MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Rick Hendrick will not be in attendance at Martinsville Speedway for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race as he recovers from knee replacement surgery, Hendrick Motorsports confirmed Saturday evening.

Hendrick, owner of NASCAR’s winningest organization, underwent the procedure last month. The 74-year-old was set to be the honorary pace car driver for the Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Hendrick’s four-car team is celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2024 and has already scored three wins through seven races this season.

MORE: Martinsville site of Hendrick history

Hendrick Motorsports is heavily leaning into its ruby anniversary this weekend at the 0.526-mile oval, where Geoff Bodine scored the program’s first victory in 1984. Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, William Byron and Alex Bowman are all carrying special paint schemes in honor of the celebration. The team now owns the record for most Cup Series wins with a current mark of 304.

Larson piloted the No. 5 Chevrolet to the Busch Light Pole Award on Saturday at Martinsville, snagging the pole by 0.001 seconds over Bubba Wallace. Larson’s HendrickCars.com Chevy is also carrying the name of Hendrick’s wife, Linda Hendrick, atop its passenger-side window.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Martin Truex Jr. said Saturday that he has moved on after the conclusion to last weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway, saying that teammate Denny Hamlin’s restart tactics and the maddening nature of the finish caused his temper to boil.

“No, it’s water under the bridge. I mean, it’s a race, it’s over,” Truex said after Saturday’s qualifying session for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Martinsville Speedway. “It’s … I was frustrated. It’s aggravating to lead an entire race, dominate a race and then have it go away that way, because I think that’s like the fifth or sixth time it’s happened to Richmond. So you just get aggravated, and it all piles on in a short amount of time in just 10 or 15 minutes, and I clearly lost my cool and did some things I’m probably not proud of, but you move on, you go to next week, and you hope you come out on top and do a better job.”

Last Sunday’s finish and the last green flag that preceded it kept the conversation rolling through the week about restarts and the regulations around them as the Cup Series loads in for the eighth event of the season and the 151st race meet at the historic Virginia half-mile. The cool temperatures in the commonwealth’s foothills this weekend have been offset by the heat of the spotlight on the restart zone, marked off outside Turn 4’s exit just before the field reaches the start/finish line.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | At-track photos: Martinsville

Last weekend, Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota accelerated just before the white line that opens the restart zone, getting the jump on Truex’s No. 19 entry as the green flag unfurled for the final time at Richmond. Hamlin drove away in the final two-lap sprint to his second Cup Series victory of the season, leaving Truex to bemoan another Richmond would-be victory that eluded him.

Post-race, Truex took exception to Hamlin’s jump but also his teammate’s brushing past as he worked to keep the lead through Turns 1 and 2. Saturday, Truex said that the two had hashed out that conflict.

“It was just fine. He didn’t do anything wrong,” Truex said. “I just … like I said, it all just piled on really quickly and I lost my cool. It happens.”

That was also part of the explanation for Truex’s post-race bump with Kyle Larson after their overtime fender tag. “He was in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Truex said. “I mean, he slid up into me and I mean barely, barely got me in the side in (Turns) 1 and 2, and I just … the lid popped off.”

MORE: Sunday’s starting lineup

Hamlin explained his side of his pre-emptive pounce Saturday, reiterating what he’d expressed on his “Actions Detrimental” podcast earlier in the week that his focus was on Truex’s car alongside him and challenger Joey Logano’s car behind him. Asked if he might’ve gotten away with a no-call, Hamlin agreed with that notion but said that the outcome would have been the same.

“Yeah, probably. Yeah, more than likely. But again, even if I go in the box, I don’t think the result changes at all,” said Hamlin, who controlled the restart as the leader when the caution period ended. “I kind of explained it on Monday that when I’m looking around at, you know, in the mirrors and through the side, I just know I’m in that vicinity, so I just kind of go when I feel it’s right to go. So obviously, when I look back at it, I was not as close to the box.”

Truex said that his opinion about the fateful Richmond restart hadn’t changed, six days later.

