NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Day will take place on Tuesday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina. A select panel will gather and ultimately produce results that will determine the three selectees into the Class of 2025 as well as the Landmark Award winner.

NASCAR will stream the announcement at 5 p.m. ET on NASCAR.com and YouTube. Tune in to find out who will be the next group to have their names permanently enshrined into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2025.

Two honorees will be selected from the 10 names on the Modern Era ballot, and one will be elected from the five nominees on the Pioneer Ballot.

Fan balloting, which closed on Sunday, will count as one vote among those cast by the voting panel. Ryan Blaney, the defending Cup Series champion, will also cast a vote.

Greg Biffle, Randy Dorton and Jack Sprague were revealed last month to be the newest nominees on the Modern Era ballot, and Ray Hendrick and Bob Welborn were announced as the newest names on the Pioneer ballot.

Larry Phillips, a short-track legend and a nominee since 2014, was moved from the Modern Era ballot to the Pioneer Ballot. Safety innovator Dean Sicking joined the list of five nominees for the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR.

The full list of nominees on the Modern Era ballot includes Greg Biffle, Neil Bonnett, Tim Brewer, Jeff Burton, Randy Dorton, Carl Edwards, Harry Gant, Harry Hyde, Ricky Rudd and Jack Sprague.

The full list of nominees on the Pioneer Ballot includes Ray Hendrick, Banjo Matthews, Ralph Moody, Larry Phillips and Bob Welborn.

Those being considered for the Landmark Award includes Alvin Hawkins, Lesa France Kennedy, Les Richter, Dr. Joseph Mattioli and Dr. Dean Sicking.

Find out more about the nominees, and learn who is already in the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Learn more about the NASCAR Hall of Fame itself and how to visit.

The NASCAR Hall of Fame has extended a Voting Day invitation to each reigning Cup Series champion since 2014. The latest title-holder to join the voting panel is Ryan Blaney, who won his first Cup crown last year and says he’s accepting the invite with a measure of gratitude.

The latest group of three inductees will be selected Tuesday in the Charlotte Convention Center as a panel of industry figures, legends and media gather to cast ballots for the Hall’s Class of 2025. The two selections from the Modern Era Ballot, the single inductee from the Pioneer Ballot, plus the Landmark Award recipient for outstanding contributions to NASCAR will be announced Tuesday at 5 p.m. ET in the shrine’s Great Hall.

RELATED: Class of 2025 nominees set | Explore: NASCAR Hall of Fame

For his first go-around, Blaney will have a list of 15 nominees — 10 on the Modern Era side, and five among the Pioneer choices — to consider. And though some names are more familiar to the 30-year-old driver, Blaney says he’s embracing the opportunity.

“It’s a big honor to be a part of. I’m really looking forward to that,” Blaney said Friday during All-Star Weekend at North Wilkesboro Speedway. “You know, some of the folks on the ballot, I grew up watching. Others, I wasn’t around when they were racing or participating in the sport, but I enjoy seeing videos and hearing stories of them, so it’s just going to be a really cool process.”

Jimmie Johnson was the first Cup Series champion to join the Hall of Fame Voting Panel. He participated after claiming his sixth and record-tying seventh titles, and he became a Hall of Fame inductee with the Class of 2024 last year.

Blaney becomes the second consecutive driver from Team Penske to take part in the Hall of Fame voting process. Teammate Joey Logano made his second appearance on the voting panel after achieving his second Cup Series title in 2022.

The panel will hold discussions before each vote. There are typically history lessons to be heard in each discourse.

“I think just to get to sit down in the room with everybody who votes for the Hall of Fame, too, I think that’s all those legends and people I admired, that’s a really cool thing to be a part of,” Blaney said. “So I’m really giddy for that on Tuesday.”

“Bugsy Stevens was one of the greatest to race a modified, winning three consecutive NASCAR National Modified Championships (1967-69), and countless championships across tracks in the Northeast including Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, Stafford Motor Speedway, and Seekonk Speedway. A fan favorite who drew crowds to his races, he was one of the legendary drivers who piloted the iconic “Ole Blue” No. 3 car that still races today on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. Our thoughts are with Bugsy’s family and friends as we honor his life.”

