plate off that thing. They said, ‘What?’ I said, ‘Leave the plate off of it.’

“Robby made two laps, and when he came in, his knuckles were white. Then he knew what those guys had gone through all those years running without a restrictor plate.”

Donlavey claimed NASCAR fined him $5,000. “Robby had the audacity the next day, he said, ‘Chief, we got another  five grand we can stand to lose?’ He wanted to try it again,” Donlavey said. “He made that lap running about 205 (mph). The fans watching that practice went nuts. He went through some of those turns sideways. Things like that make this game exciting and interesting.”

Junie Donlavey had respect from everyone, including Richard Petty.

It always was more about the journey than the destination for Donlavey, who entered racing on a lark after returning from a stint in the Navy (he was in Guam when World War II ended) and going into the auto repair business with his father in 1946.

In a 2014 tribute, longtime NASCAR journalist Monte Dutton wrote that in a sport of “saints and sinners, workaholics and con artists, contenders and pretenders,” Donlavey was “the only leprechaun. I will never think of the No. 90 without thinking of the leprechaun Junie Donlavey, always chuckling, never depressed or angry, everything in its proper perspective.”

That’s another way that the Le Mans experience was a fitting encapsulation of the life and times of Donlavey, who seemed as enamored with the places he visited as the famous tracks he raced.

“When you’re in a race, if you don’t win, it’s not the end of the day,” he said. “You still had fun participating. If you got into racing and the only thing that satisfied you was winning, your life would have so many hills and valleys in it.

“There’s only one thing I enjoy more than racing and that’s being around the people. You wouldn’t believe the number of nice people all over the country you meet. The only thing I regret is it passed by so quickly.”

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

The second of three crown jewel events at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan, the Money in the Bank 150, is set to take place Wednesday evening, when NASCAR Cup Series driver Erik Jones will look to defend last year’s victory.

Despite being in just its eighth year of existence, the Money in the Bank 150 has quickly become a cherished event amongst the drivers and fans due to its large entry lists, intense racing and a $10,000 race-winning paycheck.

STREAMING: Watch the Money in the Bank 150 live on FloRacing

Although local drivers have historically shined during the Money in the Bank 150, the past four victors in the event all currently compete in the Cup Series. The most recent of this group is Jones, who brought home an emotional win driving his own No. 4 Super Late Model in 2023.

Jones will attempt to defend his Money in the Bank 150 triumph against a stout field of local regulars and outsiders, all of whom are looking to make their own mark in the long, prestigious history of Berlin.

Below is everything you need to know about Wednesday’s 2024 Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan.

Money in the Bank at Berlin Raceway
Wednesday’s Money in the Bank 150 will be the second of three crown jewel events at Berlin Raceway this year. (Photo: Nic Antaya/NASCAR)

What TV channel is the Money in the Bank at Berlin Raceway on?

All feature racing action from the 2024 Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the official streaming home for all NASCAR Regional properties.

The Money in the Bank 150 will not be shown on a television network.

Below is the complete schedule for coverage on FloRacing.

Date Start Time How to watch
Wednesday, June 12 6 p.m. ET FloRacing

2024 Money in the Bank 150 schedule

This year’s Money in the Bank 150 is scheduled for Wednesday, June 12. June 11 will serve as a practice day for Super Late Model teams.

Below is the complete race-day schedule for the 2024 Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway.

(All times ET)

Time Event
9:30 a.m. Pit Pass Window Opens
10 a.m. Pit Area Opens
11 a.m. Race Tires Sold and Impounded
12 p.m. Super Late Model Drivers / Spotters Meeting
1-1:50 p.m. Super Late Model Practice
2-2:50 p.m. Super Late Model Practice
3:30 p.m. Super Late Model Tech
4:10-4:40 p.m. Sportsman Practice
5:30 Super Late Model Qualifying
6:27 Invocation/National Anthem
6:30 Money in the Bank 150 (Super Late Model LCQ: 40 laps, Sportsman feature: 50 laps, Driver Introductions, Super Late Model feature: 150 laps)
Erik Jones
Erik Jones enters Wednesday’s Money in the Bank 150 as the event’s most recent winner. (Photo: Emily Elconin/NASCAR)

Entry list

The current entry list for the 2024 Money in the Bank 150 features 31 cars.

