Stewart-Haas Racing will close its NASCAR operation at the conclusion of the 2024 season, co-owners Tony Stewart and Gene Haas announced Tuesday.

“We have made the difficult decision to close Stewart-Haas Racing at the conclusion of the 2024 season. It is a decision that did not come easily, nor was it made quickly.

“Racing is a labor-intensive, humbling sport. It requires unwavering commitment and vast resources, with a 365-day mindset to be better than everyone else. It’s part of what makes success so rewarding.

“But the commitment needed to extract maximum performance while providing sustainability is incredibly demanding, and we’ve reached a point in our respective personal and business lives where it’s time to pass the torch.

“We’re proud of all the wins and championships we’ve earned since joining together in 2009, but even more special is the culture we built and the friendships we forged as we committed to a common cause — winning races and collecting trophies.

“That is the same commitment we made to our personnel, our partners and our fans coming into this year, and that commitment will remain through the season finale at Phoenix.

“We have tremendous respect and appreciation for all of our employees, and we will work diligently to assist them during this transition to find new opportunities beyond the 2024 race season.”

Stewart-Haas Racing’s four-car Cup team currently fields the Nos. 4, 10, 14 and 41 Fords for drivers Josh Berry, Noah Gragson, Chase Briscoe and Ryan Preece, respectively. Two Xfinity Series teams also carry the SHR banner (Cole Custer, Riley Herbst).

Haas has fielded Cup Series entries each season since 2002, originally under the banner of Haas CNC Racing. In 2008, eventual NASCAR Hall of Famer Stewart joined forces with Haas to form SHR for its inaugural season in 2009, starting with a two-car outfit with drivers Stewart and 2008 Daytona 500 winner Ryan Newman with a technical alliance with Hendrick Motorsports.

MORE: Cup standings

Stewart scored the program’s first victory in the 2009 NASCAR All-Star Race exhibition, then went to Victory Lane at Pocono Raceway to net the team’s first points-paying victory three weeks later. Stewart ultimately scored four wins in the team’s inaugural campaign in the No. 14 Chevrolet.

Their success continued in 2011, when Stewart and outgoing crew chief Darian Grubb won five of the 10 races in the NASCAR Playoffs — including the season finale — to claim Stewart-Haas Racing’s first NASCAR Cup Series championship, edging Roush Fenway Racing’s Carl Edwards (a Class of 2025 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee) for the title in a tiebreaker.

Stewart-Haas Racing expanded to a three-car team for the 2013 season with Danica Patrick in the No. 10 car before adding a fourth car in 2014. Kevin Harvick shifted from Richard Childress Racing to SHR’s renumbered No. 4 car with crew chief Rodney Childers, and 2004 champion Kurt Busch, who slotted into the team’s new No. 41 car.

In their first year together, Harvick and Childers rocketed to a five-win campaign that resulted in a Cup championship. The pairing lasted a decade, culminating in 37 of Harvick’s 60 career wins before his retirement after the 2023 season.

Busch added a milestone win to his resume — as well as Stewart’s — by winning the 2017 Daytona 500 with crew chief Tony Gibson atop the pit box. Stewart never won the “Great American Race” as a driver but celebrated the triumph as a team co-owner in his first season after his Cup driving retirement.

Additional drivers through SHR’s Cup tenure included Clint Bowyer, Aric Almirola, Daniel Suárez and Cole Custer.

While Stewart-Haas hasn’t won at the Cup level since August 2022, when Harvick scored consecutive victories at Michigan International Speedway and Richmond Raceway, the company has collected 69 wins, 339 top fives and 695 top 10s through the 2024 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

The team expanded in 2017 to the Xfinity Series, where SHR has accumulated 22 wins, 104 top fives and 181 top 10s in a combined 294 starts through last weekend’s race at Charlotte. Custer, who drives its No. 00 Ford, won the Xfinity Series championship in 2023.

Cars were sliding, drivers were sweating and tempers were flaring throughout Saturday’s BetMGM 300 NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Among the heated emotions were regular season championship leader Austin Hill and the defending series champion Cole Custer.

On a restart with 18 laps remaining, Hill and Custer were battling for fifth position. The two championship threats touched through Turn 4 and door-slammed one another down the frontstretch. The contact was severe enough to cut down the No. 21 car’s right-front tire entering Turn 1 while Custer was to his outside. Both cars were mangled.

RELATED: Xfinity schedule | Standings

Hill showed his displeasure with Custer by connecting with the No. 00 car’s back bumper and turning him coming off Turn 2 on the next lap down the backstretch. Custer backed into the inside wall.

“I just came off of [Turn] 4, everybody is on old tires, scuffs, when we came in and pitted and I’m on a slide trying to stay off of him,” Hill explained. “His right rear barely might have skimmed the wall; didn’t hurt his car any. He completely lost his mind down the backstretch, doored me so hard that it cut my right front down going into [Turn] 1.”