MORE: Bugsy Stevens’ career in pictures

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — All up and down the gently sloping pit road at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend, the Goodyear tires for NASCAR All-Star Weekend had a new look to them, with sidewall lettering at the top of each stack in red, yellow and white. It was the latest curve to the ever-changing All-Star Race format, one that promised to jumble up the strategies and grip levels under the microscope of a non-points event.

If nothing else, the takeaway from a weekend of racing is that we have options.

Goodyear’s softer, red-lettered “option” tire was the winning ticket in Sunday’s All-Star main event, and Joey Logano rode them to victory in the 200-lap invitational, then promptly melted the rear ones with a professional-grade burnout in his No. 22 Team Penske Ford. The mix of option tires with the yellow-lettered and more durable “prime” tire was intended to add a new degree of pit-call intrigue, and the results were a mixed outcome. Thankfully, at least, the white-lettered wet-weather tires weren’t needed after apocalyptic rain Saturday blew through to leave race-day Sunday high and dry.

Friday afternoon’s lively practice session earned raves with a glimpse at varying performance, grip and wear with both tire options in play. Come Sunday in cooler, nighttime conditions, though, the fall-off wasn’t as dramatic, and teams and drivers could push the red-marked option tires more aggressively. Though the risk-reward nature of the option tires ended up being less risky and more rewarding, the kudos for taking on such an experiment to enhance short-track racing for the series was palpable.

RELATED: Logano rolls at North Wilkesboro | At-track photos: All-Star

“First, hats off to Goodyear and NASCAR, trying to do something different,” said Cliff Daniels, crew chief for Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 5 Chevrolet and Kyle Larson. “I do think a very genuine, a very solid attempt was there to try to do something different, and unfortunately, kind of to everyone’s surprise, the tire didn’t have the fall-off, the degradation that we thought it would have — especially at the end of the one long run, the first segment, whatever you want to call it. I was expecting guys to have blisters, and maybe the tires come apart and fade, and it just didn’t happen. So Goodyear was still almost making too good of a tire. You know, it’s crazy, and there could be some margin there that we can take. I think steps like this are steps that we need to take anytime we can, to try to learn and we all know we want to help the short-track package and yeah, we’ll just keep learning.”

It’s not the first time Goodyear tire development has been in the spotlight at North Wilkesboro. It was here that the tiremaker notched its first victory with radial-tire technology with Dale Earnhardt in 1989. This weekend’s wrinkle to the race-ready rubber was a different development, but it could also prove to be a significant step forward.

Logano benefited the most from the red tire’s performance characteristics. He had track position at the outset from winning the pole position in Saturday qualifying, then kept it when No. 22 crew chief Paul Wolfe joined four other teams opting not to pit after an early caution flag. The rest of the field swapped to the yellow, prime tires for the rest of the opening 100-lap stint, but the front five largely kept their momentum without experiencing drastic wear. Logano kept the lead after a halfway pit stop for fresh reds; he stayed out during another break with 50 laps to go and held on for his second All-Star win.

The three versions of Goodyear tires for NASCAR All-Star Race Weekend at North Wilkesboro Speedway -- prime (yellow sidewall lettering), option (red) and wet-weather (white).
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

John Probst, NASCAR senior vice president of racing development, said that competition officials gathered feedback in informal post-race conversations with drivers and crew, but that further evaluation would take place in Tuesday’s competition meeting and subsequent talks.

“Did everything go exactly like we thought? No. I think we would have liked to see the tires fall off a little more, and credit to the 22 for doing something that honestly Friday in practice, and working with Goodyear, we didn’t think you could do,” Probst said. “We didn’t think we’d see somebody run it that long and that hard and have it hold up that well. So the good thing is, we’ve got some tire tests coming up here in the near future at Iowa and Martinsville, and we’ll just get more aggressive. We’ll keep stepping up on it. It’s always hard when we come to a track and you practice in the daylight, you race at night, the track temperature has a lot to do with how the tires perform. So we’re going to stay at it. By no means are we done. We’ll get more aggressive.”

Denny Hamlin placed second to Logano, and the veteran driver and his crew chief, Chris Gabehart, had a compelling debate about whether to pit their No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota when the final competition break fell with 50 laps to go. Hamlin’s strategy suggestion was fresh reds, but Gabehart leaned toward staying out to preserve track position running P2. Hamlin eventually skipped pit road to keep his place in the running order, and that held up the rest of the way. “My guy likes offense,” Gabehart said of Hamlin’s initial hunch.