Four of the five winners in the history of the event lead a strong group of competitors set to make the trip to Berlin on Wednesday. Along with Jones, this list consists of current NASCAR Cup Series competitor Carson Hocevar, Super Late Model standout Bubba Pollard and defending track champion Brian Campbell.

Hocevar’s success at Berlin Raceway, which includes a track championship and two straight Money in the Bank 150 wins in 2020 and 2021, played a substantial role in propelling him into NASCAR’s top ranks. He will also be fielding his own developmental car on Wednesday, which will be driven by Chase Pinsonneault.

Leading the local contingent of Berlin regulars is Andrew Scheid, the current points leader in the Super Late Model standings. Scheid holds a small advantage over fellow competitors Tyler Rycenga, Joe Bush and Austin Hull, all of whom are on the preliminary Money in the Bank 150 entry list.

Other notable competitors taking part in the Money in the Bank 150 include Derek Kneeland, who spots for Kyle Busch in the Cup Series, along with Evan Shotko, Derek Griffith, Kris Wright, Gavan Boschele and Katie Hettinger.

Below is the complete entry list for Wednesday’s main event.

Car No.  Driver
4 Erik Jones
4 Tyler Rycenga
8 Tony Elrod
12 Derek Griffith
12 Brian Bergakker
14 Chase Pinsonneault
14 Michael Atwell
18 Chase Burda
18 Keith Herp
20 Austin Hull
20 Gavan Boschele
20 Kris Wright
22 Evan Shotko
24 Steven Needles
24 Dylan Stovall
26 Bubba Pollard
27 Ken Wobma
28 Scott Thomas
32 Chris Shannon
45 Sean Gipson
47 Brian Campbell
66 Nate Walton
71 Carson Hocevar
71 Katie Hettinger
88 Andrew Scheid
90 Derek Kneeland
90 Kyle Crump
92 Levie Jones
101 Joe Bush
131 Blake Rowe

Past winners

Year Winner
2017 Bubba Pollard
2018 Brian Campbell
2019 Brian Campbell
2020 Carson Hocevar
2021 Carson Hocevar
2022 William Byron
2023 Erik Jones

When Michael McDowell passed a fuel-strapped Martin Truex Jr. in the final turns Sunday at Sonoma Raceway, he scored more than just a season-high second-place finish … he secured a first, too.

No, not a race win. McDowell finished runner-up for the very first time in his 481-race NASCAR Cup Series career.

It’s a notable milestone because it now means the veteran has completed the All 40 Challenge — the name for our just-for-fun statistical category that tracks a driver’s progression of checking off every possible finishing position at least once throughout their careers from first to 40th.

Yes, prior to Sunday, second place was all that eluded the Daytona 500 winner McDowell — but now, he joins 12 fellow full-time competitors in the All 40 club.

RELATED: More on ‘All 40’

Before McDowell, the most recent driver to complete the All 40 Challenge was Ross Chastain last month when his 11th-place finish at Darlington Raceway checked the last box off his list. Austin Dillon, Chase Elliott, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson, Daniel Suárez and Bubba Wallace might be next; each driver is only one spot shy of All 40.

So, while a win would have been big for McDowell’s season, a P2 is a breakthrough, too — in a different way.

A last-lap tangle between Ross Chastain and Kyle Busch capped an eventful day of full-contact racing at Sonoma Raceway, and the two Chevrolet drivers came away with differing outcomes and viewpoints from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series event.

Contact between the two drivers in a contest for fifth place sent Busch’s No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevy spinning in Turn 4A, just before the 1.99-mile road course’s chute. Busch recovered for a 12th-place finish, his fourth consecutive finish outside the top 10.

RELATED: Sonoma results | Cup Series standings

“We lost track position but our strategy kept us in the game,” said Busch, whose winless streak reached 37 races. “A couple of guys there at the end of the race had better tires than we did but we were going to have a good day. Unfortunately, one of those guys got into us on the last lap and ruined our day. It’s frustrating to not get the finish that we deserved.”