“I guess if you try to jump, don’t be surprised if they penalize you,” Truex said about his approach going forward. “I don’t know. You know, I don’t really understand, it’s a black-and-white rule. You go and you get to the box and you go. I don’t really understand what all the questions are about. You go before it, you should get penalized.”

Elton Sawyer, NASCAR senior vice president of competition, said Tuesday on FOX Sports’ “NASCAR Race Hub” that a review of late-race footage from different angles showed Hamlin’s jump. “He definitely fired before the zone, it looked like maybe a half a car length or so,” Sawyer said. “At the end of the race, making a split-second decision, we’ve got to get that call right. And with the information and data we had at the time, I still stand by the call we made at the track. If you are going to take a race win away, you’ve got to be 100 percent accurate and confident in the call.”

Drivers’ opinions were wide-ranging in the aftermath of Richmond, with the debate opening up about whether there was room for a gray-area judgment call in the black-and-white rule. The notion of a referee swallowing the whistle in a late-game moment and letting the outcome play out was mostly dismissed, but the flip side is a more rigid system.

“I think first and foremost, I really respected Elton Sawyer’s answer when he said they just missed it. I think that’s OK. I think that happens in sports,” Brad Keselowski said in a roundtable media appearance earlier this week. “Ideal scenario, we don’t have to ever put them in a position where an official has to make a decision. We have all the technology and all the things where everything is just black and white, but the world is not that perfect, and the technology to do everything is hard to ascertain and to make foolproof. So, sometimes things slip through the cracks and you get mad at ’em, and then a week later, everybody seems to forget about them. But I think holistically, you’d like to solve for challenges like that, just being careful that you don’t fall into the natural law of unintended consequences that seems to follow that.”

Keselowski noted how track-limits officiating, which was enforced at the Circuit of The Americas event last month using video footage and technology to flag drivers for short-cutting the road course’s esses section, produced 40 penalties in a national-series tripleheader weekend.

“I think COTA was a perfect example of how this can go the other way, where you have technology to solve challenges, you create black and white, remove some of the gray judgment calls, and people don’t like that either,” Keselowski said. “So I totally understand the challenge that those guys must face in trying to pick a path for this challenge. It’s the challenge of the weekend. And to be honest, if that’s the worst challenge we have coming out of Richmond, I think we probably had a pretty good week.”

Said Logano, the Richmond runner-up: “They’re making calls, I don’t know exactly how they do it. I feel like the technology is there to do it. From what we see, we all can go back on SMT (SportsMEDIA Technology telemetry data) and say, ‘well, there’s the restart line, and here’s where he fired.’ The eyeball test is pretty good, too. We’re able to see that. I feel like there’s plenty of technology available now that you can do that. I mean, I know it’s not fun to have black-and-white or ball-and-strike calls, right? Nobody wants to make those calls. So the more we can make it to where it’s black and white, the better. And the restarts sometimes are a little bit of ball and strike, but we’ve got to stay on ’em or else it becomes a Wild West on restarts.”

The opportunity for restarts this weekend may be relatively low as recent history suggests, with an average of 5.5 yellow flags in the last four Martinsville races. Last weekend’s race at Richmond, however, had just five caution periods – including the stage breaks – and just one well-timed yellow is all it takes to spark a debate.

Should Sunday’s 400-lapper wind down to another late-race reset, multiple drivers said that they’ll be extra mindful to avoid cutting a restart launch too close.

“Glad I’m not in the (scoring) tower making those calls,” said Alex Bowman, who starts 10th Sunday. “If it’s me, I think just try to not put yourself out there for a penalty and do the best you can obviously in the restart zone is probably the way to go about it now, since there are eyes on it. I feel like once you get eyes on those things, they’re probably going to make a call now would be my assumption.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Richard Childress Racing hopes the third time is the charm for its storied No. 3 Chevrolet.

The organization announced a crew-chief change Tuesday for the No. 3 car piloted by Austin Dillon, pairing the 2018 Daytona 500 champion with Justin Alexander for the third time in the past eight seasons. Dillon, a four-time winner in the NASCAR Cup Series, has scored each of those victories with Alexander atop the pit box.