But Gabehart said he appreciated the effort in bringing tire alternates to a non-points race, even if Sunday’s conditions weren’t as ripe for the same sort of Friday fall-off from practice. Trying the same format in a longer event on one of the circuit’s shorter ovals, Gabehart said, could open up more strategy possibilities.

“Again, let’s be clear, you’re never going to finish four-wide at the finish line every week, and we’ve got to temper expectations and understand that the Game 7 walk-off home run scenario is not … if that’s what we want every week, you’re going to be disappointed,” Gabehart said. “Absolutely, it was a step in the right direction. No question about it, the industry learned a lot this weekend, And then, like I said earlier in the week, this option tire experiment, the way this weekend played out, there weren’t going to be a lot of opportunities to see diverging strategies. But if you only give me two (sets) of them of my eight sets of Loudon — I’m making it up — or Richmond or Phoenix, and I only get two of them, and it’s 400 laps, well now we can’t just figure out a way to use those two sets the whole race, right? We’ve got to pick and choose, and you’ve got stage points that matter, and playoff points that get paid at the end of them, and the end of the race obviously matters. So then you’ll start seeing a lot of comers and goers because you don’t have infinite supply the way you kind of did tonight.”

Special mention needs to be made for the quality of the repaving project at the 0.625-mile track, which now has fresh asphalt for the first time since 1981. The historic oval retained a measure of its character, but the new surface also took tire rubber readily, and the groove widened out far more quickly than with past repaves at other facilities.

The surface should only get better with more age and use, and Gabehart lauded both the overhaul and the nostalgic buzz that gave the second All-Star edition at the Wilkes County track that extra pop.

“First off, let me say fantastic atmosphere,” Gabehart said. “Fantastic job to Marcus Smith and his team here at North Wilkesboro. You don’t get a repave better than that. That’s as good as it gets. Multiple lanes, literally from the SAFER barrier to the bottom. You can’t get any better. The short track’s not what’s broke, and tonight is evident of that. The track’s fantastic.”

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — Kyle Larson has made same-day journeys to drive different types of race cars before. He mentioned after Sunday night’s NASCAR All-Star Race some of those pavement-to-dirt transitions — New Hampshire to Eldora and Richmond to the Knoxville (Iowa) Nationals, to name two.

But this? Going from a strong showing at pole day for the Indianapolis 500 to historic North Wilkesboro Speedway for the NASCAR All-Star Race was a next-level experience.

“It’s different. It’s a bigger magnitude,” Larson said from North Wilkesboro’s pit road as the last hours of a busy day ticked away. “But I’ve done it, probably more than five times, so maybe that makes me be a little bit more relaxed on days like today. But either way, I mean, the magnitude of it’s much cooler.”

Larson capped his action-filled Sunday with a fourth-place All-Star finish in a No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet he had not driven in either practice or qualifying. His first time on the freshly repaved track came after two days and multiple rounds of qualifying at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where he (maybe fittingly) earned the No. 5 starting spot for his Indy 500 debut, which will be the first leg of his planned Memorial Day Weekend double. That journey will culminate next Sunday with another epic motorsports travel day, making the trip from the venerable Brickyard to NASCAR’s longest race, the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (6 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: ‘Great week so far’ at Indy for Larson | At-track photos

This past Sunday’s logistics went about as smoothly as could be, Larson said. Team owner Rick Hendrick recruited former Cup Series champ Kevin Harvick out of the FOX Sports booth to drive the No. 5 Chevy in the preceding days’ practice and qualifying, and the car’s balance come race day was better for it. After his qualification efforts at Indy were complete, Larson’s support team executed his minute-by-minute travel timetable with plenty of time to spare. He waved to cheers from the assembled fans at the 0.625-mile track upon his arrival.

Kyle Larson greets fans at North Wilkesboro ahead of the NASCAR All-Star Race after qualifying fifth for the Indy 500 hours prior.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

“They’ve got a great process and great people in place to make things very seamless for anybody. We all heard Kevin talked about it and give them praise, so yeah. I mean, Hendrick Motorsports is the best,” Larson said. “Thanks to Kevin and everybody working together to get our car in a good spot, and I had a lot of fun. I felt like I was able to get up to speed right away. I didn’t feel like it took any time.”