Chastain continued in the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet to his first top-five finish since March, but admitted post-race that he was still trying to digest the strategy shake-up that left him out of contention for the victory, which went to a charging Kyle Larson. Chase Elliott’s final-turn bump for position briefly knocked Chastain from the top five, but he moved back up in the final order to fifth after both drivers blasted by a fuel-dry Martin Truex Jr. just before the checkered flag.

“I’m not sure what happened with the 8, either, I’ll be honest,” Chastain told NASCAR.com. “I’m pretty confused about most things here, but he checked up down into (Turn) 4A. I popped out to not hit him and then I locked up getting in there to his right. So definitely not trying to run into him, and then I get run into by the 9 (Elliott) for a spot in (Turn) 11. Lot of (Chevrolet) bowties running together today. Glad one of them got the win.”

Kyle Busch’s wife, Samantha, had her own assessment of the final-lap clash in a post-race message shared on X.

Chastain moved up one spot in the provisional standings for the Cup Series Playoffs field. Busch jumped up by two spots, but is still slotted as the first driver outside of the postseason Field of 16 — eight points back of Bubba Wallace.

Forty cars can start a NASCAR Cup Series race. That means somebody’s got to claim every position from first through 40th each week.

While the goal of a racing driver is to finish in first place, it turns out that’s quite a common goal among competitors (thus, motorsports); as a result, we get one winner and 39 losers each week.

To quote Reese Bobby, “you can be second, you can be third, fourth … hell, you can even be fifth!”

A driver really could — and often does — finish second, third, fourth or even fifth at some point over the course of their careers. They can finish all the way back through 40th, in fact.

And we’ve got a stat for that.

What we’ve dubbed the All 40 Challenge — checking a box after a driver finishes in each of the 40 possible finishing positions at least once — has become the latest statistical craze in motorsports (OK, not really, but we have fun tracking it).

We’ve tracked this metric for several years now (and for no good reason), like in 2018 when Kyle Busch nabbed his first-ever 26th-place finish, completing the All 40 Challenge in his 493rd career start, or when Alex Bowman pulled off the sweep at Chicagoland in 2019 with his first-career victory. And who could forget David Ragan’s ninth-place triumph to join the club after 476 starts in a one-off start at Daytona? 

The latest driver to join the club — Michael McDowell, who capitalized on Martin Truex Jr. running out of gas at Sonoma to claim his first career second-place finish.

We’ll update our #All40Challenge tracker here after each race this season. Follow along to see who joins the club next!

SONOMA, Calif. — Overlooked in the frenzied battle for Saturday’s Xfinity Series trophy at Sonoma Raceway between race winner Shane van Gisbergen and Austin Hill was the performance of another Austin — Austin Green, who scored a career-best fourth-place finish in just his third start.

The son of former driver and current NASCAR official, David Green, Austin earns his stripes currently in the Trans-Am ranks, competing regularly on road courses. He also scored a top 10 in his lone ARCA Menards Series run at Toledo in 2020.

At Circuit of The Americas earlier this season, the 23-year-old wheelman earned his first NASCAR national series start with Jordan Anderson Racing and excelled with a seventh-place run.

He followed up COTA with a top 15 at Portland International Raceway last weekend before working his way through the field at Sonoma from a 22nd-place starting spot to score his best result so far. Green has bettered his finishing result from his starting position by at least 11 spots in each of his three starts so far.

RELATED: Xfinity Sonoma results | Best photos from Sonoma

“We didn’t get the qualifying spot that we like so I definitely need to work on that,” Green said after Saturday’s race. “But yeah, just had to pick them off and it was a long race, so keep the nose on it and hats off to everybody at Jordan Anderson Racing. [The car] was on rails [Saturday]. We kind of struggled on short runs, so I was thankful a caution didn’t come out there at the end, but it was awesome.”

Austin Green drives at Sonoma
Logan Riely | Getty Images

With help from Trans-Am Series organization Peterson Racing, JAR owner Jordan Anderson has been able to maximize the most out of Green’s starts as well as JAR full-time driver Parker Retzlaff.  The Wisconsin native finished 11th in Saturday’s affair and has results of ninth and two 11th-place runs in three road-course events in 2024.

Having taken a similar journey through the racing ranks, Anderson appreciates how Green has approached his first national-series starts.