Custer saw the incident differently.

“[Hill] put me in the fence off [Turn] 4 and then we hit on the frontstretch because I was going to go pinch him down, and he decided to try and go up and side draft me and then we hit again,” Custer told reporters after the race. “I don’t know if he blew a tire into one or what happened into 1, but then he tried to kill me on the backstretch and just held it full throttle until he wrecked our car and killed the rear clip. I slapped my head against the back of the headrest.

“I know it was hard racing, but at the end of the day I don’t like getting intentionally wrecked and killing the front and rear clip on our race car. It’s just ridiculous. If he wants to drive like a pissed-off teenager, it’s just ridiculous.”

Hill took ownership of his actions down the backstretch, saying he got “a little too carried away.” But he won’t change his mind about the steps that led up to the initial incident.

“I don’t apologize for racing him off of 4. I do not know what he’s mad about,” Hill stated. “It’s not like he slammed the wall really hard or messed his car up any. I guess he’s going to have to go back and watch [the replay] because I don’t get it. It was very uncalled for to door us as hard as he did down the frontstretch and we cut the right front down and we take us both out. It is what it is.”

The two race-winning drivers have been fierce competitors for nearly a season and a half at the Xfinity level. Hill won the regular season championship last year, while Custer was hot when it counted in the postseason en route to winning his first championship.

But they’ve never had any prior run-ins on the track. It’s entirely possible that this is a one-off incident, and the bad blood will be over.

“I’ve never had a problem with Cole,” Hill said. “I don’t know that he’s ever had a problem with me, but that was definitely weird. I’m sure we will talk about it, but Cole and I have always raced really well together.”

The series heads to Portland International Raceway on Saturday (4:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), where Custer is the defending winner. It was this weekend one year ago when he scored his first win of the 2023 season.

Hill started the year off hot, winning the opening two races, and holds a four-point lead over Chandler Smith after 12 races. Custer ranks third in the championship standings, 21 points back. He lost 18 points to the championship lead by wrecking out at Charlotte and finishing 32nd.

For just the 12th time in the history of NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, the series on Saturday night will visit Massachusetts’ Seekonk Speedway for the running of the J&R Precast 150.

Seekonk first welcomed the Modified Tour in 1987, when the legendary Reggie Ruggiero outlasted Jimmy Spencer in a 200-lap battle. The Tour returned to Seekonk 13 years later in 2000, and when it did, Jerry Marquis drove to victory in a 150-lap feature.

In the 10 races run since the series returned to Seekonk, nine different drivers have secured trips to Victory Lane. The only repeat winner at Seekonk is Doug Coby, who scored wins at the 0.333-mile oval in 2017 and 2019. Other winners include Eric Beers, Timmy Solomito, Chris Kopec, Ed Flemke Jr., Chuck Hossfeld, Justin Bonsignore and, most recently, Matt Hirschman.

Tickets to the J&R Precast 150 are available here. Below is everything you need to know about the sixth race on the 2024 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule.

Seekonk Speedway
NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour drivers line up for the Seekonk 150 on June 10, 2023. (Photo: Armond Feffer/NASCAR)

J&R Precast 150 at Seekonk Speedway

Ron Silk is off to what is by far the best start of his Modified Tour career.

The defending champion has won three of the first five races — at New Smyrna Speedway, Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park and Riverhead Raceway — meaning he’s already more than halfway to his win total from the entire 2023 season. Last year, his five wins marked a career high.

With the J&R Precast 150 on the horizon, Silk will look to continue his momentum at a track where he’s never visited Victory Lane on the Modified Tour.

Silk’s biggest challenger Saturday could be Coby, the lone driver who has multiple Modified Tour wins at Seekonk. Rather than Tommy Baldwin Jr.’s No. 7, Coby will pilot the Tinio family No. 44 on Saturday evening.

Matt Hirschman returns to Seekonk as the defending Modified Tour race winner after leading every lap of the event last year. Hirschman is still looking for his first Tour win of 2024.

One driver will be making a landmark start this weekend at Seekonk. Patrick Emerling, a four-time series race winner, will make his 150th Modified Tour start.

Also racing Saturuday is Justin Bonsignore, who continues his pursuit of history. The 2018 Seekonk victor remains one win behind Ted Christopher for third on the all-time Tour wins list. Seekonk is a good a place as any for Bonsignore to match Christopher.

Other notable entries include local favorite Jake Johnson, Kyle Ebersole, Anthony Sesely, Austin Beers, Matt Swanson, Craig Lutz, Andrew Krause and Kyle Bonsignore, among others.

The full entry list for Saturday’s J&R Precast 150 is available here.