Larson dropped to the rear of the 20-car field for the All-Star Race start after the team’s driver change but pecked his way to the upper reaches of the contenders in his bid to repeat at North Wilkesboro. A fresh set of the red-lettered, softer “option” tires for the final 50-lap segment to the end provided a short-term benefit that propelled him as high as third place behind eventual winner Joey Logano and runner-up Denny Hamlin, but their effectiveness faded in the closing stretch.

No. 5 Chevy crew chief Cliff Daniels noted Larson’s resilience in advancing through the stressful structure of Indy 500 qualifying after an early mechanical hiccup, then his ability to carve his way into contention after nightfall in Wilkes County. It marked the first “historic weekend” in back-to-back weeks, Daniels said, as Larson switched from a lithe IndyCar at speeds exceeding 240 mph to a rumbling stock car at a classic short track all in one day.

“We just kind of had to chip away at the race,” Daniels said. “Looking back, there’s things that I want to say I could have done different or not, I don’t really know. But all in all, the team was really tough this weekend. Road crew did an amazing job. Pit crew hung tough today. Kyle did Kyle things, and so much fun to watch him move around and go drive hard and be exciting on restarts. Super, super proud of his effort, and all in all, I think we have a lot to be proud of as a team. We’re going to keep our nose down. We’re going to keep digging because the next two weeks are still going to be very action-packed for us. But I think we’re built for it, and we’ll keep marching forward.”

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — It was a study in domination and impeccable strategy.

Leading a NASCAR All-Star Race record 199 of 200 laps, pole winner Joey Logano kept Denny Hamlin and peripatetic Kyle Larson at bay on Sunday night in winning the 40th running of the event and banking the $1 million top prize.

Running the entire race on softer option tires — and eschewing the more durable prime tires at repaved and revitalized North Wilkesboro Speedway — Logano beat runner-up Hamlin to the finish line by 0.636 seconds, with Chris Buescher passing Larson for third place on the next-to-last-lap.

The All-Star Race victory was the second for Logano and the fifth for Team Penske, which also won with Kurt Busch (2010), Ryan Newman (2002) and Ryan Blaney (2022).

RELATED: Official race results | At-track photos

“A lot of fun when you’ve got a car this fast,” said Logano, who is winless through 13 Cup Series points events this season. “The Shell/Pennzoil Mustang, it’s just so great to get in Victory Lane. 

“All of our sponsors and everyone who stuck with us to get a win, it feels nice. It’s been a while. I wish it was for points, but a million bucks is still a lot of money, and I feel great about that.”

Though Logano spent the race at the front of the field, Larson drew his share of attention, too, as he shuttled between the 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the historic 0.625-mile short track.

After qualifying fifth for next Sunday’s Indianapolis 500 — the first leg of a planned Memorial Day Double with the Coca-Cola 600 next Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway — Larson left Indy on a helicopter at 5:44 p.m.

After transferring to Hendrick Motorsports’ private jet and arriving at Wilkes County Airport, Larson took a helicopter to nearby North Wilkesboro Speedway and landed on the track property at 7:15 p.m. — to loud applause from fans in the grandstands.

Larson started from the rear of the field because of a driver change, given that Kevin Harvick had qualified the No. 5 Chevrolet while Larson was at Indy.

During a planned caution at Lap 151, Larson pitted for option tires that had spent only one green-flag lap on his car and charged through the field from 10th at the restart to challenge Hamlin for the runner-up spot before fading in the closing laps.

Larson ran out of steam, and Hamlin was frustrated by his inability to make a move on the race winner.

“I needed more of an advantage to pass, for sure,” Hamlin said. “I would run to him, and then you couldn’t pass. I would lose a little bit of air there, and I would try to give my car a break and then run to him again — just have to be so much faster to get around.

“Hats off to the track, NASCAR and Goodyear for giving (two tire choices) a try. Hopefully, we learned something here for future short tracks.”

SHOP: Race winner gear

Fireworks started popping early on Sunday. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. went up the middle to create a three-wide scenario mid-pack and angered Kyle Busch on the outside when the cars collided. Busch retaliated on Lap 2 and turned Stenhouse’s Chevrolet into the outside wall, eliminating Stenhouse from the race.

Stenhouse drove his damaged car to pit road, parked it in Busch’s stall and expressed his displeasure to Busch’s crew chief, Randall Burnett. After the race, Stenhouse vented his pent-up rage in a brief fistfight with Busch, which also involved crews from the two teams.

