See where your favorite NASCAR Cup Series and O’Reilly Auto Parts Series drivers will pit this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.

NASCAR Cup Series

A view of the pit-road layout for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway.
NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, FOX One, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Martinsville weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on FS1

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

A graphic detailing the pit stalls for the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series at Martinsville Speedway.
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series NFPA 250 at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday (3:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

RELATED: How to watch O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races on The CW

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Justin Allgaier has another busy weekend ahead — his “9-to-5” job competing for the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series championship on Saturday and then continuing to fill in for the injured Alex Bowman in Sunday’s Cup Series race at the famous half-mile Martinsville Speedway.

So far, the 2024 O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champ has done admirable work balancing the heavy schedule. He’ll drive the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevy in Saturday’s NFPA 250 (3:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and then suit up again for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) to steer the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for Bowman, who has been battling vertigo.

RELATED: Lineup for Saturday’s O’Reilly race | Martinsville schedule

Allgaier earned his second O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victory of the season — and 30th of his decorated career — last weekend at Darlington Raceway and now leads the championship by an impressive 52-point margin over Richard Childress Racing’s Jesse Love.

He’s finished 25th (Las Vegas) and 24th (Darlington) in two Cup Series starts in the No. 48 Chevy. The team has said Bowman will be out at least through the April 12 Bristol Motor Speedway race.

“Obviously, the goal is to get Alex back into the car as soon as possible,’’ Allgaier said Friday before O’Reilly Auto Parts Series qualifying at Martinsville. “That’s the main thought and transitioning from there, how do we strengthen the 48 program. The hard part for me is, obviously, I want to do the best job I can for both parties and I also don’t want to hold anyone back, whether that be the 48 or the 7. I owe it to both teams to give 100 percent so it’s made for a bit of a challenge over the last two weeks with family time but it’s worth it and you take a team like Hendrick Motorsports and they’ve obviously been successful in the series for so long because of the way they operate, and how much stuff they have and how great they are.

“It’s been a really unique and fun journey to see the back end of that and hope to get Alex back in the car soon. Hopefully, we can do a good job until that time comes.’’

Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200

Martinsville Speedway

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  • Qualifying results
Pos No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 1 Patrick Emerling USNE Motorsports 19.482 97.197 2 2  —
2 25 Danny Bohn Foxfire Farms/Ready Mix 19.487 97.172 2 2 0.005
3 79 Jonathan McKennedy Stuart’s Automotive 19.498 97.118 2 2 0.016
4 7 Luke Baldwin Baldwin Automotive 19.537 96.924 2 2 0.055
5 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 19.557 96.825 2 2 0.075
6 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 19.573 96.746 2 2 0.091
7 16 Ron Silk Blue Moutian Machine/ Future Homes 19.579 96.716 2 2 0.097
8 82 Andrew Molleur Horton Avenue Materials 19.602 96.602 2 2 0.12
9 05 Teddy Hodgdon IV* Business Time Motorsports/The Landau Team of Re/Max/Montanari Fuel 19.605 96.588 2 2 0.123
10 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication 19.607 96.578 2 2 0.125
11 73 Paulie Hartwig III* Professional Therapy Associates/Velocita USA 19.619 96.519 2 2 0.137
12 21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Construction/Newton Pools 19.625 96.489 2 2 0.143
13 70 Andy Seuss Rockingham Boat 19.64 96.415 2 2 0.158
14 0 Ryan Newman Oshwekon Speedway/Glenn Styers Racing/Keydisplay/USNE 19.652 96.357 2 2 0.17
15 60 Matt Hirschman Bar Harbor Bank & Trust/Pee Dee Motorsports 19.659 96.322 2 2 0.177
16 66 Timmy Solomito USNE Power/Kennedy Realty/FX Caprara 19.714 96.054 2 2 0.232
17 3 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Drilling/SYP 19.716 96.044 2 2 0.234
18 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power 19.738 95.937 2 2 0.256
19 24 Andrew Krause Supreme Mfg Co. 19.745 95.903 1 2 0.263
20 22 Kyle Bonsignore ChawLew Performance/MTT/LRD 19.759 95.835 2 2 0.277
21 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara/USNE Power 19.772 95.772 2 2 0.29
22 64 Austin Beers G&G Electrical Supply/Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical/Fastrack Electic/AP Marquadt & Sons/Andrew Ja 19.78 95.733 2 2 0.298
23 71 Jimmy Zacharias Kevo Motorsports/Stafursky Paving/American Property Solutions/Velocita 19.782 95.723 1 2 0.3
24 31 Michael Christopher Jr Elite Towing/Elite Racing/Baker Racing 19.809 95.593 2 2 0.327
25 40 Luke Fleming William E. Smith Trucking/Taylor Auto Parts/Perkins & Associates/Hodges Realty/Autos by Nelson 19.832 95.482 2 2 0.35
26 18 Ken Heagy Merkel Racing Engines 19.86 95.347 2 2 0.378
27 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feeds 19.915 95.084 1 2 0.433
28 55 Jeremy Gerstner Garage Doors of the Triad/Cherokee Underground/JTS Services 19.942 94.955 1 2 0.46
29 38 Jack Baldwin* Stokes Shoes 19.949 94.922 1 2 0.467
30 95 Cory Plummer* Tuckers Metal Fab & Welding/Apex Race Cars/Apex Racing/Croteau Machine & More 19.984 94.756 2 2 0.502
31 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Power/Eighty-Two Services Gerneral Contractor 20.097 94.223 1 2 0.615