“I’m just so happy for Austin because he’s kind of cut out of the same cloth that I am,” Anderson told NASCAR.com. “He’s had to work hard for these opportunities. When you see a young guy come in and do his homework and work hard and then come up here, he kept a level head all day. He’s up there racing against guys who’ve been doing this for a long time and just extremely proud of how well he handled himself.”

Green will next compete on the Chicago streets when NASCAR returns to the Windy City on Independence Day weekend, along with some select starts on ovals later in the year as he continues to build his NASCAR resume.

“I think Austin has a bright future in our sport,” Anderson said. “I put him and Parker in the same boat. They come out here and they’ll race nose to nose with these guys. They know they gotta be there at the end and both of them did such a great job with that today. I’m excited for him. I know we’ve all talked about some oval races coming up so that’s gonna be cool to see him get an opportunity to go to a place where his background is oval racing. I think he’s gonna keep getting better and keep sharpening his talent here, and hopefully, he’ll keep it rolling.”

A panel representing multiple viewpoints of stock-car racing sat down to discuss one pressing question — What makes a good race?

The result of that conversation debuted in full this evening on NASCAR’s YouTube channel in the NASCAR Insiders Roundtable Presented by Goodyear.

Larry McReynolds, a former crew chief and longtime broadcast analyst, was joined by Alex Weaver, host and reporter for NASCAR.com and voice of the fan; John Probst, NASCAR’s senior vice president and chief racing development officer; Shannon Spake, host of NASCAR on FOX’s studio coverage and with a unique broadcast perspective; and Ty Dillon, the full-time driver of the No. 25 Rackley W.A.R. Chevrolet in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and someone who has competed in all disciplines of racing throughout his life.

ROUNDTABLE: Panel discusses driver emotions | Can a good finish impact sentiment toward a race?

As for what makes a great race, Probst said it plain and simple: The people who love the sport are the ones who make it so significant.

“Ultimately, it comes down to the fans,” Probst said. “That’s what really matters.”

The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season is off to a momentous start, with two of the four closest finishes in the history of the sport occurring within the season’s first 12 races of the year. And a memorable finish could outshine the overall quality of an event.

“Fans really do remember, one, how competitive the whole entire race was,” Weaver said. “But the finish and that photograph that goes up on the end of the wall when you win that race with that checkered flag, fans remember that stuff. It sticks. It really creates that lasting impact.”

Check back for the entire roundtable conversation, including the group’s favorite races, at 7 p.m. ET.

Sonoma Raceway provided an incredible amount of ups and downs in the Toyota/Save Mart 350 — and not just in its elevation changes.

Kyle Larson was able to storm through the field and celebrate his second win in Napa Valley. Few others behind him left the 1.99-mile road course smiling — even those who capitalized on the day to exit with good finishes.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Sonoma

Before the circuit heads to the Midwest for the inaugural Cup race at Iowa Speedway on Sunday (7 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), here’s a look at the drivers who trended up and slid down through Sonoma.

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford

Chris Buescher races at Sonoma.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

Started: 26th

Finished: 3rd

What happened: After three weeks of disheartening results, Buescher launched back into the conversation Sunday at Sonoma, leading 32 laps and planting himself firmly in the conversation for the race win. He charged through the field early, setting himself up well enough that crew chief Scott Graves could leave Buescher on track to take the lead ahead of the final-stage restart.

Ultimately, Buescher was at a 13-lap tire disadvantage to eventual race winner Kyle Larson, but Buescher maintained to collect a third-place finish when second-place-running Martin Truex Jr. ran out of fuel. It’s Buescher’s first top-five finish since coming 0.001 seconds short of the victory at Kansas Speedway on May 5, ending a spell of poor results: 30th at Darlington Raceway, 23rd at Charlotte Motor Speedway and 14th at World Wide Technology Raceway.

What’s next: Buescher heads to Iowa Speedway for the track’s inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race. The Texas native scored an Xfinity Series win at the 0.875-mile oval in 2015.