At least we had an exciting fight in the end — something to talk about,” said Hamlin.

Under the caution for Stenhouse’s wreck, five drivers — Logano, Tyler Reddick, Brad Keselowski, Buescher and Blaney — stayed on the track on the softer option tires, while the rest of the field came to pit road and switched to the primary tires.

Preserving track position proved to be the winning move for the No. 22 Team Penske Ford. When crew chief Paul Wolfe saw the car’s performance on the option tires, he chose not to change to primes at the 100-lap halfway break.

“Well, we did the first 100, so why wouldn’t it last the second 100?” agreed Logano. “That was our thought, so it was definitely an aggressive strategy, but it worked out good.”

Blaney came home fifth, followed by Bubba Wallace, Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Busch.

Toyota drivers Ty Gibbs and Wallace transferred into the main event by finishing first and second, respectively, in the 100-lap NASCAR All-Star Open.

For Gibbs, the victory was a cakewalk. Starting from the pole, the driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Camry led every lap and crossed the finish line 1.572 seconds ahead of Wallace, who had to hold off charging Josh Berry and Justin Haley to secure his spot in the show.

Berry was third in the Open, less than a half-second behind Wallace, with Haley trailing in fourth. Berry’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Noah Gragson, finished fifth but transferred into the All-Star Race by winning the Fan Vote.

“I can’t say enough about the fans,” Gragson said after learning he had been voted into the race. “They’re badass. They keep us motivated each and every weekend to come out and do our jobs.

“When times aren’t great, the fans always pump us up and we feed off their energy. I appreciate everybody’s support and we’ve got 200 laps to go chase a million bucks.”

The chase came up short. Gragson started at the back of the 20-car field and finished 11th.

The Cup Series head to Charlotte Motor Speedway next Sunday for the Coca-Cola 600 (6 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

NOTE: Post-race inspection was completed in the Cup Series garage at North Wilkesboro Speedway without any issues, confirming Logano as the All-Star Race winner.

Contributing: Staff reports

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. ran just two of the 200 laps in Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race, his No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet battered and out after an early altercation with Kyle Busch. With no pedestrian tunnel or bridge out of the North Wilkesboro Speedway infield, Stenhouse was forced to sit and stew.

So, he waited for the remaining 198 to retaliate.

WATCH: Stenhouse discusses wreck

With post-race fireworks popping off behind them in the background, Stenhouse and Busch had a brief verbal confrontation that escalated into a physical showdown between the two drivers and their crews in the NASCAR Cup Series garage, a nasty spat that triggered memories of North Wilkesboro’s rough-and-tumble past. Both drivers went to the ground, and the mounting frustrations of both the night and their seasons overall reached a tipping point.

“Bring it! I don’t give a [expletive]. I suck just as bad as you!” Busch yelled at his rival less than a minute after Stenhouse landed a right hand to Busch’s left cheek.

Stenhouse’s night was over early after jostling in the pack with Busch’s No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet led to a series of bumps that landed the No. 47 Chevy in the outside retaining wall. Stenhouse limped the crumpled heap back to pit road, sending a message by parking in the No. 8 team’s stall and dismounting.

Before walking for a mandatory check at the infield care center, Stenhouse climbed the No. 8 pit box’s ladder and had words with Busch’s crew. In his post-crash interview, Stenhouse made a “hold my watch” reference, calling back to a long-ago physical scuffle that Busch had with his current car owner. He also said that nothing Busch could say would comfort him and that “I’ll handle it.” Pressed for what that might entail, Stenhouse said: “Eh, you can just watch afterwards.”

The 36-year-old driver was a man of his word, and when Busch rounded the corner through the break in the pit-road wall toward the garage, Stenhouse was waiting for him at the back of the No. 8 hauler.

“I mean, it’s the first lap of the race,” Busch said as he explained his side of their contact during his final strides to the post-race face-off. “We don’t even have water temp in the car yet, and we’re wrecking off of (Turn) 2. … I’m tired of getting run over — by everybody. But that’s what everybody does. Everybody runs over everybody to pass everybody.”

The discussion lasted only a short bit, with the debate intensifying over who ran into whom and just how much running room there actually was. “I don’t believe you,” Busch said, and Stenhouse replied, “Go back and watch it,” before throwing a hard right.