 

Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200

Martinsville Speedway

Dis 17 743631 Coca Cola 250 V6gb 4pres

  • Final practice results
Pos No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Construction/Newton Pools 19.307 98.078 6 6  —
2 60 Matt Hirschman Bar Harbor Bank & Trust/Pee Dee Motorsports 19.316 98.033 22 23 0.009
3 7 Luke Baldwin Baldwin Automotive 19.327 97.977 18 19 0.02
4 16 Ron Silk Blue Moutian Machine/ Future Homes 19.338 97.921 6 20 0.031
5 3 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Drilling/SYP 19.379 97.714 10 25 0.072
6 64 Austin Beers G&G Electrical Supply/Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical/Fastrack Electic/AP Marquadt & Sons/Andrew Ja 19.412 97.548 3 30 0.105
7 1 Patrick Emerling USNE Motorsports 19.436 97.427 22 23 0.129
8 70 Andy Seuss Rockingham Boat 19.443 97.392 2 24 0.136
9 79 Jonathan McKennedy Stuart’s Automotive 19.451 97.352 14 19 0.144
10 05 Teddy Hodgdon IV* Business Time Motorsports/The Landau Team of Re/Max/Montanari Fuel 19.477 97.222 5 26 0.17
11 82 Andrew Molleur Horton Avenue Materials 19.485 97.182 12 19 0.178
12 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara/USNE Power 19.499 97.113 16 18 0.192
13 66 Timmy Solomito USNE Power/Kennedy Realty/FX Caprara 19.505 97.083 26 29 0.198
14 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication 19.507 97.073 4 25 0.2
15 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feeds 19.523 96.993 15 23 0.216
16 71 Jimmy Zacharias Kevo Motorsports/Stafursky Paving/American Property Solutions/Velocita 19.523 96.993 8 10 0.216
17 24 Andrew Krause Supreme Mfg Co. 19.544 96.889 15 16 0.237
18 31 Michael Christopher Jr Elite Towing/Elite Racing/Baker Racing 19.562 96.8 4 23 0.255
19 0 Ryan Newman Oshwekon Speedway/Glenn Styers Racing/Keydisplay/USNE 19.563 96.795 8 21 0.256
20 22 Kyle Bonsignore ChawLew Performance/MTT/LRD 19.586 96.681 4 23 0.279
21 25 Danny Bohn Foxfire Farms/Ready Mix 19.589 96.666 3 17 0.282
22 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power 19.604 96.593 9 21 0.297
23 73 Paulie Hartwig III* Professional Therapy Associates/Velocita USA 19.605 96.588 2 28 0.298
24 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 19.621 96.509 2 15 0.314
25 18 Ken Heagy Merkel Racing Engines 19.639 96.42 7 14 0.332
26 55 Jeremy Gerstner Garage Doors of the Triad/Cherokee Underground/JTS Services 19.716 96.044 6 9 0.409
27 95 Cory Plummer* Tuckers Metal Fab & Welding/Apex Race Cars/Apex Racing/Croteau Machine & More 19.734 95.956 11 26 0.427
28 38 Jack Baldwin* Stokes Shoes 19.798 95.646 3 29 0.491
29 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Power/Eighty-Two Services Gerneral Contractor 19.868 95.309 4 21 0.561
30 40 Luke Fleming William E. Smith Trucking/Taylor Auto Parts/Perkins & Associates/Hodges Realty/Autos by Nelson 19.892 95.194 13 21 0.585
31 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 0 0 0 0 0

