NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Texas Motor 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 9 of 36: Texas

Last week at Martinsville, each of our four pickers selected a Stewart-Haas Racing car, leading to mixed results and a tightened second-place battle in the standings. The r/NASCAR community pick of Josh Berry didn’t fare well following pit issues for the No. 4 team, picking up just 15 points for Berry’s 25th-place finish. For Cameron Richardson, a late charge by Ryan Preece earned 28 points from a ninth-place finish, while 10th-place finisher Chase Briscoe tallied 38 points for Dustin Albino and Steve Luvender. 

Now, our pickers face Texas Motor Speedway, with its unique characteristics that don’t position it quite like an ordinary intermediate track and not much like a drafting track. Seven different drivers won the past seven Texas races, so it’s not an easy one to predict.

Jayski’s Dustin Albino: No. 99, Daniel Suárez

Dustin’s pick last week: No. 14, Chase Briscoe
Points earned last week: 38 (10th-place finish)
Total season points: 169 (fourth place)

Dustin:
Ever since Suárez won at Atlanta in one of the most thrilling races of all time, the No. 99 team has slid down the regular-season standings to 17th. That triumph remains his only top-10 finish of the season through the opening two months. However, Suárez has been relatively consistent at Texas in recent seasons, finishing eighth last fall. In three starts with Trackhouse Racing at the 1.5-mile track, he has an average finish of 10th. If he can snag a top 10 this weekend, it will be a solid points day for yours truly.

NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 21, Harrison Burton

Steve’s pick last week: No. 14, Chase Briscoe
Points earned last week: 38 (10th-place finish)
Total season points: 237 (first place)

Steve: I’ve been fortunate to build a points lead solid enough to afford a gamble, and this weekend I intend to do just that. Texas is the site of Harrison Burton’s third-best average finishing position of tracks on this year’s schedule (19.0, behind Charlotte Motor Speedway and Pocono Raceway, where I already have my picks in mind), and he won an Xfinity Series race at the track in 2020. And, not for nothing, Burton also led 15 laps — the most he’s led in any single Cup event — in the 2022 Texas race. Ranked 34th through eight races, it’s been a rough season so far for the No. 21 team, but maybe Texas is the place to turn things around.

NASCAR.com’s Cameron Richardson: No. 6, Brad Keselowski


Cameron’s pick last week: No. 41, Ryan Preece
Points earned last week: 28 (ninth-place finish)
Total season points: 171 (third place)

Cameron: Amid a winless streak that has lasted nearly three years and spans over 100 Cup races, the 2012 champion is hungry to return to Victory Lane and do it for the first time as co-owner of RFK Racing. One of the best bets for Keselowski to find pay dirt again will be this Sunday in Texas. He’s scored top-10 finishes in the last five outings at the 1.5-mile facility and won the pole in the 2022 edition. With an inconsistent start to 2024 so far, Texas should be the weekend where the No. 6 really gets firing on all cylinders to succeed the rest of the season.

r/NASCAR Community: No. 77, Carson Hocevar


r/NASCAR’s pick last week: No. 4, Josh Berry
Points earned last week: 15 (25th-place finish)
Total season points: 180 (second place)

The r/NASCAR community hopes to make up some ground on first place in the standings with a back-to-back rookie pick. Carson Hocevar won the weekly vote, following the subreddit’s Martinsville selection of Josh Berry. Hocevar finished 16th in last year’s Texas race driving for Legacy Motor Club in an interim role. 

From this week’s voting thread

u/LeapsFrog: “I think Texas is a track where you can’t reliably pick a strong driver due to the high DNF rate and unpredictability. Picking Hocevar because he has done solid so far on 1.5 mile tracks and isn’t someone I think needs to be saved for a track like Talladega.”

u/KrustyWaffles6 (in reply to u/LeapsFrog): “I agree, although I was leaning towards Gragson until you commented. I do think this is a solid time to pick Hocevar, I just worry about him being over aggressive ”

u/FridgusDomin8or: “He was sneaky good at Vegas, was able to drive through most of the field up into the top 15 multiple times, and won here in the Trucks last season. I don’t think he’s gonna win the race ofc but the last two races here the leaders have crashed out late.”

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

And, if you’ve got a competitive itch beyond meticulously managing your Fantasy Live lineup each week, feel free to save or print your own 36 for 36 sheet and see if you can beat our pickers and the Reddit community!

Wyatt Gardner has never really ran a full season for points at Monroe, Washington’s Evergreen Speedway, but he may have to this season.

Following Gardner’s season-opening win at Evergreen last weekend, he’s found there’s “a little bit of magic left in the racing world,” he said in a recent phone interview.

For the first race of the season in the NASCAR Home Track’s Speedway Chevrolet Pro Late Model division, Gardner’s car showed speed all day, leading the second practice and qualifying on the pole. He started the race fourth after an invert, and said “I knew we just had to be patient.”

He rode in third for 10 laps and then picked off the second place car. After riding safely there for a few more laps, he saw the opportunity to pass the race leader.

“We kind of took off, kind of checked out from the field, and built up myself quite a bit of a lead,” he added.