Busch was scored 10th in the All-Star main event, and Stenhouse was last in the 20-car invitational field. And though the All-Star event had no bearing on the season-long points, both drivers’ position in the Cup Series standings was another source of irritation. Busch is winless and 13th in the standings with just a pair of top-five finishes so far this year, and Stenhouse sits 26th with just one top five midway through the regular season.

MORE: 2024 Cup Series standings | 2024 Cup Series schedule

Stenhouse said that his All-Star displeasure with Busch has far deeper roots.

“I wrecked him one time at Daytona, and he’s been kind of bad-mouthing me ever since then,” Stenhouse said after the fracas. “I feel like we get along with each other OK outside the race track. I talk to him quite a bit. I’m not sure why he was so mad that — I shoved it three-wide, but he hit the fence and kind of came off the wall and ran into me, and when I was talking to him, he kept saying that I wrecked him.

“Yeah, just definitely built-up frustration with how he runs his mouth all the time about myself. But I know he’s frustrated because he doesn’t run near as good as he used to, and I understand that. We’re a single-car team over here. We’re working really hard to go out and get better each and every weekend, and we had a really good game plan coming in. Our car was really strong Friday in practice. I was looking forward to running to the front. I think we had passed a couple cars there and I was excited for the rest of the night, and he ruined it.”

Instead, the rest of the night was spent inside the historic 0.625-mile track, where — as an old-school flourish — a crossover gate is the only means of exiting.

“Being stuck in here definitely doesn’t help the frustration,” Stenhouse said. “If there was a tunnel, I’d have probably been home watching the end of that, but here we are.”

According to FOX Sports, Busch declined a request for a post-fight interview.

INDIANAPOLIS — After a few minutes of politely answering questions from a throng of reporters contorting themselves around riot barriers a few feet from his No. 17 Dallara-Chevrolet, Kyle Larson smiled.

“Everything about Indy is a great atmosphere,” he said. “Now I’m ready to go drive a stock car. So I’ll talk to you guys later.”

And with that, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion was on the move.

Tossing a brief hello to his parents, Mike and Janet, Larson made a hard left into the base of Victory Circle while being ushered by a few Indianapolis Motor Speedway security officers. He signed a few autographs while barely breaking a brisk stride to meet up with a Hendrick Motorsports contingent that included Jeff Gordon and Jeff Andrews.

PHOTOS: Kyle Larson at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

With fans screaming their approval from atop the Tower Terrace grandstands (“We love you, baby! Let’s go Larson!”), Larson and his entourage took a few more dozen steps to the entrance of the media center where two Suburbans conveniently were waiting with engines idling.

Larson and Gordon climbed into the red SUV, which began rolling through the infield to a helipad on the Brickyard Crossing golf course outside Turn 2.

From the time he exited his race car to when he effectively began leaving the property, the entire process took less than 20 minutes. It was another moment of peak efficiency at the Brickyard for Larson, who is attempting to become the fifth driver to race the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 in the same day.

His bid at history has been going quite swimmingly.

“I’m just happy because it’s really cool,” he said. “It’s gone much better than I ever could have anticipated or ever hoped. Just proud of everybody at Arrow McLaren. Proud of everybody at Hendrick Motorsports. Thankful for Rick Hendrick and Linda Hendrick for allowing me to do this.

“Yeah, it’s been a great week so far. So we’ll look forward to now switching to race mode and see if I can learn there to get ready for the race.”

Larson could have been talking about where he was heading — the All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway, where he was hustling to defend his win in the $1 million event.

But he actually meant the 108th Indy 500, which he will start fifth as a rookie after advancing to the final round of qualifying Sunday.

After the All-Star Race, Larson was heading straight back to Indianapolis for an 11 a.m.-1 p.m. practice Monday on the 2.5-mile oval as the focus shifts toward getting comfortable in traffic at 230 mph. Larson will have one more opportunity Friday in the two-hour Carb Day final practice.

He was eager to work on his racecraft with practice being truncated by a couple dozen hours this week because of rain. But Larson also was ready to say goodbye to the nerve-wracking experience of Indy 500 qualifying, which constitutes the speed average of four white-knuckle laps around the 2.5-mile oval.