 

Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200

Martinsville Speedway

Dis 17 743631 Coca Cola 250 V6gb 4pres

  • Practice results
Pos No. Name Sponsor Best Tm Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff
1 70 Andy Seuss Rockingham Boat 19.458 97.317 12 18  —
2 21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Construction/Newton Pools 19.466 97.277 7 15 0.008
3 1 Patrick Emerling USNE Motorsports 19.474 97.237 12 20 0.016
4 25 Danny Bohn Foxfire Farms/Ready Mix 19.484 97.187 10 22 0.026
5 79 Jonathan McKennedy Stuart’s Automotive 19.488 97.167 11 24 0.03
6 16 Ron Silk Blue Moutian Machine/ Future Homes 19.494 97.138 15 21 0.036
7 60 Matt Hirschman Bar Harbor Bank & Trust/Pee Dee Motorsports 19.497 97.123 6 19 0.039
8 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication 19.509 97.063 4 21 0.051
9 3 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Drilling/SYP 19.538 96.919 24 25 0.08
10 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises/Eastport Feeds 19.54 96.909 32 32 0.082
11 64 Austin Beers G&G Electrical Supply/Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical/Fastrack Electic/AP Marquadt & Sons/Andrew Ja 19.576 96.731 12 27 0.118
12 05 Teddy Hodgdon IV* Business Time Motorsports/The Landau Team of Re/Max/Montanari Fuel 19.589 96.666 25 28 0.131
13 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing 19.593 96.647 15 22 0.135
14 0 Ryan Newman Oshwekon Speedway/Glenn Styers Racing/Keydisplay/USNE 19.64 96.415 11 22 0.182
15 7 Luke Baldwin Baldwin Automotive 19.642 96.406 18 34 0.184
16 73 Paulie Hartwig III* Professional Therapy Associates/Velocita USA 19.664 96.298 33 33 0.206
17 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara/USNE Power 19.669 96.273 14 30 0.211
18 46 Craig Lutz Riverhead Building Supply 19.709 96.078 12 19 0.251
19 71 Jimmy Zacharias Kevo Motorsports/Stafursky Paving/American Property Solutions/Velocita 19.723 96.01 11 18 0.265
20 22 Kyle Bonsignore ChawLew Performance/MTT/LRD 19.724 96.005 19 27 0.266
21 82 Andrew Molleur Horton Avenue Materials 19.73 95.976 23 34 0.272
22 66 Timmy Solomito USNE Power/Kennedy Realty/FX Caprara 19.746 95.898 17 29 0.288
23 31 Michael Christopher Jr Elite Towing/Elite Racing/Baker Racing 19.751 95.874 12 12 0.293
24 38 Jack Baldwin* Stokes Shoes 19.756 95.849 24 31 0.298
25 56 Trevor Catalano USNE Power 19.758 95.84 11 11 0.3
26 24 Andrew Krause Supreme Mfg Co. 19.813 95.574 20 21 0.355
27 40 Luke Fleming William E. Smith Trucking/Taylor Auto Parts/Perkins & Associates/Hodges Realty/Autos by Nelson 19.818 95.55 15 23 0.36
28 18 Ken Heagy 19.888 95.213 4 14 0.43
29 8 John-Michael Shenette USNE Power/Eighty-Two Services Gerneral Contractor 19.893 95.189 21 27 0.435
30 55 Jeremy Gerstner Garage Doors of the Triad/Cherokee Underground/JTS Services 19.949 94.922 11 14 0.491
31 95 Cory Plummer* Tuckers Metal Fab & Welding/Apex Race Cars/Apex Racing/Croteau Machine & More 20.004 94.661 12 22 0.546

Editor’s Note: Keep tabs on this page for lineup advice following qualifying, including changes you should consider.