Seekonk Speedway
Cars in action during the Seekonk 150 on June 10, 2023. (Photo: Armond Feffer/NASCAR)

RACE FACTS

Race J&R Precast 150
Date June 1, 2024
Track Seekonk Speedway
Layout 0.333-mile oval
Location Seekonk, Massachusetts
Start time 8 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Posted awards $83,384
Tickets Here
How to watch FloRacing

Schedule: Saturday, June 1 … Final practice from 3:10 to 3:50 p.m. ET … Qualifying at 5:20 p.m. ET … J&R Precast 150 at 8 p.m. ET (FloRacing).

Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the J&R Pre-Cast Inc 150 is limited to 26 starters including Provisional Positions.

Redraw: The fastest qualifier will spin the wheel to determine the number of drivers that will redraw for their starting positions: 4, 6, 8 or 10 positions will redraw. Once the fastest qualifier spins the wheel, NASCAR will have the various buckets ready to immediately start the redraw procedure. Drivers will redraw in their qualifying order after qualifying has been completed (1 through 10, or however many are applicable). The pole position and/or any bonus point(s), if applicable, will be awarded to the fastest qualifier and will be the pole of record. If, due to adverse conditions, qualifying is canceled, the field will be set in accordance with the 2024 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Rule Book. The redraw procedure will still take place regardless of how the field is set. However, pole awards and/or any bonus point(s), if applicable, will not be paid, if due to adverse conditions, the field is set in accordance with the 2024 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Rule Book.

Tire allotment: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eight (8) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires, and/or emergency change tires during the event. If a tire is used as an emergency change tire, it cannot be a new/sticker tire. The tire change rule is zero (0) tires, any position.

CONCORD, N.C. — A grueling Saturday afternoon at Charlotte Motor Speedway left Noah Gragson feeling exhausted but satisfied.

Making his first Xfinity Series appearance since finishing runner-up to Ty Gibbs in the championship back in 2022, Gragson helped Rette Jones Racing enjoy a solid first outing by piloting its No. 30 Ford to a hard-fought 10th-place finish.

Nothing about Gragson’s performance came easy, but the 13-time series winner said he and Rette Jones did everything necessary to persevere and come away from Charlotte with plenty of momentum to build upon.

“It was fun,” Gragson said. “I raced the Rette Jones Racing Super Late Model at the [Snowball] Derby. [Today] was a big challenge and there was a lot of adversity throughout the weekend. We were 31st in practice, qualified 18th and brought it home in the top 10.”

Expanding into the Xfinity Series was the next logical step for Rette Jones to bolster its ongoing growth.

Founded in 2015 by Mark Rette and veteran driver Terry Jones, the organization has maintained a strong presence on the ARCA Menards Series presence with occasional ventures into the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. Among those who have driven for Rette Jones include Frankie Muniz, Justin Bonsignore and Jesse Little.

In recent years, Rette Jones has taken a proactive interest in developing a successful Super Late Model program. Gragson was instrumental in helping their Super Late Model team find its footing, having run their car in the Snowball Derby during the past two years.

When the decision was made to start up an Xfinity Series team, both Rette and Jones knew Gragson was the perfect driver for their first race. For Rette, not only does Gragson’s NASCAR Cup Series experience provide invaluable knowledge, but his chemistry with the entire organization is what made him feel comfortable about starting on the right note.

“Noah is family to Terry and myself,” Rette said. “I consider him a little brother. I’ve known him for some years now and with everything he has been through the past couple of years, we’ve built a really good relationship and [Noah’s] done that with Terry and his son Kasey.”

Even with Stewart-Haas Racing backing its efforts, Rette knew it would be difficult to excel against established Xfinity Series organizations, both big and small. The increasingly abrasive surface of Charlotte also required diligence on Rette Jones’ behalf to keep its car intact heading into Saturday’s race.

After spending much of the past year with the Next Gen in the Cup Series, Gragson had to re-acclimate himself to the Xfinity Series cars. It took Gragson until the green flag to find that comfort zone he had in 2022, which only emphasized how versatile drivers must be when oscillating between the top three NASCAR series.

“When I got out of the Xfinity Series and had nine top-five finishes in the last 10 races, I felt like I had a handle on things,” Gragson said. “Then I got in the Xfinity car this weekend and I was out of control and was out of my element. You just adapt over time and I kind of lost my old habits of making speed in the Xfinity car.”

Despite all the unknowns surrounding the weekend, Rette arrived at Charlotte fully expecting to see Gragson park its No. 30 in Victory Lane.

Having enjoyed plenty of successful years as a crew chief, which includes winning an ARCA Menards Series title with Justin Lofton in 2009, Rette knew the key to pulling off a potential upset win involved getting creative with pit strategy.