From there, the caution flags started waving with about 20 laps remaining and “things got real stressful, real quick” Gardner said.

“You know, you build up a huge lead like that and you figure you can kind of cruise the end,” he added. “And then people start spinning, yellows are coming out, and you start having to go four or five restarts later. It gets a little interesting.”

On the final restart with five to go, Gardner said he fired off strong and was able to pull away with the lead.

Leading the race following the white flag, he got emotional. Tears filled in his eyes under his helmet during his last lap.

It was his first win at Evergreen, and also his first win without his dad by his side. Gardner’s father, Ben, died just more than a month before the season opener.

“We were able to bring it home and it was just one of those things where just something magical was in the air that night,” Gardner said.

The first thing Gardner did when he got out of his car was find his mom so he could share the moment with her.

“Obviously she’s had a rough go, and being able to share that with her, it doesn’t fill the void in your life, but it definitely shows you that he is still there and still looking out for us.”

Gardner’s dad was the one who got him into racing at three years old. His siblings also raced, and Gardner said he jokes with people he didn’t really have a choice but to also follow them.

“It was just kind of a family thing,” he said. “My dad got me into it at a really young age and I’ve been racing ever since.”

From micro sprints to road courses, go-karts, and mini-stocks, Gardner has raced just about every discipline of car. When he was in college in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, he raced on both coasts before returning to Washington and racing full-time around his home state after graduation.

Ben was still helping Gardner through the offseason, though he had taken a bit of a step back in recent years, serving as more of an observer and supporter.

Evergreen Speedway
Evergreen Speedway hosts NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series racing from March to September each season. (Photo: Alika Jenner/ARCA Racing)

“It’s definitely hard every race going to the track without him,” Gardner said. “It’s definitely, it’s a test, but it’s one of those things where he’d want us to keep racing. There was definitely a question of, ‘Hey, should we do this? Or should we take a year off?’ But, knowing him, he’d want us to keep racing and that’s what we’re going to do.”

For the last four years, Gardner has been just running big shows around Washington, never really settling on one track. Evergreen has always been considered his home track, though, which made last week’s win even more special. He’s qualified on the pole in the past and had good cars there, but said “We’ve had a lot of dumb luck over the years that has kept us from getting a win.”

“Our cars are really good, and we’ve always had speed, but we finally kind of hit on a few things that are really good for long run speed.

“We finally were able to get that monkey off our back and give us a little more confidence going the rest of the year.”

He called the victory, “definitely a good way to kick the season off,” but it still came with complications. He has sponsor obligations to compete in other big races throughout the summer, while he’d also like to now try to go for an Evergreen track championship and possibly a Washington state title.

Ultimately, more racing is a good problem to have, even if it could make for some stressful weeks.

“We really haven’t ever chased the championship,” Gardner said. “It definitely put us in a weird position I really wasn’t anticipating. I mean, we wanted to run the full calendar, but there’s never any real expectations.

“You can’t ever set your sights on winning a championship. You just kind of have to take it race by race and whatever happens, happens.”

Racing returns to Evergreen Speedway this Saturday for the City of Monroe Industry Night Presented by Hill Street Cleaners. The night will feature Pro Late Models, Street Stocks, Hornets, Stinger 8s, and Youth Hornets.

“Not a lot of sleep in my near future, trying to get the car turned around and maintained in between races,” Gardner said. “We’re definitely going to try and race as much as we can… For right now it’s just one way, one race at a time and just keep chugging away.

“Hopefully we’ll be talking to you again when we can start talking about the championship a little bit later in the year.”

Throughout the 2024 NASCAR season, Ken Martin, director of historical content for the sanctioning body, will offer his suggestions on which historical races fans should watch from the NASCAR Classics library in preparation for each upcoming race weekend.

Martin has worked exclusively for NASCAR since 2008 but has been involved with the sport since 1982, overseeing various projects. He has worked in the broadcast booth for hundreds of races, assisting the broadcast team with different tasks. This includes calculating the “points as they run” for the historic 1992 finale, the Hooters 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The following suggestions are Ken’s picks to watch before this weekend’s AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.

1997 Interstate Batteries 500:

The NASCAR Cup Series returned to the state of Texas for the first time since 1981. The series previously raced at Texas World Speedway in College Station eight times between 1969 and 1981.

Both the Cup and the Xfinity Series were on tap to race in the inaugural race weekend at the new facility in Fort Worth. Qualifying for the Cup Series event was canceled due to rain, so the starting order was determined off of points.

This set up for the first 10 starting positions to be filled by 10 drivers who were named to NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers list in 2023.

The action started immediately after the green flag dropped, as a 15-car accident eliminated many contenders between Turns 1 and 2.

Another multi-car accident occurred 162 laps into the event, as eight more cars were involved, including Sterling Marlin, Rusty Wallace, Mike Skinner and Brett Bodine.

A handful of laps later saw Ernie Irvan slam into Greg Sacks while trying to race for his lap back from race-leader Terry Labonte. Jeff Gordon ended up running into the back of Irvan, ending his day in the process.