Fantasy Update: NASCAR’s biggest organizations have dominated Martinsville Speedway in recent years, with Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing and Team Penske combining to sweep the last 15 events at “The Paperclip.” My lineup is completely full of those three organizations for Sunday’s Cook Out 400. While Ryan Preece was steady over the long haul in practice, Chase Elliott was simply faster, bumping the No. 9 car into my lineup. Preece is also being replaced by quasi-Penske driver Josh Berry as my 36 for 36 pick, with the No. 21 car starting third, immediately in position for stage points. 

My lineup: Denny Hamlin, William Byron, Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, Chase Elliott. 

Garage: Kyle Larson.  

After a grueling, old-school 400 miles at Darlington Raceway, the Cup Series heads north to Martinsville Speedway for the first true short-track race of the 2026 season. Many of the usual cast of characters run up front at “The Paperclip,” so expect Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing and Team Penske — with a sprinkle of RFK Racing — to lead the pack on Sunday.

Returning to Fastlane this year is my weekly NASCAR 36 for 36 pick, where you can come play along. It’s a season-long points battle introduced in 2024 where strategy is the primary emphasis. With 36 chartered cars and 36 races on the 2026 schedule, players can choose each car once for the duration of the season.

RELATED: NASCAR Fantasy Live hub | Play 36 for 36 

MUST START

Driver: Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Selections remaining: 7
Comment: With only seven starts remaining for Hamlin over the course of the regular season, I’m debating whether to use him this weekend. He is hard to pass up at Martinsville, leading active drivers in wins (six), top fives (21), top 10s (27) and laps led (2,722) here. He enters with four top-five finishes in the last seven races at the Virginia track, so I think I’ve convinced myself that he needs to be in my lineup.

Driver: Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford
Selections remaining: 7
Comment: Blaney is in the mix for being the new short-track king. He has a pair of victories at Martinsville, with 11 top-five and 13 top-10 finishes, including finishes of seventh or better in seven of the last eight trips to the Commonwealth. He also scored 41 more points than any other driver last year at short tracks.

Driver: William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Selections remaining: 9
Comment: When the Cup Series visited Martinsville in October, nobody could dethrone William Byron, who has won three of the eight Next Gen races at the 0.526-mile venue. His six top-five finishes and 664 laps led at Martinsville are his best at any circuit on the calendar, with nearly half of those laps coming in the fall (304).

william byron wins at martinsville in 2025
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

DRIVERS TO AVOID

Driver: Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
Selections remaining: 8
Comment: Reddick put it best while departing his post-race press conference at Darlington when he quipped the world would end if he were to win at Martinsville. The four-time 2026 winner has a pair of top-10 finishes in 12 Martinsville starts, with a best finish of seventh. It’s his only track where he hasn’t placed inside the top five with at least 10 starts.

Driver: Brad Keselowski, No. 6 RFK Racing Ford
Selections remaining: 8
Comment: Vintage Keselowski was on full display at Darlington, leading a race-high 142 laps en route to a runner-up finish. And while he is a multi-time Martinsville winner, it’s been a dreadful track for the No. 6 team in recent years. The 2012 Cup Series champion has finished 20th or worse in six of the last seven Martinsville races.

brad keselowski
Patrick McDermott | Getty Images

SLEEPERS OF THE WEEK

Driver: Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
Selections remaining: 10
Comment: Expect Preece, who won this year’s Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, to lead the way for RFK at Martinsville. He made a name for himself running short tracks across the Northeast, and it’s led to some success on the big stage. He won the Busch Light Pole Award for this race in 2023 and has a trio of top-10 finishes in the last four races here.