MORE: Martinsville schedule

Most recently serving as RCR’s competition director, Alexander takes over for Keith Rodden, who’d headed the team since the start of the 2023 season. Rodden now transitions to “a larger role across the organization to help maximize the capabilities of RCR’s Chevys and provide leadership, coordination and support,” the team said.

“Yeah, it’s hard to make a change midseason,” Dillon said Saturday before practice. “But having Justin be a part of RCR for as long as has been in the role that he was in, it kind of helped us just do a swap. Justin has done a good job. Obviously, my four Cup race wins have come with Justin and bringing back, too, his engineer Joel Keller, who (he) has a really good relationship with, I think it bodes well for our team. Everybody’s excited to get to work.”

The swap comes on the heels of a 24th-place finish at Richmond Raceway, where frustration became evident on the team’s radio over strategy calls. In seven races, Dillon has just one top-20 finish — a 16th-place effort at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March. Last season also marked a career-high in DNFs for Dillon after failing to finish 10 times and scoring just seven top-10 results in 2023, a stark contrast from the 11 top 10s he scored in the debut year of the Next Gen car in 2022.

For RCR, that meant there was no better time to make a change than now.

“We had my best year in the series with the Next Gen cars the first year, and then we just kind of lost that momentum, and we couldn’t ever get it back going,” Dillon said. “I think it’s a big morale boost for our team, like I said, and to get Justin back on board with traveling and going to the race track, you know, that was the biggest thing.

“Truthfully, Justin and I wouldn’t have ever changed. It was just one of the things that the schedule’s brutal. He’s got two young kids, and he wanted something different. So when we had to make the change, it wasn’t ideal for both of us, but it was something Justin needed to do, and we were able to fortunately get him back talked into coming back to the track. And I’m really thankful that him and his family and his wife are allowing him to come back to race with us because we need it, and our team’s excited about it.”

Austin Dillon drives the No. 3 Chevrolet into Turn 3 at Martinsville Speedway.
James Thomas | NASCAR.com

Chemistry is key in the relationship between a crew chief and a driver, particularly in an era where competition is closer than ever. Dillon and Alexander’s prior success together bodes well for what could come next for the No. 3 group.

“I think he communicates really well with me; giving me information during the race is something I need,” Dillon said. “From his standpoint, he just tells me the right things. And I think communication is half the battle once the race starts. If you can communicate better than the others are about strategy or what the car needs, you just have better races. This has been good for us in the past. I think Keith did a really good job at certain things, and Justin does a really good job in certain things. But obviously, our communication that Justin and I have been able to have over the years has been able to get us to this point. Glad to have him back.”

A strong No. 3 team can bolster RCR’s No. 8 team with driver Kyle Busch and crew chief Randall Burnett. Busch’s results have been more mixed than his teammate’s, but Busch — a two-time Cup champion — has finished 20th or worse in four of the last five races.

“I think anything for RCR is the strength in having both teams running up front,” Busch said. “It seems like there’s a comfort factor there with Austin and Justin. And Justin, I think he’s tried to come off the road a couple times for family and whatnot, but he kind of keeps getting pulled back out of the bullpen and put in play.

“I respect the hell out of Keith and Justin and Randall and all those guys — (RCR’s executive vice president Andy) Petree too. It’s not due to lack of intellect. We certainly have that. There’s a lot going on at the shop and things like that where it seems like there’s some pretty good minds being put to use on the stuff that we do. It just hasn’t correlated to the race track yet.”

RELATED: Recap Saturday’s qualifying session

In a sense, that also encapsulates how RCR has run on short tracks recently. As the duo prepares for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), Busch and Dillon enter the 0.526-mile oval with a combined two top 10s in eight Next Gen starts at Martinsville. Busch will roll off 11th on the starting grid for Sunday’s race, while Dillon will start 28th.

“I feel like I know how to get around Martinsville,” Busch said. “I’ve won here before. I feel like my good stretch of races here certainly came from the 2013-14 timeframe to about ’18-19. So we had some good runs. I think we won two or three races here in that time period. So yeah, the short-track stuff, though, has been very miss. We have had like two hits, I think. It’d be nice to get more on the hit side and to where we have good cars and that we’re able to go out there and contend and compete.