Todd Bodine was the surprise of the day, driving the No. 25 car for Hendrick Motorsports. Ricky Craven, who normally piloted the car, sustained a concussion in a practice crash, which took him out of the event. Bodine was leading the race during the closing stages before a crash knocked him out of contention while battling for the lead with eventual race winner Jeff Burton.

It was the first victory of Burton’s career, which came in his fourth full-time season

view of Jeb Burton crossing the finish line
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

1998 Texas 500:

The NASCAR Cup Series arrived at Texas Motor Speedway for the second time and the weekend was full of surprises.

Chad Little, driving the No. 97 car for Jack Roush, headlined that group with a strong weekend. He started fifth, led 49 laps and finished second to his teammate Mark Martin.

Martin passed Little for the lead with 30 laps remaining and cruised to Victory Lane.

A handful of other drivers had great runs, most notably Robert Pressley, who finished third.

Joe Nemechek came home in fourth, while Johnny Benson Jr., another one of Jack Roush’s rockets, was fifth.

The usual contenders struggled throughout the day as Jeff Burton, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt all finished between 29th and 35th.

View of the No. 6 of Mark Martin
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

2000 DirecTV 500:

It was a banner day for some of the biggest names in NASCAR history, as both the Petty and Earnhardt families celebrated milestones at Texas.

Nineteen-year-old Adam Petty became the first fourth-generation athlete in professional sports history, as he qualified 33rd for the event. Petty’s father Kyle unfortunately failed to qualify for the event in his No. 44 car.

The stars almost aligned to see the father and son duo on the track together after all.

Elliott Sadler, driver of the No. 21 car for Wood Brothers Racing, bruised his shoulder during a mid-race accident. As the team attempted to fix the car in the garage area, the elder Petty was poised to take the No. 21 car back out on the track in a relief effort.

Less than 100 laps later, the younger Petty, unfortunately, blew an engine before the Wood Brothers Racing team could fix the car, nixing the dream of seeing the two share the track together.

The No. 21 returned to the track with Petty behind the wheel, in turn creating a reunion for the duo that worked together from 1985 to 1988.

Sadly, the family patriarch Lee, passed away three days after the race at the age of 86. It turned out to be the only NASCAR Cup Series start of the 19-year-old Petty’s career, as he tragically passed away 37 days after his grandfather.

Rookie driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s historic day came at the same track where he captured his first Xfinity Series victory in 1998. Earnhardt Jr. also captured his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory in just his 12th start. This bested the previous series record of 16, which was held by his father, Dale Earnhardt, who won his first race in 1979.

Earnhardt rushed to Victory Lane following the race to greet his son, as he was beaming with pride while embracing Earnhardt Jr. as he climbed from his car to celebrate his record-setting day.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. drives the No. 8 Chevrolet in 2000 in the NASCAR Cup Series.
David Madison | Getty Images

You can watch these three races and hundreds more by visiting NASCAR Classics.

BURBANK, CA (April 11, 2024) – The CW Network today announced it will be the exclusive broadcast home for the final eight races of the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series this fall. Live coverage begins on Friday, September 20 with the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway. The series continues through the fall with the final seven Xfinity Playoff races of the season, culminating in the Xfinity Series Championship from Phoenix Raceway on Saturday, November 9. All of the races will be produced by NBC Sports, with Rick Allen serving as lead race announcer alongside analysts Jeff Burton and Steve Letarte, and NBC Sports’ Vice President of Motorsports Jeff Behnke overseeing production.

“As The CW prepares to be the new broadcast home of the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2025, we want to thank our partners at the league and at NBC Sports for welcoming the network into the NASCAR broadcast family and for the early opportunity to showcase these thrilling final eight Xfinity Series races of the season,” said Dennis Miller, President, The CW Network. “We can’t wait to give racing fans an early preview of all the exciting action the NASCAR Xfinity Series has to offer on The CW and we look forward to establishing the network as a new destination for live motorsports.”

“We have incredible media partners who collaborate at an exceptional level to showcase the excitement of live NASCAR racing,” said Brian Herbst, NASCAR Senior Vice President, Media and Productions. “We’re looking forward to having The CW get a head start as the home of the NASCAR Xfinity Series with the help of NBC Sports and continuing to deliver our fans thrilling on-track action.”

“We have a great partnership with NASCAR and welcome The CW to the family of NASCAR broadcasters,” said Rick Cordella, President, NBC Sports. “This sneak peek of NASCAR Xfinity Series races will continue to feature NBC Sports’ critically acclaimed NASCAR production while assisting in the transition for fans to watch the Xfinity Series on The CW full-time in 2025.”

Composed primarily of NASCAR’s younger, up-and-coming drivers, the NASCAR Xfinity Series features the sport’s future stars often competing side-by-side against NASCAR’s biggest names – many of whom earned their stripes and won championships in the Xfinity Series. NASCAR Xfinity Series races in some of the nation’s largest markets – from Chicago to Dallas to Miami – and at the sport’s most iconic tracks, including Daytona International Speedway, Talladega Superspeedway and the series championship at Phoenix Raceway.