Rette intentionally had Gragson go off-sequence from the leaders so he could gain an advantage with fresher tires later in the day. Although he believed the right calls were made, the cautions did not fall the way Rette wanted them to, preventing the team from securing a better finish.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Charlotte

The final showing might not have been what Rette wanted, but he considered the weekend to be a success, especially since Gragson was required to re-learn a car that had undergone aerodynamic changes since his most recent start.

Rette envisions his team having a bright future in the Xfinity Series and wants to run at least a dozen events in 2025. He hopes to provide Gragson more opportunities to add to his Xfinity Series win total while simultaneously helping him maintain consistency at the Cup Series level.

“We took a chance to win this race tire-strategy-wise, and we had a shot there,” Rette said. “We didn’t come here to run second. [Being] second or 10th doesn’t matter to me. I want to put Noah in Victory Lane and that’s what we went for. This [deal] is to help build my program and help [Gragson] for Sunday.”

“Anything we can do to make him better on Sundays, we’re willing to do.”

Like Rette, Gragson was disappointed he was not able to battle Chase Elliott for the victory in Saturday’s BetMGM 300, yet the speed his No. 30 showed all day only emphasized the potential Rette Jones possesses in only its first race.

Now that the organization has a baseline, Gragson is determined to make the most of his remaining starts at Rette Jones by delivering it an Xfinity Series victory.

“[Tenth] is better than 11th,” Gragson said. “I wanted to win for them, but I feel pretty fired up. We want to win races.”

Gragson’s next Xfinity Series race in a Rette Jones car will be at Nashville Superspeedway on June 29. He will then appear at Michigan International Speedway and Darlington Raceway. He will also run two ARCA Menards Series events for Rette Jones at Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International.

Each track presents its own unique obstacles for Gragson, but his past success should put Rette Jones in a great position to thrive in the Xfinity Series for many years to come.

NASCAR official Elton Sawyer said Tuesday that challenging track-drying conditions and the prospects of an early morning finish led to the decision to end Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 before its scheduled distance — and that making these types of decisions are never easy and include a variety of considerations.

Sawyer, NASCAR senior vice president of competition, offered those remarks during a regular appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio’s “Morning Drive” program.

Heavy rain and lightning at roughly 9:30 p.m. ET stopped the NASCAR Cup Series event at Charlotte Motor Speedway with 249 of the 400 scheduled laps complete.

Safety crews deployed track-drying equipment, but humidity and the amount of rainfall slowed the progress, and competition officials declared the race official at 11:30 p.m. ET, with Christopher Bell as the winner.

RELATED: Coca-Cola 600 results | Race Rewind: Charlotte

“Mother Nature played havoc with racing all over the country this past weekend and we had to deal with it Sunday night, unfortunately,” Sawyer told SiriusXM. “We did everything we could when we had the rain shower — a lot of water fell in a short period of time. We knew at that point it was going to be a challenge. We were up for it; we attempted to get the track dry, it just wasn’t going to come in.

“As all of that started unfolding, looking at the timelines and the amount of racing we needed to complete the race, 151 laps, we were looking at well past 2 a.m., which just didn’t feel right for our competitors or our fans alike, and all the workers that had been there all day. Unfortunately, we hated to have to get to that point, but that’s where we landed.”

Sawyer noted that NASCAR’s experience with track-drying operations informed those decisions. Sawyer also noted that Kyle Larson’s inability to turn laps in the 600 after his late arrival from the Indianapolis 500 was an unfortunate consequence.

Larson’s appearance in his pit stall coincided with the arrival of Sunday’s storm in Charlotte, and he did not replace stand-in driver Justin Allgaier in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet when the race did not resume.

“Every situation is different depending on the weather conditions after it stops raining, the humidity and things of that nature,” Sawyer said. “The things we have full control over, the Air Tundras and all the drying equipment there, once it stopped and we could start the drying process and then communicate with our folks on the ground who have great experience and have done this for many years, they get a feel pretty quick for where we’re at. We wanted to make a run at it. We knew it would be a challenge, but we for sure wanted to give every effort we could because our fans deserve that. A lot went on Sunday with the Kyle Larson back-and-forth, and to see him in the car Sunday night would have been great. Unfortunately, it didn’t work out that way.”

Sawyer added that NASCAR officials worked hand-in-hand with broadcast partners, plus the track and its support staff, to make the call, acknowledging that the timeline of completing the longest race on the Cup Series schedule had pushed into the wee hours of Monday morning.

“I think if you just take experience from the past and you learn from that, and these decisions … ultimately it’s our decision, it’s a NASCAR decision, but we do work closely with our folks at Speedway (Motorsports), work closely with our TV partners to get to the right decision,” Sawyer said. “If you look closely at how that day unfolds, and there’s a lot of people behind the scenes that are there early in the morning to get the facility ready, local law enforcement officers that are directing traffic, things of that nature. … You take all of that into consideration. But ultimately trying to get to the end of the race, when you start to get into that timeline, again, 1:30-2 am range, and then by the time you dropped the checkered flag — and this is all based off us having a clean race to the end. You get into a multiple caution-flag situation, then you’re looking at 2:30-3 a.m. So you have to take all that into consideration. Again, not a decision we wanted to make, but one we had to make at that point in time.”