“I think a lot of it is just the reliance on the simulation and what we’re being told in that and making decisions based off of that, what makes you faster or better in the sim. And that is not transferring to the race track, so we’ve got to go about it a different way.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va.– Kyle Larson and Bubba Wallace renewed their rivalry on Saturday at Martinsville Speedway—without contact between their cars.

Six days after Wallace turned Larson with fewer than two laps left to cause the final caution at Richmond and take a likely win from Martin Truex Jr., Larson edged Wallace for the pole position for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

With Hendrick Motorsports celebrating its 40th anniversary this weekend with special paint schemes, Larson — the last driver to make a qualifying run in the final round — scorched the 0.526-mile short track with a lap at 96.034 mph to edge Wallace (96.029 mph) for the top starting spot by 0.001 seconds.

“Of all people, it would be Larson—by a thousandth,” Wallace said after Larson’s lap flashed onto the scoreboard.

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos

Though Larson was part and parcel of the final caution at Richmond, he rallied to finish third in overtime, while a slow final pit stop relegated Wallace to 13th.

“Last week was pretty sweet revenge, us finishing third and him having a rough pit stop,” Larson said with a smile.

The pole on Saturday, however, was something of a surprise.

“Honestly, a bit unexpected,” said Larson, who earned his second straight Busch Light Pole Award this season, his second at Martinsville and the 18th of his career. “I knew we’d be good, but that second lap (in the final round) didn’t feel that good. It was just enough, though. Really cool to get this 40th anniversary Hendrick Camaro on the pole.

“It seems like all four Hendrick cars are really good, too, so hopefully, it’s a good day for the organization.”

Larson’s teammate, Chase Elliott, qualified third at 95.869 mph, with Alex Bowman taking the 10th starting spot. William Byron failed to make the final round and will take the green flag in 18th.

Truex (95.864 mph) claimed the fourth spot on the grid, followed by Ford drivers Chase Briscoe, Joey Logano and Josh Berry. Last week’s Richmond winner, Denny Hamlin, reigning series champion Ryan Blaney and Bowman will start eighth through 10th, respectively.

Note: Team owner Rick Hendrick had planned to drive the pace car on Sunday as part of the 40th anniversary celebration, but knee replacement surgery intervened, preventing Hendrick from attending the race.

Practice recap

Corey LaJoie topped the leaderboard in practice at 94.585 mph over Bubba Wallace (94.383 mph) and Ryan Preece (94.265 mph).

MORE: Practice results

Alex Bowman (94.195 mph) and Martin Truex Jr. (94.181 mph) rounded out the top five.

The rest of the top 10 were William Byron (94.092 mph), Todd Gilliland (94.017 mph), Austin Cindric (94.008 mph), Ryan Blaney (93.994 mph) and Christopher Bell (93.980 mph).

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Trackhouse Racing driver Ross Chastain can’t come to Virginia without being reminded of his remarkable “Hail Melon,” the extraordinary high-speed trip around the wall in Turns 3 and 4 at Martinsville that shot him into the 2022 Championship 4 race at Denny Hamlin’s expense.

Needing at least two positions on the final lap of the Round of 8 elimination event, Chastain grabbed fifth gear as he approached Turn 3, pinned his No. 1 Chevrolet against the outside wall and rocketed around the final corner as if his car were racing in a sped-up video game.

WATCH: Chastain explains “Hail Melon” | Chastain reflects on infamous moment

The move enabled Chastain to gain more than enough spots to advance, and the following week, he finished third behind champion Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney in the title race.

Chastain, however, doesn’t want the “Hail Melon” to be his definitive statement at Martinsville, as difficult as the feat might be to supplant in the history of the track.

“I do know that we have a small blip in the history of (Martinsville),” Chastain said. “I want more. I don’t want that to be my legacy here, so we’re working on that.