Starting in 2025, The CW Network will become the exclusive home to the NASCAR Xfinity Series, extending through the 2031 racing season. The CW will broadcast 33 live NASCAR Xfinity Series races annually, along with practice and qualifying events each weekend. For the first time in series history, every NASCAR Xfinity Series race will be available on free, over-the-air broadcast television with additional content available through The CW’s digital platforms. Also in 2025, all NASCAR Xfinity Series races and ancillary content will be fully produced by the Emmy Award-winning NASCAR Productions group, in close collaboration with The CW Network.

Below are the start times for the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series races airing on The CW this fall (all times ET). Race start times subject to change.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Bristol Motor Speedway
7 p.m. Pre-race coverage
7:30 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Kansas Speedway
3:30 p.m. Pre-race coverage
4 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Talladega Superspeedway
3:30pm Pre-race coverage
4 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Charlotte Roval
3:30 p.m. Pre-race coverage
4 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Las Vegas Motor Speedway
7 p.m. Pre-race coverage
7:30 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Homestead-Miami Speedway
3:30 p.m. Pre-race coverage
4 p.m. Race start

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2
NASCAR Xfinity Series at Martinsville Speedway
3:30 pm Pre-race coverage
4 pm Race start

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9
NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship at Phoenix Raceway
7 p.m. Pre-race coverage
7:30 p.m. Race start

Last year’s zMAX CARS Tour race at New River All American Speedway felt like old times for veteran Ronnie Bassett Jr.

After running up front all evening, the closing stages saw Ronnie try to chase down Brenden Queen for his first CARS Tour victory. An attempted bump-and-run by Ronnie on the final lap didn’t work as intended, but he still brought home a third-place finish.

Ronnie went his entire debut season in the CARS Tour without a victory, but runs like the one at New River highlighted just how close he was to emulating his past success in Late Model Stocks despite being away from the discipline for so long.

“We had some strong runs last year,” Ronnie said. “When we got to New River, we realized it was a tire conservation race, but we worked on our car all weekend to make it really good. At the end, we just came up a couple of spots short.”

Ronnie Bassett Jr.
Ronnie Bassett Jr. accumulated several victories in Late Model Stocks before progressing into ARCA Menards Series East. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/CARS Tour)

In their youth, Ronnie and his younger brother Dillon garnered a reputation as hard-nosed, but efficient competitors. Among the accomplishments the elder Bassett accumulated in a Late Model Stock were victories in the Bobby Isaac Memorial at Hickory Motor Speedway and Thanksgiving Classic at Southern National Motorsports Park.

The success enjoyed by the Bassetts in Late Model Stocks made it inevitable for them to progress through the developmental ladder. In 2013, the Bassett family formally broke into the ARCA Menards Series East with Ronnie making his debut at Dover Motor Speedway, which laid the foundation for a full-time campaign the following year.

Everything went according to plan for Ronnie during his first years in the East Series. Although he didn’t find Victory Lane, Ronnie held his own with many of the best NASCAR prospects at the time with five top-five finishes between 2014-15, all while Dillon broke through for his first victory at Motordrome Speedway.

The momentum the Bassetts initially enjoyed was undone on a fateful night in May of 2016.

While the family was doing work at the shop, one of their trucks caught fire. That fire rapidly spread around the facility. None of the Bassetts were injured, but the blaze caused serious damage to their shop, with all their cars being destroyed in the process.

Ronnie suddenly found himself at a crossroads with no usable racing equipment at his family’s disposal. As devastating as the fire was, Ronnie was not going to let the circumstances take away a dream he and his family had worked hard to achieve all their lives.

“We didn’t really know if we would get back to racing after that,” Ronnie said. “That was a tough deal, but fortunately we had some good people in the racing community help us get to the next couple of races. Thankfully, here we are.”

With help from their fellow East Series competitors, Ronnie and Dillon were back on track just more than a week after the fire upended their way of living.

Less than a year later, Ronnie was an East Series winner, earning a victory in the season-opening event at New Smyrna Speedway.

Ronnie Bassett Jr.
Ronnie Bassett Jr.’s lone ARCA Menards Series East victory at New Smyrna Speedway in 2017 was an emotional one, as it occurred less than a year after a fire devastated his family-owned team. (Photo: Sarah Crabill/Getty Images) .

Feeling confident in the quality of his equipment, Ronnie was ready to take another step forward with Dillon by moving up to the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2019. The brothers only had a small number of resources at their disposal, but they were gradually starting to amass decent results against other small Xfinity programs.

Two crucial blows in quick succession set the Bassett family back once again.

During an overtime restart for the 2020 Shady Rays 200 at Kentucky Speedway, contact with Justin Allgaier sent Ronnie into the inside retaining wall. The ensuing collision destroyed the lone car the Bassetts had in their garage, bringing their 2020 season to a premature end.

For 2021, Ronnie and Dillon tried a fresh approach by branching off from DGM Racing, who they had been partnered with since entering the Xfinity Series. This decision carried an immense risk for the brothers, as COVID-19 protocols meant a metric would set the field on a combination of factors that included owner points, which the Bassetts didn’t have.