J&R Precast 150

Seekonk Speedway

Car No. Driver Team Crew Chief Chassis Sponsor
00 Tom Rogers Jody Lauzon Steve Mendoza Chevrolet BNP Machine, SSRP
01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Racing, LLC Jake Marosz Troyer Pine Knoll Auto Sales
1 Patrick Emerling RGM AZ LLC Dale Hedquist LFR Fleetworks, Inc
3 Jake Johnson Boehler’s Racing Equipment Greg Fournier Boehler Racing Propane Plus; Lin’s Propane Trucks
4 Tim Connolly Connolly Racing Cale Gale FURY Race Cars Connolly Companies, LLC
5 Kyle Ebersole Bob Ebersole Bob Ebersole FURY Race Cars Ebersole Excavating, Inc.
06 Sam Rameau Rameau Family Motorsports Jimbo Boccanfuso FURY Race Cars Rameau Family Motorsports
16 Ron Silk Haydt Yannone Racing Phil Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine; Future Homes
18 Ken Heagy Robert Pollifrone Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars Buoy One Restaurant & Seafood
19 Anthony Sesely Wanick Motorsports LLC James Archibald Troyer Franzosa Trucking Company; Karchner Warehousing
21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Motorsports LLC TBA Troyer Newtown Pools & Karchner Warehousing
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Cam McDermott FURY Race Cars Chalew Performance; MTT; Munns Auto
26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply Chad McDonald Chevrolet Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply
44 Doug Coby Lawney Tinio Daniel Gamache LFR TBD
46 Craig Lutz Goodie Racing Douglas Ogiejko FURY Race Cars Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports, LLC Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications, Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano Catalano Motorsports Rick Kluth Troyer FX Caprara
56 Trevor Catalano Catalano Motorsports David Catalano Troyer Catalano Motorsports
58 Timmy Solomito Goodie Motorsports Jason Shephard FURY Race Cars GAF roofing
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee Motorsports LLC Mike Stein Troyer PeeDee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer G&G Electrical Supply, AP Marquadt & Sons, Dell Electric, Lumiere Electrical, Andrew James Interiors, Hughes Motors
84 Tyler Catalano Catalano Motorsports JJ Vece Troyer Catalano Motorsports
89 Matt Swanson John Swanson Gary Casella FURY Race Cars Cervaolos Auto; Casella Snowplows; Mullys Auto Repair
114 Jacob Lutz Advantage Motorsports, LLC Bill Putney LFR Advantage Trucks; Anastasi Trucking; Washtronics

NASCAR’s longest race of the season ended up shorter than expected on a turbulent Sunday night weather-wise, but there was no shortage of comers and goers in the Cup Series standings after the Coca-Cola 600.

The most recent round at Charlotte Motor Speedway elevated Christopher Bell into Victory Lane for the second time this year. There are now four drivers with multiple wins this season, and Bell joins Denny Hamlin, William Byron and Kyle Larson on that list.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Charlotte

With Sunday’s show in the books and the second half of the Cup Series regular season underway, here are three drivers with rising fortunes and three more in need of a turnaround when the schedule heads next week to World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway.

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford

Brad Keselowski's No. 6 Ford on track through the turns at Charlotte Motor Speedway
David Jensen | Getty Images

Started: 30th

Finished: 2nd

What happened: Keselowski surged into the stage-point pay window after taking the green flag in the back portion of the field. The 2020 winner of the 600 pressed Bell in what turned out to be the final restart but settled for his fourth top-two finish in the last six Cup Series races — a stretch that’s marked a nine-position gain for Keselowski to ninth in the standings.

What’s next: The RFK co-owner/driver heads to Gateway, where he has an Xfinity Series win (2010) and a steady amount of momentum. Keselowski’s victory two weeks earlier at Darlington Raceway — part of his recent upswing — has taken off plenty of pressure as the team steamrolls toward the Cup Series Playoffs.

2. Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota

Tyler Reddick's No. 45 Toyota rounds Turn 4 at Charlotte Motor Speedway
David Jensen | Getty Images

Started: 8th

Finished: 4th

What happened: Reddick technically earned a starting spot among the top 10 based on his qualifying effort, but an unapproved adjustment after pre-qualifying inspection Saturday forced him to drop to the rear and serve a pass-through penalty at the start. The comeback he made was admirable, and his result could easily have been one spot better without William Byron’s daring frontstretch pass that sidestepped both him and pole-starter Ty Gibbs just six laps before weather slowed the event.