“But there’s no way we’re going to get in and out of Virginia here without talking about it.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Ask any NASCAR Cup Series driver which pit stall on the circuit is most valuable, and chances are most would point to pit stall No. 1 at Martinsville Speedway, closest to the exit from pit road.

Conventional wisdom says that pit box is worth two or three positions per stop, assuming the service for fuel and tires goes according to plan.

PIT STALLS: See where drivers will pit Sunday

Possession of pit stall No. 1 typically is a perk for the pole winner, who has first choice of pit boxes for the ensuing race.

The anomaly is that no Cup driver has parlayed the pole position and the No. 1 pit box into a victory in more than a decade—since Jimmie Johnson accomplished the feat in the spring race of 2013, specifically.

RELATED: Martinsville paint schemes | Photos from the track

Among full-time active drivers, Denny Hamlin is the last to win from the pole at Martinsville, in the fall race of 2010.

Notably, drivers have won the last three races at the 0.526-mile short track from outside the top 10 on the grid. Reigning series champion Ryan Blaney started 11th last year before winning the race that propelled him into the Championship 4.

“I think the No. 1 pit stall wherever you go is important — some more than others — but it’s still important,” Blaney said on Saturday. “It’s the best stall out there …

“We had the first stall in (closest to the pit entrance) last year in the fall, and I thought it was fantastic, like it was really, really good for us. When you pull off to go in there, you gain spots on guys.

“We’ve always come with the mentality of stall No. 1 or anything on the straightaway … Obviously, the goal is the pole, because it makes it easier on you.”

Easier, perhaps, but not decisively so—at least not in recent years.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Christian Eckes and Ty Majeski were the only two drivers to lead multiple laps in Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway.

A restart with 28 laps remaining finally pinned the two most dominant drivers of the Long John Silver’s 200 head-to-head on the front row. Majeski leaned his No. 98 Ford against Eckes’ No. 19 Chevrolet as the two beat door panels, but Eckes ultimately held on — even after a pair of additional cautions — to score the win while Majeski finished runner-up.

MORE: Martinsville results

“I think, overall, the 19 was just a little bit better than us, and restarts were my Achilles heel — and there was just too many of them at the end,” Majeski said.

That didn’t short anyone of a classic short-track battle. The old-fashioned roughhousing produced 11 cautions, setting up a final showdown with three laps to go, with Majeski falling just short. And while the No. 98 ThorSport Racing entry wasn’t sitting in Victory Lane, Majeski was still able to muster plenty of positivity out of the night–including an appreciation for his hard-nosed fight with Eckes.

“Honestly, he got a good start, and I was trying to keep position on him,” Majeski said. “And I got in hot and doored him a little bit, and he was holding me down really tight, which he needed to be. So yeah, I thought it was a good race. I hope he thinks so, too. I thought we put on a good show.”

Indeed they did — and the race winner agreed with him.

“It was super hard racing for sure,” Eckes said. “I’m sure he enjoyed it as much as he does. You know, he’s a short-track racer just like me, so that was fun. I felt like really coming in from practice, us and the 98 were the best two trucks and that kind of proved itself in the race for sure.”

Though they ended up atop the leaderboard anyway, their nights were largely determined by pit strategy. Eckes’ No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Racing Chevrolet stayed out to lead each of the first 104 of 200 laps, his team deciding not to pit until the conclusion of Stage 2. That plummeted Eckes to 18th on the ensuing restart.

Sitting in the Martinsville media center as the race winner, Eckes admitted he thought a simple top-10 finish would have qualified as a good night at the start of that final stage.

“Honestly, I was surprised we moved through the field as quickly as we did because, in practice, I struggled in traffic pretty badly,” Eckes said. “So whatever we did from practice to the race definitely worked, and I was able to move through the field really quickly.”

Majeski, on the opposite strategy, pitted just once at Lap 54 after the conclusion of Stage 1. Green-flag runs would have helped the No. 98 team’s strategy, but those were hard to come by after the opening stage. Nine of the 11 cautions in Friday’s race occurred during or after the second stage.