Qualifying for the season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway was cancelled due to rain. With only a handful of opportunities to compete throughout the rest of 2021 because of metric qualifying, Ronnie and Dillon quickly fell behind the rest of their competition.

Sensing that they could not make up the lost ground with their limited funding, Ronnie confided with his family that the best option would be to shut down their Xfinity Series program and return to his Late Model Stock roots.

“There was going to be a point where the cars we had would not be sellable,” Ronnie said. “I told my dad at the end of [2022] that if we were seriously thinking about going Late Model Stock racing, now would be the time to do it with how valuable our cars were to other people. We got rid of those cars and were able to buy our own stuff for Late Model Stock racing.”

Now fully settled into the Late Model Stock scene once again, Ronnie feels he is right where he belongs at this point in his career. Despite this, Ronnie admitted that he is still adjusting to the plethora of changes that have enveloped the discipline since the mid-2010s.

Ronnie Bassett Jr.
There are many aspects of modern Late Model Stock racing Ronnie Bassett Jr. is figuring out, but he remains confident in his ability to score a zMAX CARS Tour victory. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Ronnie said riding around and conserving equipment during the opening portion of a race does not carry as much of a benefit compared to a decade ago. With as equal as the cars are now, Ronnie believes there is more incentive to maintain track position to have an opportunity to the win.

Placing himself near the front of the field proved to be a challenge for Ronnie in year one with the CARS Tour, only qualifying inside the top-five twice. On days where he struggled in qualifying, Ronnie’s experience helped him methodically climb to the front, as he ended the year with five top fives, which included three consecutive third-place finishes in the summer.

Ronnie knows his cars are more than capable of winning a CARS Tour race. The key to taking that next step is to be quicker at the start of race day as opposed to just finding speed near the end.

“We have to improve on qualifying and be better from lap one to 90,” Ronnie said. “Our car usually came along with 35 to go, but I’d like for that to happen with 50 to go. That way, we don’t have to run as hard as long. Hopefully we can fine tune on a few things and be better earlier in the races.”

RELATED: Follow the zMAX CARS Tour on FloRacing

The path to Victory Lane for Ronnie became more challenging with an influx of full-time competitors into the CARS Tour, yet he has never been one to back down from any obstacle standing in his way.

From dealing with a devastating shop fire to enduring numerous setbacks with his now defunct Xfinity Series program, Ronnie emerged from each tribulation more mature and determined to prove that he is still a race-winning driver.

Each weekend gets Ronnie closer to finally breaking through for his maiden CARS Tour victory and showing his kids just how efficient their dad was at the genesis of his Late Model Stock career.

“The coolest thing would be to share a [CARS Tour] win with my wife and my two kids,” Ronnie said. “Every time I come home, my kids talk about how I was so close to winning. I want to celebrate with them in Victory Lane and we’re going to work hard to make that happen.”

Kyle Larson rocketed to second-fastest on the leaderboard Wednesday, gaining experience and showing speed in a rain-abbreviated Indianapolis 500 open test.

Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion, drove the No. 17 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet to a best lap of 226.384 mph at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. His speed was second to the chart-topping 228.811 mph posted by defending Indy 500 champ Josef Newgarden, driving for Team Penske.

RELATED: Scenes from Larson at Indy 500 test

Larson is attempting to compete in both Memorial Day weekend classics on Sunday, May 26, driving in the Indianapolis 500 before transitioning to Charlotte Motor Speedway for the Cup Series’ Coca-Cola 600 (6 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). A total of 34 cars made laps in Wednesday’s session, and Larson’s track time was his first among other vehicles in an IndyCar.

“It felt good. Just good to get laps and get in some traffic, and to visually see what that looked like, to feel the runs and the dirty air a little bit,” Larson said after a morning run. “I feel like I learned quite a bit there and still have a lot to learn. It’s been a good morning so far. By yourself, (the car) has a lot of grip. In traffic, it was good. The first time I got in traffic, the balance felt normal. I didn’t feel like I went into a big transition from clean air to dirty air, but the last time, I was super tight. It was good to experience to feel what that felt like.

“The packs I’ve been in have only had two or three cars, but it’ll be way different when the field is out there. I’ve just got to keep getting laps, and as the packs keep getting bigger, I think I’ll learn a lot more.”

Weather, however, cut into the field’s testing opportunities, interrupting Wednesday’s opening day and canceling a scheduled second session on Thursday. The field was split into veterans and rookies for the first four hours Wednesday, interrupted by intermittent rain. More showers halted Wednesday’s activity shortly after 2 p.m. ET—nearly four hours early.

Practice for the Indianapolis 500 opens Tuesday, May 14, with qualifying scheduled that weekend, May 18-19.

Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with Martinsville in the rearview and Texas (Sun., 3:30 p.m. ET, FS1) right around the corner.

THE LINEUP ️

1️⃣ Byron putting together a season for the ages

2️⃣ First spring tumble in Texas since 2019

3️⃣ Exclusive: Jeff Gordon in moments after Martinsville

4️⃣ Ending streaks in the Lone Star State

5️⃣ Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

william byron celebrating at martinsville
Getty Images

1. Byron putting together a season for the ages

William Byron is off to a blazing start in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, showing shades of a certain four-time champion.  