What’s next: Reddick’s result snapped a three-race stretch without a top-10 outcome, registering a positive for the No. 45 group in what’s been a streaky season so far. His Cup Series record at Gateway is just two races, with better starts (fourth, ninth) than finishes (15th, 35th).

3. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Denny Hamlin's No. 11 Toyota makes its corner entry ahead of a pack at Charlotte Motor Speedway
David Jensen | Getty Images

Started: 11th

Finished: 5th

What happened: Hamlin did not lead a lap in the race for the first time this season but inched up from where he started after just missing the final round of qualifying in Saturday’s time trials. The promise of an even better result, however, was hampered by difficulties on pit road, where his exit was hurt more than once by the No. 17 Ford of Chris Buescher in close proximity in the stall ahead of him.

What’s next: Hamlin will enter June as the new Cup Series points leader, moving up two spots after jumping teammate Martin Truex Jr. and Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson, who did not earn any points after participating in the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday. Hamlin was last year’s runner-up at the 1.25-mile World Wide Technology Raceway track.

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford

Ryan Blaney on the Cup Series qualifying grid at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Logan Riely | Getty Images

Started: 16th

Finished: 39th

What happened: Blaney’s attempt to repeat as the Coca-Cola 600 winner hit a rough patch in the second of four stages when his No. 12 Mustang clouted the outside retaining wall through Turns 3 and 4. “I just came off pit road and put tires on it and I don’t know if I ran over something, but one of them blew,” said Blaney, who limped the car to pit road with heavy right-side damage. He was unable to continue and completed just 143 laps.

What’s next: Blaney had hoped that his car’s handling would come to him when the 600 reached the later evening hours, but never got to find out. Instead, he was relegated to his second consecutive finish outside the top 30 after a crash left him 36th two weeks ago at Darlington. He and the rest of the Cup Series field move forward next weekend to Gateway, where Blaney has finishes of fourth and sixth in his two starts there.

2. Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford

Chris Buescher makes time through the turns in the No. 17 Ford at Charlotte Motor Speedway
David Jensen | Getty Images

Started: 39th

Finished: 23rd

What happened: Buescher’s weekend started at a deficit even before Sunday’s green flag arrived after his No. 17 Ford crashed during Saturday’s practice session. He was able to make a big rally into the top five after starting deep in the 40-car field, but Buescher lost ground on the final rundown in what turned out to be a late-race pit stop when his car was boxed in by the No. 42 Legacy Motor Club Toyota of John Hunter Nemechek in the neighboring stall.

What’s next: After matching a season-best result as the Kansas runner-up to start the month of May, Buescher has closed the calendar sheet with two straight finishes in the back half of the field. His strength has been evident in recent weeks, but he still seeks a breakthrough win this season that would lock the No. 17 group into the Cup Series Playoffs.

3. Noah Gragson, No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford

Noah Gragson's No. 10 Ford hurtles down the straights at Charlotte Motor Speedway
David Jensen | Getty Images

Started: 19th

Finished: 38th

What happened: Contact with the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevy of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. pitched the No. 10 SHR Ford sideways and into the inside wall after the running room ran out off Turn 2. Gragson earned just a single point after he was eliminated, completing just 170 of 249 laps with sizable damage.

What’s next: The modest streak of three consecutive top-10 finishes has started to grow smaller in the rear mirror, and Gragson dropped two spots to 21st in the Cup Series standings — leaving him further on the fringes of the postseason bubble as a result. He was 33rd in his only Cup Series start at WWTR.

CONCORD, N.C. — Kyle Larson arrived to Charlotte Motor Speedway just in time for lightning and rain to end his chances of competing in the Indianapolis 500 and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 in the same day.

That left longtime Xfinity Series driver Justin Allgaier in the driver’s seat of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for all 249 laps of Sunday’s rain-shortened Cup Series race on the way to a 13th-place finish in his first Cup start in two years.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

As Larson’s plans came together through both Hendrick and IndyCar’s Arrow McLaren programs, Allgaier was along for the ride in a reserve role, including the reception of a HendrickCars.com fire suit over the winter.

Still, when circumstances became obvious Sunday afternoon that Allgaier would need to at least start the No. 5 Chevrolet after a four-hour rain delay in Indianapolis, Allgaier had to shake off the pressure of keeping the car in one piece if and whenever Larson arrived at the track.

“If he would have come at Lap 25 or 50, when I was still not comfortable, that would have been a hard thing for me to swallow,” Allgaier said. “So as much as it stinks that he wasn’t able to run more laps in the race, I just thought it was good for me because I finally got to where I was comfortable. And I can step out of this race car and be perfectly content with how the day went.”