“We needed not all those stacked cautions,” Majeski said. “Then, all of a sudden, he was fourth and had a couple good restarts, and he really didn’t have to use anything up to get there. So yeah, if we could have got a long green-flag run any one of those first two or three runs after he pitted, we probably win the race. So yeah, it just didn’t go our way tonight. But going back, I don’t know that I would have done anything different.”

Eckes agreed a long green-flag run probably would have ended any shot of his to win Friday’s event, the sixth of the 2024 season and already Eckes’ second victory.

“I mean, seven seconds is a real big thing to come back from,” Eckes said of his then-deficit to the leaders. “I don’t think we were that good, and I don’t think we had enough time to do that. Like I said, we kind of needed the cautions to get us closer. And it’s pretty hard to pass at Martinsville, even with as good of a truck as we had. We were really the only one that could pass on the outside and make moves as efficiently as we did. So, definitely need those cautions.”

Ultimately, Majeski left smiling through the disappointment of a near-win, falling 0.644 seconds short of the victory.

“I’m super proud of it,” Majeski said. “We stepped outside of our comfort zone a little bit tonight from a setup perspective, and I thought we went the right direction. So, I think we know what we need to work on coming back here in the fall. And that’s why we did it tonight. It was a little bit of a test session. So any time you can be pretty disappointed with second, you’re having a good year. Proud of what we’ve done so far. We gotta keep it going.”

MORE: 2024 Truck schedule | 2024 Truck standings 

Majeski also leaves Virginia with the points lead, maintaining a seven-point margin over both Corey Heim and Tyler Ankrum in the hunt for the regular-season championship.

“That’s a big deal,” Majeski said. “I think it’s 15 points to the to the season winner. That equals three wins, right? So that’s a really big deal. We want to win races, but we also want to win that regular-season championship. So it’s all about balancing that as you go all throughout the season. Overall, if you don’t make mistakes, you’re gonna have a shot at the regular-season championship. We just can’t have bad days like Bristol (finishing 34th). We’ve just got to keep going, top five them to death and the win will come.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — It was indeed a special night for NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Christian Eckes, who dominated Friday night’s Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway.

Eschewing a trip to pit road between the first and second stages at the 0.526-mile short track, Eckes led the first 104 laps, swept the stages and worked his way back through the field from 19th after pitting at the Stage 2 break.

Undeterred by the chaos that produced 11 cautions for 81 laps, Eckes took the lead for the final time on Lap 172 in a side-by-side battle against pole winner Ty Majeski, who regained the top spot when Eckes came to pit road for the only time during the 200-lap event.

“Something really special,” Eckes said of the effort of his No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Racing team and the quality of his Chevrolet. “We came here last year, and we weren’t really that great… we were maybe a sixth-place truck (started sixth and finished 15th).

“And we worked really hard on it, and here we are in Victory Lane. So just super proud of this entire team.”

The victory was the second of the season for Eckes, who won from the pole at Bristol last month. It was his first triumph at Martinsville and the seventh of his career.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos 

Starting from the top spot on the grid, Majeski gave up the lead on the first lap as Eckes powered past him.

“The 19 (Eckes) was tough tonight,” Majeski said. “He was just a little but better than us. He had better tires (in the final stage), and I just could not launch on restarts…

“But I think we left here with the points lead today. Really solid day. Obviously, you want to win. I wanted that grandfather clock (trophy), but I’m super proud of this team. We’ve been working hard at getting our trucks better, and just a little but short tonight.”

Majeski leaves Martinsville as the series leader, with a seven-point edge over Corey Heim and Tyler Ankrum.

Chase Purdy ran third to post his fourth top-five finish in 81 Truck Series starts. Nick Sanchez was fourth, followed by Ankrum, Taylor Gray, Rajah Caruth, Sammy Smith, Kaden Honeycutt and Heim.

Australian Supercars star Cam Waters finished 30th in his NASCAR debut, a casualty of a chain-reaction collision on Lap 177 that left his No. 66 ThorSport Racing Ford spewing hot vapor like a geyser.

“I had so much fun tonight and all day today,” Waters said. “It is totally different racing from what I usually do, and I just wanted to learn. I learned so much.