You’d better get used to seeing that cherubic grin on the front stretch after the checkered flag on Sundays, because it sure looks like it will be happening quite often from here on out.

William Byron’s victory at Martinsville Speedway this past weekend just felt so huge for so many reasons, but sort of lost in all of the duly deserved overall Hendrick Motorsports jubilee seemed to be that Byron is laying the bricks for an all-time great NASCAR season.

That feels kind of obvious to point out, but it’s notable because several drivers have echoed the sentiment that the days of double-digit-win seasons are over with the level of parity we’ve seen thus far in the Next Gen era. Yet, here we are with a driver holding three trophies just eight races into the schedule, on three race tracks that couldn’t be more different.

Not only is Byron — who passed Hall of Famer Terry Labonte on Hendrick’s all-time wins list on Sunday — on pace to hit the double-digit mark, but he could really be putting together something special here.

jeff gordon looks at william byron
Getty Images

For context, the last driver to hit double-digit wins was teammate Kyle Larson in his 2021 championship season, one of the more dominant campaigns in recent memory. No. 5 didn’t pick up his third win that year until Sonoma — in June.

STACKING PENNIES: Will Byron hit double-digits?

Digging a little deeper and comparing him directly to the Hall of Fame driver who made the No. 24 famous, Byron’s third win almost certainly indicates championship potential, if not likelihood.

Jeff Gordon won his third race of the season as early as Byron did this year — or earlier — just three times in his career, amazingly, in consecutive years from 1995-97. Between those three seasons, he netted a pair of championships, a runner-up finish to Labonte (who had eight fewer wins) and 27 total Cup Series victories. The next year Gordon actually clocked in a career-high 13 wins — and, naturally, the title — but remarkably didn’t pick up his third until race No. 11.

Sunday’s 1-2-3 finish led by Byron, with all of the emotion tied into it and everything that it foretells down the road, felt like the biggest Martinsville moment for Hendrick since the half-mile short track reverberated with bellows of “We’re goin’ to Homestead!

And it’s only fitting it was ushered in by a ruby red, flame-adorned No. 24 Chevrolet doing burnouts with a grandfather clock awaiting in Victory Lane.

byron does a burnout at martinsville
Getty Images

2. First spring tumble in Texas since 2019

After a spate of short tracks, what does a return to a 1.5-mile track have in store for Sunday? 

Bristol, Richmond and Martinsville each offered their own unique twists and surprises, but when all was said and done all three races were won by two title favorites in Byron and Denny Hamlin.

The way things are going it’s hard to look past No. 24 — the most recent winner at Texas, last fall — especially considering he’s finished in the top 10 in seven of the last eight races on 1.5-mile tracks and has the second-longest active top-10 streak at the Fort Worth track. It’ll take a catastrophe for him not to be in the mix, but each of the last seven Texas races was won by a different driver for the longest streak of different winners at the track since the first 12 races there were won by fresh drivers.

Byron could go out there and dominate, but the window is certainly open for others, particularly where there’s no direct comp for this race since the last time it was run in the spring was in 2019 with a different generation of car and much longer length.

His Hendrick teammate Kyle Larson has the edge when it comes specifically to 1.5-mile tracks as a whole, having won at least one stage in each of the last five races on them — including sweeping the stages en route to Victory Lane in two of the last three. Nobody’s touching the California native on the intermediates right now, with Larson winning 31% of all stages on 1.5-mile tracks in the Next Gen era and Hendrick itself claiming 50% of them.

The two-headed monster Hendrick has right now between Byron and Larson is beyond intimidating and we could be looking at a decade-plus of this. (And that’s not to mention 2020 champion Chase Elliott, who is heating up in a big way and nearly took the Martinsville win himself).

Outside of Hendrick, this feels like the weekend 23XI Racing really collectively puts it all together after showing plenty of promise in the early going so far, with both Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick looking like top-10 locks for Sunday — and Wallace, in particular.

There’s still some smoothing out across the board to be had with the No. 23 team, but there have been a few spots this season (Martinsville chief among them) where it looked championship-capable. Texas might be where Wallace enters that conversation completely.

The two-time Cup winner was dominant in the Lone Star State last fall, leading 111 laps from the pole and averaging a running position of 4.2 before Byron took control on a late restart to win. Wallace has been excellent on 1.5-milers in general lately, though, with his five top fives in the last 11 races on them — including a Kansas victory — tied for third most during that span.

It’s entirely possible that when Wallace exits his No. 23 Toyota on Sunday evening, he does so with his head held high as he’s handed the checkered flag.

bubba wallace exits his car at texas
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3. Exclusive: Jeff Gordon on how his Hendrick family ‘changed (his) life’

The NASCAR Hall of Famer caught up with NASCAR.com after the team’s historic 1-2-3 finish at Martinsville.

 

4. Ending streaks in the Lone Star State

Texas has seen six drivers snap 30-plus-race winless streaks in its history. With five past champions riding lengthy droughts of their own, will one snap the skid on Sunday?