Driver: Josh Berry, No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford
Selections remaining: 10
Comment: Like Preece, Berry is another short-track standout who has found success in other divisions of motorsports at Martinsville. In his first attempt with the Wood Brothers, he had a mechanical issue while leading and finished 32nd. He rebounded with a 10th-place effort in October.

ryan preece wins clash
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

FEATURED MATCHUPS

Tyler Reddick vs. Christopher Bell
Pick: Bell
Comment: Expectations are minimal for Reddick at Martinsville, giving Bell plenty of wiggle room. He is a former Martinsville winner and placed runner-up last spring to Hamlin. Bell is always in the mix at short tracks, recording 11 top-10 finishes in the last 15 races.

William Byron vs. Kyle Larson 
Pick: Byron
Comment: Because Byron’s highs have been higher at Martinsville, he’s the pick. However, Larson is flirting with must-start territory at Martinsville — something he never thought would be possible. But he’s finished sixth or better in each of the last seven Martinsville events.

Carson Hocevar vs. Brad Keselowski
Pick: Keselowski
Comment: While Keselowski hasn’t had recent success at Martinsville, his 12 top-five finishes at “The Paperclip” are tied for the most at any venue in his career. Meanwhile, Hocevar has a best finish of 17th in five Martinsville attempts, and he completed the hat trick for spins in a single race last fall.

Bubba Wallace vs. Joey Logano
Pick: Logano
Comment: Wallace has steadily improved at Martinsville in Cup, finishing inside the top 10 in four of the last seven races. In those same seven races, plus six before that, Logano’s name was a mainstay inside the top 10 in all of them. His 13 consecutive top 10s at Martinsville is the fourth-longest streak in track history.

MY LINEUP

Starting five: Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney, William Byron, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano.
Garage pick: Ryan Preece.

36 FOR 36

Pick: Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
Comment: A little humble brag, but by swapping to Keselowski after Darlington qualifying, I now have three consecutive 51-plus point performances. The goal this weekend is to stay clean, something Preece can do. He is an absolute menace at short tracks, with four finishes of seventh or better in the last eight races, and that dominant Bowman Gray showing leaves plenty of optimism.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Due to potential weather forecasted for the Martinsville area late Friday night, NASCAR and Martinsville Speedway officials will move up the start time for the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 to 7 p.m. ET.

Friday’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event was originally scheduled for a 7:30 p.m. ET start time.

Justin Bonsignore enters Martinsville Speedway with momentum firmly on his side. After opening the season with a victory at New Smyrna Speedway in February, Bonsignore has also captured each of the last two Modified Tour races at Martinsville. A win this weekend would place him alone in the record books, as no driver in series history has ever won three consecutive Modified Tour events at the historic half-mile.

Reigning NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Austin Beers enters Friday’s race in the midst of a historic run of consistency. Beers has recorded 31 consecutive top-10 finishes dating back to April 7, 2024, at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, marking the longest streak of its kind in series history. During that span, he has earned three victories while posting an average finish of 4.77 and has finished outside the top 10 just four times since the start of the 2023 season.

Friday’s event also marks the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour’s return to Martinsville Speedway in the spring for the first time since 2021. The previous spring race at the venue, held on April 8, 2021, saw Eric Goodale take the checkered flag.

Fans unable to attend Friday’s race in person can watch live on FloRacing. For updated event information as available, fans can visit nascar.com/regional.

The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series resumes competition Saturday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway with the NFPA 250 (3:30 p.m. ET on CW, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill is the defending race winner, leading only the last lap of overtime to claim the win last spring after that day’s most dominant driver, Connor Zilisch — now a NASCAR Cup Series rookie — spun on the last regularly-scheduled lap, resulting in an overtime restart. Zilisch had started from pole position and led 100 of the opening 250 laps.

MORE: See Saturday’s entry list | Full Martinsville schedule

Taylor Gray’s 87 laps out front were second to Zilisch, and the 21-year-old Gray answered that production later in the year, scoring his first series victory the following October race at Martinsville.

Three other championship contenders own Martinsville clocks, including last week’s Darlington winner, JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier (2023), Joe Gibbs Racing’s Brandon Jones (2022) and Sam Hunt Racing’s Harrison Burton (2020).