Kyle Larson's No. 17 Chevrolet spits up smoke as it pulls away
Photo courtesy of IndyCar

“I’m happy to not have to run another qualifying run,” said Larson, who made four 10-mile runs over the past two days. “I’ll be honest, it wasn’t that stressful (at first), but then each time you go out, it gets more stressful because you know they’re going to turn the (turbo boost) more. You know you’re trying to find that extra bit of speed.

“In my mind of someone who doesn’t have experience, you think it’s going to be harder to drive. So just the nerves going out each time is more and more every time. I’m glad we made it through it, I’m glad I don’t have to run another four laps in qualifying trim.”

A weekend crowd of nearly 90,000 — the largest for Indy 500 qualifying in more than a decade — was on hand to watch as Larson never put a wheel wrong — though he did have a big moment between Turns 1 and 2 on a practice lap Sunday.

Two hours later, Larson drew one of the largest ovations from the crowd during the Fast 12 when he topped Arrow McLaren teammate Pato O’Ward and Indy 500 winners Takuma Sato and Ryan Hunter-Reay.

“People used to ask me or say to me, ‘Can you believe Kyle Larson?’ and I used to think the same way, but I don’t anymore,” Gordon said after Larson advanced to the pole shootout. “He just always steps up, and it’s fun to watch, fun to be a part of this whole experience.”

Now the question will turn to whether Larson can win the May 26 race — amid increasing belief that perhaps he could.

“Well, so far he’s shown that he’s very comfortable,” Mario Andretti said. “That young man has the ability to really converge, and I think he’ll be a factor for sure in the race. He’s a racer. That’s it. He didn’t come here just to drive. He came here to win, and he’s going to put his best foot forward for sure.”

That’ll be while he’s trying to win a couple of races in North Carolina, too, starting with Sunday night’s All-Star Race. NASCAR helped out by pushing back the green flag by 16 minutes, allowing Larson to arrive nearly an hour ahead to prepare for a race that will feature an option tire, a fresh asphalt surface and many other unknowns.

Larson has been on the phone from Indy with Kevin Harvick (his substitute driver Friday) and crew chief Cliff Daniels to get his bearings.

“I actually look forward to the challenge of having zero laps there and trying to figure it out quickly,” he said. “So it should be a good time.”

Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, 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.

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — Kyles show of speed Sunday wasn’t limited to his qualifying performance at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Fresh from scoring a second-row starting position for next weekend’s Indianapolis 500, Larson threaded a tight timing window to arrive for Sunday night’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

Larson, the NASCAR Cup Series points leader, strapped into his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and finished fourth in his Sunday night bid to defend last year’s All-Star Race win. NASCAR officials moved the green-flag time back 16 minutes to 8:30 p.m. ET to add a slight cushion to Larson’s travel logistics, but he flew in with plenty of time to spare, landing on the speedway grounds more than an hour before the start.

Larson was among the fastest six drivers advancing to the final round of Indy 500 qualifying Sunday afternoon, claiming the fifth starting spot for next Sunday’s race after making his last attempt at 5:30 p.m. ET. Then it was off to Wilkes County for his full-time ride, having completed his mission of locking into the Indianapolis 500 field for the first leg of his Sunday double attempt, with the May 26 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway as the NASCAR nightcap.

RELATED: All-Star Race results | At-track photos

Larson missed the All-Star Race preliminaries, with former Cup champ Kevin Harvick coming out of retirement from the FOX Sports booth to drive the No. 5 Chevy in Friday’s practice and Saturday’s qualifying. With the team making a driver change, Larson dropped to the rear of the field for the start of the All-Star Race but charged back up into the hunt.

He briefly made advances up to third place in the final 50-lap segment of the main event on a fresh set of softer “option” tires, but its effectiveness faded down the stretch.

“Yeah, I thought we were in great position there,” Larson said post-race. “Got to fourth pretty quickly; got to third pretty quickly. I thought I could just be patient. I built really loose for a little while, and then they started kind of inching away from me. I moved up and I was kind of hanging on from there. I was surprised that the guys that didn’t pit were as strong as they were. I thought we were going to be in the best position there to win.”

Chad Knaus, Hendrick Motorsports’ Vice President of Competition, said during a pre-race availability that had Larson not arrived in time, the No. 5 team would not have participated in the All-Star Race. The only driver who met the eligibility criteria for the invitational event and who was not already entered was Shane van Gisbergen, last year’s winner of the inaugural Chicago Street Race.