DriverCarWinless StreakDate
Elliott SadlerNo. 38 Yates Racing Ford1084/4/2004
Austin DillonNo. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet887/19/2020
Matt KensethNo. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford764/9/2011
Greg BiffleNo. 16 Roush Fenway Racing Ford494/14/2012
Jeff GordonNo. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet474/5/2009
Kyle BuschNo. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota3310/25/2020

5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

Power Rankings: Ryan Blaney’s title defense set to start shining

Paint Scheme Preview: See the schemes for Texas tripleheader 

Analysis: Byron’s rebound, milestone moment swell 40th anniversary emotions

Rick Hendrick reflects on Martinsville triumph: ‘I’m glad they played nice’

Bubba Wallace on Martinsville showing: ‘Got the result we deserved’

Sawyer: Officials ‘trying to get to a better place’ with short-track package

Inside the Race: Byron’s upper hand at Martinsville

Chase Elliott on trying to ‘go for the win’ at Martinsville, falling short

Kyle Petty: Hendrick’s domination is a Martinsville ‘walk-off’

@nascarcasm: Fake texts to Martinsville winner William Byron

Which driver is favored to win 2024 title after Martinsville?

start of the race at texas
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Carson Kvapil knew the opportunity in front of him at Martinsville Speedway was special. There was no way Saturday could be just another day.

He made sure he did his part behind the wheel to make his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut unforgettable.

The 20-year-old native of Mooresville, North Carolina stormed to a fourth-place finish in his inaugural Xfinity start in the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, impressing but perhaps not surprising anyone who has followed Kvapil’s career up through the CARS Late Model Stock Tour as the two-time defending series champion.

MORE: Xfinity Series schedule

A top-five result in his first outing after never driving the Xfinity chassis before Friday’s 20-minute practice and two-lap qualifying sessions dazzled. But Kvapil admitted he wanted a little more still.

“Man I know this 88 team, this Chevrolet Camaro, it’s capable of winning,” Kvapil said. “So the end goal and really the expectation for me is to go out and win. So coming up with a fourth is obviously not bad, right? I’m pretty excited. But I felt like we had a car that was capable of at least running top three and maybe going for the win.”

That perspective and drive are what JR Motorsports co-owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. admires most about his shining prospect, who has wheeled JRM late models since the beginning of 2022. Kvapil may be young, but the head upon his shoulders only bolsters the talent he sees on the race track.

So while Kvapil may have had higher expectations for himself, Earnhardt was beaming under the bright lights of Martinsville Speedway after such a notably positive performance.

“He’s got such good race craft — better race craft than probably 80% of people in the field,” Earnhardt said. “He’s just mature. And (that’s) not a knock on everybody in the field here. He’s just that good, I think. Kid’s grown up in it, works on cars all day, every day. Everything about his life, every minute is racing, and he’s got this incredible temperament.

“He’s level all the time. Not once did he show any nerves or anxiety over this being too big or too heavy. Can’t seem to really rattle him, you know? I asked him in the middle of the race what he thought. He’s like, ‘It’s pretty simple. Do what I’m supposed to do, you know?’ So just fun to watch him race. Awesome to be able to give him a car that he can do something with, and his dad and his mother did a good job raising him. He’s just such an awesome character. Awesome character and a hell of a race car driver.”

Carson Kvapil's name sits above the door of the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Martinsville.
James Thomas | NASCAR.com

Kvapil’s father is none other than Travis Kvapil, the 2003 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion and a longtime driver between NASCAR’s three national series with 481 combined Cup, Xfinity and Truck starts. The younger Kvapil made his first national appearance in the Truck Series last season at Bristol Motor Speedway, where he finished 12th, 20 years after his father’s title run.

Travis Kvapil keeps it no secret that he’s been fortunate to help open doors for his sons — both Carson and the up-and-coming Caden Kvapil — as he helps find sponsorship to fund future opportunities. But Carson Kvapil’s performance Saturday at Martinsville was just the latest example of the sheer talent and ability to perform on the race track once those opportunities come to fruition.

“He’s put in the work and he’s got the ability,” Travis Kvapil said. “To me, Carson is the right story. You know what I mean? He’s a young kid. He’s worked hard. He’s put in the work. He’s started at Millbridge and Bandoleros and cut his teeth and won at every level. And get an opportunity like this and then go do great things when you do get the opportunity.”

Carson Kvapil drives the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet at Martinsville in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.
James Thomas | NASCAR.com

Kvapil is far from the first late model driver from the JRM stable to get his inaugural Xfinity start with the same program. Earnhardt — who himself has returned to the grassroots level he loves so much — helped propel Josh Berry all the way to the NASCAR Cup Series, with the Tennessean racing for JRM for more than a decade before this year’s rookie campaign driving the No. 4 Ford for Stewart-Haas Racing, a coveted seat at the sport’s top level.