The 2024 series champion Allgaier holds a 52-point edge over last year’s champ, Richard Childress Racing’s Jesse Love atop the standings. JR Motorsports’ Carson Kvapil (-84), Haas Factory Team’s Sheldon Creed (-88) and Love’s teammate Hill (-96) round out the top-five atop the standings.

JR Motorsports has won the last four races (with three different drivers), and a victory Saturday would mark the second-longest streak of wins for a team in series history. Joe Gibbs Racing won six consecutively in 2008.

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Practice & Kennametal Pole Qualifying at Martinsville is scheduled for Friday at 4:30 p.m. ET (CW App). The last time a pole sitter won this race was 1987 (Jimmy Hensley).

Tyler Reddick is racing like a man on a mission to win every single race – and he sure picked the right year to do it.

The driver of the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota is off to an absolute season for the ages so far in 2026, winning again last Sunday at Darlington for his fourth victory in the first six races on the schedule. Going back to the dawn of NASCAR’s modern era in 1972, only two other drivers also won four times in the first six races of a season: Dale Earnhardt in 1987 and Bill Elliott in 1992 – and Reddick had greater consistency and/or a higher floor in his non-wins:

Chart comparing Tyler Reddick's fast start in 2026 to the fastest starts in NASCAR history

Simply put, we haven’t really seen a performance like this in the early phase of a season in a long time, if ever. And the benefit to Reddick in the standings is disproportionate this particular season, due to the new Chase system’s points format. As part of the trade-off for mothballing the old win-and-in mechanism for clinching a playoff spot, each trip to Victory Lane carries an extra 15-point bonus (compared with last year) to encourage a priority on winning.

And as it turns out, when you win almost every race in a season, those bonuses really start to pile up quickly.

Here’s a comparison between Reddick’s cumulative lead in the standings each week of the 2026 season under the current Chase points system – currently +95 over Ryan Blaney – and what his lead would be under the old system, without the 15-point bump for winning:

Chart showing just how much more valuable Tyler Reddick's wins are in 2026 compared with wins in the old points system.

Under the old points format, Reddick would still be the clear standings leader at this point of the season. But he would “only” be up 50 points on the rest of the field: a healthy margin for sure, but also well within striking distance of a win, plus a strong performance in the stages, under the old system. Instead, as the wins have piled up within this new format, Reddick’s lead over Blaney and company is nearly doubled compared with what it would have been a year ago.

The better he keeps driving, the more Reddick leaves the competition further and further in the standings dust. Of course, the extra bonus potentially makes a comeback quicker to pull off as well – it’s a bit like the 3-pointer for a trailing team in basketball that way. But to catch the guy with a big winning streak, you need to put together one of your own, which feels like the way it should be.

Now the main question might be, how many wins can Reddick reach by season’s end?

The record for wins in a single Cup Series season was 27 by – who else? – Richard Petty in 1967, though he did it in 48 races. Pro-rated to a 36-race schedule, that works out to 20.3 wins, which means Reddick’s current 24-win pace is actually ahead of the record as we sit one-sixth of the way through the 2026 calendar. But before we get too excited, Reddick will obviously not go on to win anything close to two out of every three races he enters all season, so winning at the requisite 54.2% clip to match Petty from here is probably out the window. (Sorry to disappoint!)

The modern-era Cup record of 13 wins, however, is held by Jeff Gordon in 1998 and Petty himself in 1975, and Reddick would need to win 30% of races from here on to match that. (Still a very tall order – although, incredibly, Gordon won 39.4% of his races that season, so it can be done … in theory at least.)

More realistically, at the most basic level, Reddick has won 5.4% of his career Cup races, which works out to an expectation of 1.6 additional wins over the rest of the year (and 5.6 overall). But that includes his early seasons with Richard Childress Racing, which may not be very relevant; at his 7.9% win rate since moving to 23XI, we might expect 2.4 additional wins (and 6.4 overall) for Reddick by season’s end – still only half of the record number.