“There at the end I just had nowhere to go and knocked the radiator out of it. It is a shame, but I was having fun and learning and had some awesome battles, too.”

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Martinsville garage concluded without issue, confirming Eckes as the race winner.

NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Martinsville Speedway.

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

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

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

Current Standings:

RankNamePointsBehind
T-1Steve Luvender284
T-1Dustin Albino284
3Cameron Richardson235-49
4r/NASCAR Community219-65

Race 8 of 36: Martinsville

Last week’s overtime thriller at Richmond delivered the first race-winning pick among our pickers all year. The r/NASCAR community swung for the fences and picked Denny Hamlin, who snatched up his fifth Richmond victory. Dustin Albino’s Ryan Preece pick went sour, earning him just 10 points and dropping him to last place in the standings. Steve Luvender’s 65-point lead nearly halved after Austin Dillon scored just 13 points, while Cameron Richardson’s bold Josh Berry selection netted 37 points — the season’s best result for both picker and driver. 

Now, another short track awaits, this time in paperclip form at Martinsville. Will our pickers choose a short-track ace, or perhaps employ an opportunistic underdog?

Jayski’s Dustin Albino: No. 14, Chase Briscoe

Dustin’s pick last week: No. 41, Ryan Preece
Points earned last week: 10 (28th-place finish)
Total season points: 131 (fourth place)

Dustin: It’s been a rough couple of races as I’ve sunk to the bottom of the standings with disappointing finishes at Bristol, COTA and Richmond in consecutive weeks. But I think — and hope — Briscoe can swing the pendulum in the opposite direction at Martinsville. The Indiana native is one of three drivers to have top 10s in all four Next Gen races at the paperclip-shaped short track — hi, Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano — and last year collected a pair of top fives. The No. 14 team was good at Phoenix, another shorter track Briscoe has excelled at in recent years. I need that trend to continue this week.

NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 14, Chase Briscoe

Steve’s pick last week: No. 3, Austin Dillon
Points earned last week: 13 (24th-place finish)
Total season points: 199 (first place)

Steve: Richmond wasn’t pretty for me with my Austin Dillon pick — and now he’s got a new crew chief, which could spell good news for my competitors who haven’t used the No. 3 yet. Onward to Martinsville, where I’m selecting Chase Briscoe. I learned of Briscoe’s recent Martinsville success through a stat our colleague Pat DeCola shared in this week’s Power Rankings: Briscoe’s earned four straight Martinsville top 10s, including fourth-place and fifth-place finishes in last year’s races. Pat’s never steered me wrong, so I’m choosing the No. 14 this week. (Plus, I now have somebody else to blame if it goes wrong. Win-win.)

NASCAR.com’s Cameron Richardson: No. 41, Ryan Preece

Cameron’s pick last week: No. 4, Josh Berry
Points earned last week: 37 (11th-place finish)
Total season points: 143 (third place)

Cameron: Despite not having that standout result yet, I believe Preece is determined to be out front and stay out front, unlike last year’s spring race after winning the pole. It’s going to take a great qualifying run and a perfect day on pit road to garner a quality result, but SHR has yet to let me down with Briscoe’s top 10 at Phoenix and Berry’s solid outing last Sunday at Richmond.

r/NASCAR Community: No. 4, Josh Berry

r/NASCAR’s pick last week: No. 11, Denny Hamlin

Points earned last week: 46 (first-place finish)

Total season points: 165 (second place)

The r/NASCAR subreddit completed the Stewart-Haas Racing sweep for our pickers, selecting Josh Berry. It was a close race between Berry and teammate Ryan Preece, but the No. 4 earned the community’s nod this week. 

From this week’s voting thread

u/FridgusDomin8or: “Berry is our guy for this week. SHR has had tons of speed at Martinsville recently and Berry has been a standout in both short track races this year”

u/Boom_Confetti: “Hear me out: SHR has had a ton of speed at Martinsville over the last few years, Josh Berry had one of the best cars in the field last week, and it doesn’t hurt that his scheme for this race is incredible”

u/ChaseTheFalcon: “Right answer here. Berry is a god at this track”

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