2. Michael McDowell, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford

Michael McDowell races at Sonoma.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

Started: 12th

Finished: 2nd

What happened: Despite starting 12th, McDowell’s day was anything but smooth sailing and required a gargantuan comeback. The No. 34 Ford was inside the top 10 to begin Stage 2 but took an opportunity during an early-stage caution to hit pit road. That decision set the car back in traffic, just for calamity to strike in front of McDowell entering Turn 11, forcing him to knife through spun and sitting cars. The Arizona native then was involved in another melee not of his own doing, getting spun through the grass at Turn 8A after checking up for Austin Cindric, Noah Gragson and Corey LaJoie’s contact ahead.

But the veteran driver persevered and ran solidly inside the top five late in Sunday’s going, capitalizing on his speed and others’ misfortune to charge into a runner-up finish, his first top-five result of 2024.

What’s next: McDowell is no stranger to Iowa Speedway and has great results to show for it. In eight Xfinity starts — including six with Joe Gibbs Racing — McDowell has a 6.9 average finish at the Midwestern short track, earning a runner-up finish in 2014, his most recent outing.

3. Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Kyle Busch races at Sonoma.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

Started: 29th

Finished: 12th

What happened: A topsy-turvy day for Busch ultimately resulted in a net positive, finishing 17 positions better than he started. But even that felt like a little bit of a letdown for the two-time Cup champion. Busch was running fifth on the final lap, but a hard-charging Ross Chastain rocketed into Turn 4 and appeared to lock his brakes while attempting to pass Busch, ultimately spinning the No. 8 Chevrolet around.

Busch was still able to salvage a 12th-place finish for his efforts, continuing a four-race stretch of results outside the top 10 but earning his second top 15 in that stretch.

What’s next: Busch has only made two Xfinity starts at Iowa Speedway — way back in 2009 and 2010 — but managed finishes of second and first.

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford

Joey Logano races at Sonoma.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

Started: 1st

Finished: 21st

What happened: All things started beautifully for Logano, who led each of the first 16 laps before the No. 22 team opted to pit under caution to get a jump on fuel strategy. That decision ultimately played a part in upending the team’s day, though, placing Logano in unfortunate circumstances when Chase Briscoe spun at Turn 8A. With Briscoe’s No. 14 Ford sideways cresting the corner, Logano darted left to avoid the mess but instead caught the rear of Briscoe’s car with the No. 22 Ford’s passenger-side door.

Logano never properly recovered and finished 21st despite starting from the pole position for the third time this season.

What’s next: Surprisingly, Logano has never made an Xfinity, Craftsman Truck, or ARCA start at Iowa — but don’t rule him out. Logano has a knack for doing really well when the Cup Series attends a track for the first time.

2. William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

William Byron races at Sonoma.
Logan Riely | Getty Images

Started: 6th

Finished: 30th

What happened: Byron’s race turned upside down almost immediately and never landed right-side up. The No. 24 Chevy was forced to pit with a flat rear tire at Lap 13, miring him back in traffic early. He charged back to 12th place in Stage 2 but was then collected in the Turn 11 pileup, breaking a toe link on Byron’s suspension.

The team eventually cleared the Damaged Vehicle Policy clock and could further repair the damage, but the day never quite improved. He later suffered a flat right-rear tire within the final 25 laps. Byron, a three-time winner this year, came home 30th, two laps down — his third finish of 23rd or worse in the past six races.

What’s next: Byron could use some good momentum and might find it at Iowa, where he has two wins — one each in Xfinity (2017) and Truck (2016) competition — in three national series starts.

3. Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Ty Gibbs races at Sonoma.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Started: 10th

Finished: 37th

What happened: A self-admitted, self-induced mistake thwarted any chance of a good run Sunday for Ty Gibbs. A misjudgment exiting Turn 11 led Gibbs into the right-side concrete barriers on corner exit, impacting the right-front tire and wheel. That went from bad to worse two corners later when Gibbs couldn’t steer his car out of the Turn 1 concrete.

The result was a retirement after completing just 16 of 110 laps, leading to a 37th-place finish in the 38-car field.

What’s next: Gibbs may not have any Xfinity or Truck starts at the Iowa short track, but he does have three ARCA Menards Series races to lean on. In a shock to no one who remembers Gibbs’ ARCA domination, he has two wins in three starts at the 0.875-mile oval.