This method is simplistic, treating every remaining race the same (regardless of track type) and lumping all seasons together, which isn’t ideal. We can do a better job of estimating Reddick’s true odds of winning each remaining race by looking at track-specific data weighted by recency. If we anchor his win percentages in recent years at each track type to the typical rates for a top-10 driver in the standings during the Next Gen car era, giving more weight to more recent years (including 2026), we can come up with more reasonable guesses at his “true” chance to win at each track type.

(This includes an estimated 5% chance to win at short tracks, even though Reddick himself is 0-for-36 on short tracks in his career – the only track type he’s never won on before. Through our method, he still gets some small odds of winning because the average top-10 Cup driver wins 8% of the time on short tracks.)

Plug all of those values into the remaining schedule, simulate the rest of the 2026 season a bunch of times, track how often Reddick wins a given number of races and we arrive at a plausible distribution of winning outcomes for his year in full:

Chart showing the most likely outcomes of how many wins Tyler Reddick will get in 2026.

According to this method, there’s around a 7% chance he doesn’t win another race all year, which would be somewhat shocking but absolutely possible – think about Christopher Bell winning three of the first four races last year, then not winning again for more than six months.

More likely, though, Reddick will win at least one more race. On average, he wins 2.5 additional times to finish with either six or seven victories on the year. (Exactly six wins was the most common outcome in the simulations.) There is a 47% chance he ends up with at least seven wins, which would break the Next Gen-era record of six (co-held by William Byron in 2023, Kyle Larson in 2024 and Denny Hamlin in 2025), a 4% chance he gets to double-digits – joining a club with Jimmie Johnson (2007) and Larson (2021) for the most of the 2000s – and even a 0.15% probability (1 in around 600 to 700) that he gets to 13 and ties Gordon’s record.

So we’re saying there’s a chance!

But just the same, Reddick doesn’t need to catch Petty or Gordon to make history. He’s looking for his first career Cup Series title, so although a wins record would be nice, the main function of these victories is to keep padding that standings lead with the extra emphasis on winning in this year’s points format. Anything beyond that is just icing on the cake of a season that’s already off to a historic start.

As NASCAR’s oldest track, Martinsville Speedway presents a timeless challenge. Fitting for the track that presents its winners a grandfather clock.

Its drag-strip straights connected by abrupt, flat U-turns on either end create its iconic paperclip shape, a layout accentuated by a winding pit road.

Some drivers naturally find success in Martinsville’s tight confines. But others, well, they need a minute to feel around in the dark to find the light switch.

MORE: Martinsville schedule | Cup standings

Take Ryan Blaney, for example.

Heading into Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion is easily considered a favorite to win again at Martinsville. But once upon a time, it wasn’t hard to consider him an also-ran there.

The sample size was small for Blaney back in 2017, his second full-time season at the Cup level. He was steady in five NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts from 2012 through 2014, with three fifth-place efforts and an eighth-place finish in that span. But his first three Cup starts there were forgettable, finishing 19th twice in 2016 and 25th in the 2017 spring race.

That all changed in October 2017.

“Fall 2017, it really clicked for me of, hey, here’s what I need to have the car feel like, and here’s how I need to drive it,” Blaney told NASCAR.com. “And I can’t say it was really anything specific. It’s just that we had a good race there, and it’s like, ‘Oh!’ Like a light switch all of a sudden. And, you know, fortunately, it’s transferred to the current car as well.”

Boy, has it. After those three throwaway starts, it now seems Blaney is inevitable every time the series heads to Martinsville: In 17 starts since the 2017 fall race, Blaney has two wins to bolster an astonishing 11 top fives and 13 top 10s. He has finished worse than eighth only four times in that span.

What changed between April 2 and Oct. 29, 2017? As always, the details are in the data. Then driving for Team Penske affiliate Wood Brothers Racing and its No. 21 Ford, Blaney leaned on quasi-teammates Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano for feedback and input, with the added benefit of having their in-car data available to him before that information became public in the garage in 2019. He also studied film to analyze who did what well around the 0.526-mile short track, particularly six-time Martinsville winner Denny Hamlin and two-time winner Kyle Busch.