“The deal with Carson is kind of similar to Josh,” Earnhardt said. “We’re just gonna keep grinding, running the late model races and doing everything we can to get him chances. And for Josh, it took 10 years. Hopefully it doesn’t take that long for Carson. You know, runs like that didn’t do much for Josh’s career. You know, we’d take Josh somewhere, he’d run really good, and we thought the phone was gonna ring. But you’ve just got to stay in it like Josh did. That’s the example of dedication and sticking with it and not giving up on your dream. And we’re gonna keep doing that with Carson as long as we can.

“I’m almost sad watching him run good out there because I know he might move up and move on out; at least out of the late model car. And it’s tough when you get so used to them driving it every single week.”

Kvapil hopes not to stray far from the Earnhardt family any time soon, expressing his gratitude for Earnhardt’s belief in him Saturday night.

“You guys have seen what he’s done for short-track racers the last few years,” Kvapil said. “It’s an honor to drive his late model full time and it’s definitely an honor to get the run at Martinsville here with them. So obviously I was wanting to go out and win, right? That’s everyone’s goal. But I’m pretty happy with how I did.”

NEW YORK and DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR, the sanctioning body for the No. 1 motorsport in the United States, is enhancing its NASCAR Mobile app experience by launching a new In-App Stories product from WSC Sports, the global leader in AI-powered sports video content.

In-App Stories offers NASCAR fans a user-friendly, multi-clip vertical video experience in a format they are familiar with seeing on other social media platforms. Fans can tap into the new experience on race weekends and beyond, as the stories will provide live in-race highlights for NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series, and Craftsman Truck Series races. Additionally, In-App Stories will have a prominent place on the NASCAR Mobile homepage throughout the week, so fans can continue to engage with the best on-track action and additional stories centered around their favorite drivers.

“NASCAR’s unique style of close, side-by-side racing delivers plenty of highlight-reel moments each week and In-App Stories are an ideal way for us to deliver the type of compelling content fans crave on mobile,” said Wyatt Hicks, vice president of Digital Media at NASCAR. “We’re eager to continue collaborating with WSC Sports and building deeper connections with NASCAR fans around the world.”

generates image of nascar app
NASCAR Digital Media

The new integration comes as part of an expanded partnership between NASCAR and WSC Sports, in which NASCAR has been using the WSC Sports platform to quickly ingest and create highlight content from a multitude of video sources. The expansion coincides with NASCAR’s continued brand resurgence and growth the past several years, including increases in unique users, visits and page views inside the NASCAR Mobile app to start 2024.

“We are thrilled to be growing our partnership with NASCAR,” said Aviv Arnon, chief business development officer at WSC Sports. “Together, WSC Sports and NASCAR have taken initial steps towards giving fans even closer access to racing content and I am certain the path of innovation will continue. For this racing season, fans will be able to connect with their favorite NASCAR drivers on a scale like never before.”

The In-App Stories solution is beneficial for media rights holders like NASCAR in augmenting owned and operated platforms with vertical video content in a seamless, technologically forward way. It allows rights holders to instantly update their website and mobile app to fit fan consumption behaviors driven by other social media platforms. For NASCAR specifically, the In-App Stories SDK paired with WSC Sports’ content automation will allow the league to promote personalized content specific to each driver or what is currently happening in that weekend’s race within dedicated content widgets. In-App Stories bring valuable opportunities for media rights holders to share their content on a more intimate level in a more immersive experience to a global audience while also retaining important user data.

For more information, visit wsc-sports.com and nascar.com.

Kyle Larson will enter the next phase in his bid for his Indianapolis 500 debut this week when Indianapolis Motor Speedway hosts a two-day open test.

Larson will be among the entrants for Wednesday and Thursday sessions in preparation for the 108th running of the 500-mile event on May 26. The Hendrick Motorsports driver will attempt to run two historic races on the same day, traveling from Indianapolis that afternoon to compete in NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway that evening.

RELATED: Scenes from Larson’s Phoenix test

This week’s test will mark the third on-track session for Larson in an IndyCar. He successfully completed rookie orientation at the Speedway last October, then participated in a test with his Arrow McLaren team at Phoenix Raceway in February.

“I’ve been excited about it since January of last year when we announced it, but yeah, I don’t get too overly excited about anything,” Larson said during last weekend’s NASCAR events at Martinsville Speedway. “Just take it every day, day by day. Hopefully, the weather is good next week, and we can get in the car as scheduled on Wednesday and Thursday and just get to learning, I think, from there. I think next week is when I’ll really get to learn more about things, racing and getting to be around my team of people. The other times I’ve been in the car, I haven’t had — and I don’t even know, maybe I have been around a lot of the team members, but I’ll at least have my team there next week to kind of talk to and learn from. And then yeah, as far as being at the track with teammates and all of that sort of stuff, it will be good.”

The track is scheduled to open Wednesday at 9:05 a.m. ET for a nearly two-hour session for veteran drivers, followed by a two-hour rookie orientation practice and refresher at 11 a.m. ET. The session is then open to all drivers from 1-6:30 p.m. ET Wednesday and again from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET Thursday. Admission is free, with infield access limited because of construction near the IMS Museum.

Larson enters this Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) having won the pole position in the last two Cup Series events. He has one victory (Las Vegas in March) through eight races this season and ranks second to Martin Truex Jr. in the points standings.