Larson was unavailable for comment post-race Sunday, but issued a lengthy statement Monday morning on his social media platforms that read in part: “What I thought could be one of the best days of my life quickly turned into one of the most disappointing ones I’ve ever experienced. … So much time, money and effort went into this experience and it just kills me to have it all end the way it did. I feel like I let so many people down. We knew all along weather could throw a wrench into things but seeing it come to reality is a horrible feeling.

“Up until Sunday it was truly one of the greatest experiences of my life. I can’t describe how appreciative I am of everyone’s support of me to live out a dream. I hope it’s not the last opportunity I have to try the Double but if it is I guess it was memorable.”

While Larson was battling weather all day in Indianapolis, crew chief Cliff Daniels was running the show in Charlotte.

Daniels has had to adapt to working with three separate drivers across the past two weeks, including Kevin Harvick for practice and qualifying at North Wilkesboro Speedway’s NASCAR All-Star Race, Allgaier at Charlotte and Larson at both. But his steady leadership prevailed, particularly in the early stages of Sunday’s race as he verbally coached Allgaier around the track using SMT data. That included properly placing the car in certain lanes, recommending brake pressures and passing maneuvers.

Justin Allgaier drives the No. 5 Chevrolet in the Coca-Cola 600.
Logan Riely | Getty Images

“He is very buttoned-up and he says all the right things and he does all the right things,” Allgaier said. “He’s very positive on the radio. But I told Cliff before the race, I said, ‘Listen, I don’t know what I’m getting into. The last thing I want to do is wreck this thing, right? I have not fooled myself enough to know that I don’t need help. So, any little piece of advice that you can give me along the way, make sure you tell me because the only way I’m going to get better is to have direction from you and what everybody else is doing.’ ”

Daniels obliged, and the improvement from Allgaier’s early laps to the premature checkered flag was glaring as Allgaier worked from fighting from the tail end of the lead lap all the way to a 13th-place charge.

“Justin had a lot of guts to come in and do the job that he did and be as focused and do all the things to get up to speed as well as he did,” Daniels told NASCAR.com. “It’s no secret he’s the Chevrolet test driver. And it’s one thing to get to know these cars, which he has in a test environment. But in a race environment, they are so different. The pack is different. For him to come in and get up to speed the way he did was really impressive, and we’re very appreciative of the job that he did. And let’s be honest, once he got comfortable, he was coming to the front. He was doing a really good job, so very proud of him.”

Fresh from Indiana, Hendrick Motorsports’ president and general manager Jeff Andrews offered his praise of the 37-year-old Illinois native, underscoring the difficulty of jumping into a car with limited experience.

“Justin did an amazing job for us,” Andrews told NASCAR.com. “I mean to step in in those conditions, not having practiced or qualified the car and step in and do what he did, we couldn’t be more pleased with him. He does a lot of work for us, obviously, on the testing side and driving the Chevrolet wheel force transducer cars, so we’re very familiar with him, and I’ve used him for many years in these situations. But this one was probably the — I just can’t iterate enough what a great job he did for us bringing that car home in 13th place.”

Kyle Larson and wife Katelyn emerge from the helicopter at Charlotte
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

The logistics of Larson’s plans were complicated by weather throughout each of Sunday’s two events. While Hendrick Motorsports had put over a year’s worth of plans together, Mother Nature ultimately had the final say.

“Obviously, the weather messed with us, not only there but again here, and it’s unfortunate,” Andrews said. “It’s not the way we wanted this whole situation to go. Kind of (felt) like we were well-prepared to handle all the travel logistics and do what we needed to do to run both races and it just wasn’t meant to be. We can’t change the weather or work on that. But all in all, proud to go up there. Proud of the effort to those guys put in.”

Larson finished 18th in his inaugural Indianapolis 500 attempt, a run slowed by a speeding penalty in the latter stages of the 200-lap affair. But ultimately, the longtime sprint car racer opted to start the 500-miler despite its delayed start.

“We kind of knew what we were going to be faced with there as far as being committed to running Kyle in the 500 and it starting late,” Andrews said. “We just hoped to be able to get back here to let him have a couple hundred laps in the car here to see what he could do. So, unfortunate.

“I feel bad for him. He’s pretty dejected right now, but he needs to hold his head high. He did a great job today, and weather is what it is. So we’ll just take what he gave us and learn from it and talk about if we want to do it next year or not.”

As the No. 5 team’s leader, Daniels was tasked with making sure the car and its driver — whether it be Larson or Allgaier — excelled. Asked whether he would describe Sunday as stressful or otherwise, Daniels took perhaps his first moment all day to ponder how he actually felt about the day, all at the ripe time of 11:59 p.m. ET.

“I don’t know,” he said, the only interruption in a 12-second pause. “I don’t get paid to put a lot of emotion — I feel like stressful is an emotional term. Like, we had a job to do, and that was our focus. There were a lot of boxes we had to check, a lot of details that had to be met, coordination with our team and logistics and NASCAR, and there’s a lot of moving parts. So, never at any point did I even have a minute to sit down and think, like, what do I feel right now? I don’t get paid to have feelings here at the race track. You know what I mean? You have to hit the marks you have to hit.”