“Those four guys, especially around that time — like ’16, ’17 — I really studied those guys a lot,” Blaney said. “And for me, just being able to talk to Joey and Brad, who were teammates at the time, like, picking their brains about how do they approach or see these certain things and moments in corners really helped me out. And then you can apply it, and you hope that it works, you know? So I’d say those three or four guys I really watched and tried to learn from more than others.”

Ryan Blaney and William Byron race at Martinsville.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

William Byron has a shockingly similar stat line to Blaney’s, down to the crummy first three starts — 20th, 39th (DNF, crash), 22nd — and only four finishes worse than eighth since. So it’s only fitting that last year’s penultimate race came down to a thrilling battle between Blaney’s No. 12 Team Penske Ford and Byron’s No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, with Byron getting the upper hand and earning his third Martinsville victory.

Now boasting a total of three wins, six top fives and nine top 10s in 16 starts, Byron had strong results at the short oval before breaking through for his first win there in the spring of 2022 — including a runner-up performance in 2019. But it wasn’t until that victory that he found what he was looking for.

“We had been pretty good there, but not great. There was always that little bit missing,” Byron said. “And I feel like there was just the last little bit of getting through the corner that I needed to understand. And I feel like when I understood how to make that part of the corner work, I feel like everything started to flow and I had more pace and just could take care of the tires better. So I would say it takes a good car, but it takes that feel and what you’re looking for to put it all together.”

Unlike Blaney, though, Byron said he didn’t lean on his teammates to figure out what was missing. That had to be found behind the wheel.

“I feel like I just kind of figured that out myself,” Byron said. “I had some advice from different people. … I think it kind of took a few races, and then it took my own learning to figure it out.”

In contrast to his younger counterparts, Denny Hamlin never quite had that light-switch moment. Instead, his background competing on short tracks around the Southeast prepared him for one of the Cup Series’ most unique challenges by the time he arrived for his first start in October 2005.

“It really started in late models,” Hamlin told NASCAR.com. “I had gotten to participate in the big late model race there for quite a few years before I got to the Cup Series. So if anything, it was one of the more easier tracks for me to adapt to. Speeds weren’t all that much different. Like, every other Cup Series track that I went to for the first time, it was like a late learning experience. And there, it was like my let-off points are similar, how you get back on the throttle was similar, how you roll the corner was similar. So I was able to adapt to it pretty early, just because of the short-track experience.”

Denny Hamlin celebrates a Martinsville win with a flag that reads, '11 against the world.'
Hannah Gentlesk | NASCAR Digital Media

What’s more fascinating is the prolonged success all three have found. All three had already proven themselves as Martinsville contenders long before the Cup Series shifted from team-built stock cars through 2021 and introduced the Next Gen vehicle in 2022, a radically different ride than what they had grown up racing.

But the success kept pouring in. Blaney and Byron each earned all of their Martinsville wins in the Next Gen car, and Hamlin enters Sunday’s Cook Out 400 as the event’s defending winner, with top fives in five of his last seven Martinsville starts.

“It is different, and how you make speed at Martinsville has changed with shifting, tires and the car,” Hamlin said. “But the general premise of what you need is the same.”

The driver has never been busier at Martinsville, shifting four times per lap through upshifts and downshifts while trying to nail braking points lap after lap — 400 times in the spring, 500 times in the fall.

The greats, though, know how to handle those stressors nearly unconsciously.

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“It’s a lot of stuff going on in there, for sure,” Blaney said. “But at those places like Bristol and Martinsville, the shorter places like that, you just get into this trance of doing it to where you’re not really thinking about it. But then you’re constantly having to adjust as the run goes on. So I feel like if you could just get into that rhythm zone quickly …

“And yeah, it’s pretty crazy that the old car drives completely different than this one with downshifts, brakes and roll speed, stuff like that. But the feel itself — like, this is how I feel like I have to roll through the corner (and) enter this certain way — that stuff kind of translates.”

This week’s race will present its own challenges. NASCAR arrives at Martinsville with 750 horsepower under the hood for the first time in the Next Gen era — an 80-horsepower increase from years past — with a simpler diffuser underneath, helping reduce the aerodynamic impact. There may be some unanswered questions, but Blaney, Byron and Hamlin surely know the feel they will need to earn another grandfather clock on Sunday.