Knaus said that his team discussed a plan with NASCAR officials that could have potentially placed Xfinity Series regular Justin Allgaier in as a substitute, but that he would have to reach the main event by advancing from the All-Star Open qualifying race. That plan, Knaus said, was scuttled after running through the potential hurdles and hypotheticals.

“It’s going to sit there and look pretty. We’ll save it for another event,” Knaus said about the team potentially withdrawing if Larson did not arrive in time. “… The way things are working out, all of our cards are in getting Kyle here, and that’s the plan. To put Justin in and have him run the Open, we went down that road, we thought about it, we spoke with NASCAR, we came to a collective decision, that’s not the best route for all of us. We get pretty messy pretty quickly. Where is it fair? Is it fair to the people that are in the Open or not fair to the people in the All-Star. All of that stuff just gets kind of crazy, so better off just to make sure that our helicopters, our planes light off and we get him on the ground, and we get him on a golf cart and get him here.”

Larson dominated last year’s All-Star Race, leading 145 of the 200 laps as NASCAR’s top division returned to North Wilkesboro for the first time since 1996. Knaus, a NASCAR Hall of Famer, was the grand marshal for this year’s second All-Star edition at the 0.625-mile track.

The 2024 All-Star Race Weekend is back in North Carolina at the cherished 0.625-mile North Wilkesboro Speedway, with Sunday’s All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) acting as the festive finale to the weekend celebration.

RELATED: North Wilkesboro schedule | At-track photos

Twenty NASCAR Cup Series drivers will attempt to leave their mark with an All-Star-worthy victory. And with the All-Star Race comes the challenge of beating NASCAR’s best to a $1 million prize.

Here’s how setting the lineup works:

— The All-Star Open lineup was set per the rule book after rain forced the cancellation of the qualifying session.

— Seventeen drivers were locked into Sunday’s All-Star Race via points-race wins in either the 2023 or 2024 Cup seasons, past All-Star Race victories or Cup championships. Two spots on the starting grid were filled by the top two finishers in the preliminary All-Star Open, with the final entry taken by the All-Star Fan Vote winner, awarded to the highest vote-getter who did not already race their way into the show.

— The 17 eligible drivers for the All-Star Race competed in Saturday’s qualifying and Pit Crew Challenge. Their elapsed time from qualifying and the Pit Crew Challenge determined the starting lineup for the All-Star Race due to Saturday’s All-Star Heat races being canceled due to severe weather at the track.

We’ll keep this page updated with results, filling in the full All-Star Race lineup along the way.

All-Star Open: Results

FINISHING SPOTCAR NUMBERDRIVER
154Ty Gibbs
223Bubba Wallace
34Josh Berry
451Justin Haley
510Noah Gragson
648Alex Bowman
714Chase Briscoe
841Ryan Preece
93Austin Dillon
1077Carson Hocevar
1115Kaz Grala
127Corey LaJoie
1321Harrison Burton
1442John Hunter Nemechek
1538Todd Gilliland
1631Daniel Hemric
1771Zane Smith
1843Erik Jones
1966Timmy Hill
202 Austin Cindric

FULL STARTING LINEUP FOR ALL-STAR RACE (Sunday, 8 p.m. ET, FS1) 

STARTING SPOTDRIVERHOW DETERMINED
1Joey LoganoQualifying pole winner
2Brad KeselowskiSet by qualifying time
3Christopher BellSet by qualifying time
4Daniel SuárezSet by qualifying time
5Chris BuescherSet by qualifying time
6Tyler ReddickSet by qualifying time
7Ross ChastainSet by qualifying time
8Martin Truex Jr.Set by qualifying time
9Michael McDowellSet by qualifying time
10AJ AllmendingerSet by qualifying time
11Denny HamlinSet by qualifying time
12Kyle Larson*Set by qualifying time
13William ByronSet by qualifying time
14Kyle BuschSet by qualifying time
15Chase ElliottSet by qualifying time
16Ricky Stenhouse Jr.Set by qualifying time
17Ryan BlaneySet by qualifying time
18Ty GibbsAll-Star Open winner
19Bubba WallaceAll-Star Open second place
20Noah GragsonFan Vote winner

* = Kyle Larson to the rear for driver change. Kevin Harvick qualified Larson’s car.