While circumstances kept Larson from climbing into his Cup car, Allgaier hit all the marks he needed by the end of his rain-shortened return to the Cup Series.

CONCORD, N.C. – A lightning delay that turned into a heavy rainstorm made a winner of Christopher Bell in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Not that Bell didn’t deserve the victory in the rain-shortened race, which NASCAR was forced to call after 249 of 400 laps were complete.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

The driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota started third, led a race-high 90 laps and won the second stage of the 14th NASCAR Cup Series race of the season.

The decisive juncture in the Memorial Day Weekend race came when Bell held off Darlington winner Brad Keselowski during a 10-lap run after a caution for Corey LaJoie’s spin in Turn 2 on Lap 229.

On the ensuing Lap 236 restart, Bell and Keselowski lined up side-by-side at the front of the field, with Bell prevailing and pulling out to a lead of roughly six car-lengths before NASCAR called the seventh caution for lightning in the area.

After the lightning came heavy rain, and though NASCAR attempted to dry the track when the rain subsided, heavy humidity thwarted efforts to do so in a timely manner. As a result, Bell collected his second victory of the season, his first on the 1.5-mile Charlotte oval and the eighth of his career.

The victory was a welcome momentum shift for Bell, who had finished outside the top 10 in five of his previous six races.

“Man, it feels so good — to win or lose — just to have a great race to go off of,” Bell said. “A race where we led laps. We were able to pass cars. We lost the lead at times and were able to drive back to the lead.

“We had great pit stops. It was a team effort, and it was amazing to have a good race. Hopefully, this is something we can build on and get back to being more consistent.”

SHOP: Winner gear

Keselowski, who posted his third runner-up finish of the season, was convinced he had the fastest car.

“We just didn’t have time for it to play out,” said the driver of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford, who pressured Bell throughout the final 10-lap run before weather intervened.

Stage 1 winner William Byron ran third behind Bell and Keselowski, with Tyler Reddick and Denny Hamlin finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.

Pole winner Ty Gibbs finished sixth after leading 74 laps, including the first 42 of the race. Chase Elliott finished seventh, followed by Ross Chastain, Alex Bowman and Josh Berry.

After finishing 18th in his Indianapolis 500 debut, Kyle Larson arrived at Charlotte Motor Speedway just before weather forced the stoppage. Larson intended to take over his No. 5 Chevrolet from Justin Allgaier, who had started the race at Charlotte because the Indy 500 was delayed by rain.

Allgaier was running 13th when the race was called, and Larson never had a chance to drive the car.

Defending race winner and reigning series champion Ryan Blaney slammed the outside wall in the second stage and exited the event after 143 laps.

“We’ll have to look if I hit something or… I don’t know,” Blaney said.  “I just went into (Turn) 3 getting up to speed and blew a tire and hit the fence.  It’s an unfortunate end to our night. That sucks.

“We’re not even halfway and just wanting to work on your stuff all night. I thought we were getting it a little better here and there, but won’t get a shot.”

MORE: 2024 Cup Series standings | 2024 Cup Series schedule

The Cup Series’ next race is the Enjoy Illinois 300, scheduled next Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at World Wide Technology Raceway.

NOTES: NASCAR officials completed post-race inspection in the Cup Series garage without issue, confirming Bell’s victory. Competition officials indicated that four cars will return to the NASCAR Research & Development Center – the Nos. 34 and 45 for teardown and engine dyno and the Nos. 3 and 99 for engine-dyno testing.

Contributing: Staff reports

CONCORD, N.C. — The Coca-Cola 600 has been placed on hold due to inclement weather.

The NASCAR Cup Series’ longest race of the season was red-flagged on Lap 246 as rain overtook the 1.5-mile Charlotte Motor Speedway oval.

Christopher Bell is scored as the leader with 151 laps remaining, ahead of Brad Keselowski, William Byron, Tyler Reddick and Denny Hamlin. Completing the top 10 are Ty Gibbs, Chase Elliott, Ross Chastain, Alex Bowman and Josh Berry.

MORE: Live leaderboard | Track the weather

Justin Allgaier was running 13th at the time of caution, piloting the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in place of Kyle Larson. Larson is traveling to the speedway after finishing 18th in his inaugural showing in the Indianapolis 500.

Ryan Blaney, the 2023 winner of the Coca-Cola 600, crashed out of Sunday’s running at Lap 143 after suffering an issue with his right-front tire in Turns 3 and 4 and contacting the outside SAFER barrier.

Noah Gragson also wrecked exiting Turn 2 at Lap 171, nosing into the inside wall and ending his day prematurely.

This story will be updated.