HAMPTON, Ga. – Michael McDowell and Joey Logano performed their own version of “Trading Places” during NASCAR Cup Series time trials on Saturday at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
After finishing second to Logano in qualifying for the season-opening Daytona 500, McDowell will start his 467th Cup race from a position he has never occupied before — first on the grid — with Logano beside him in second.
Having won the first Busch Light Pole Award of his career, McDowell will lead the field to green in Sunday’s Ambetter Health 400 at the 1.54-mile track (3 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
All told, seven Fords and three Chevrolets comprised the top 10 in the qualifying session.
The only driver to break the 31-second mark, McDowell posted a time of 30.999 seconds (178.844 mph) in the final round of time trials, beating second-place Logano (178.424 mph) by 0.073 seconds.
Kyle Busch (178.235 mph) earned the third starting position, with Todd Gilliland, McDowell’s teammate at Front Row Motorsports, claiming the fourth spot at 178.080 mph.
“That’s awesome,” McDowell said after topping the session. “Two weeks in a row, we sat on the front row. We need to back that up with a good result (on Sunday). We’ve got both cars in the top five, so that’s awesome.”
Kyle Larson, defending series champion Ryan Blaney, Chris Buescher, Austin Cindric, Chase Briscoe and Austin Dillon will start the Ambetter Health 400 from fifth through 10th, respectively.
For the second straight race, no Toyotas advanced to the top 10 in qualifying, though Martin Truex’s 12th-place effort on Saturday was an improvement from Daytona, where Erik Jones was the fastest Camry driver in time trials at 22nd.
Daytona 500 winner William Byron missed the final round by 0.002 seconds (behind Hendrick teammate Larson.
The 400-miler (260 laps) is the second race of the Cup Series season.
A pair of Stewart-Haas Racing Fords in the NASCAR Cup Series had parts confiscated for further evaluation during inspection Friday evening at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
The No. 10 and 41 machines, driven by Noah Gragson and Ryan Preece, respectively, had roof rail deflectors seized at the track before Saturday’s qualifying session and Sunday’s Ambetter Health 400 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Any potential penalties will be announced next week.
Per the NASCAR Rule Book, roof air deflectors must consist of parts outlined in the below diagram. Additionally, they must meet the following criteria: be constructed of 0.05-inch thick aluminum; be installed perpendicular in the applicable slots; must not interfere with the functioning of the roof flaps; and must be painted.
NASCAR
While the roof rail deflectors do create drag, the most important function involves their aero properties and how they react specifically for cars spinning.
Roof deflectors also are a team part and not a single-source supplier part.
Additionally, the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Chevrolet of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. failed pre-qualifying inspection twice, resulting in loss of pit selection and ejection of their engineer.
CONCORD, N.C. – Ryan Patton has a recurring nightmare about his job that has awoken him in a cold sweat and clutching for a phantom tire.
“Usually it’s at Martinsville, and I’m outside the track trying to get in,” the Hendrick Motorsports tire carrier said. “And I’m not ready at all for a pit stop.”
That terrifying feeling hit him again Monday night at Daytona International Speedway – and somehow it happened during the biggest waking dream of his life. After pitting the No. 24 Chevrolet that William Byron drove to victory in the 66th Daytona 500, Patton, rear tire changer Orane Ossowski, front tire changer Jeff Cordero and jackman Spencer Bishop got barely an hour to celebrate the most sought-after prize in NASCAR.
The confetti hardly had settled on the Harley J. Early Trophy when the foursome suddenly was dashing off to 300 more miles of work on the pit crew for Sammy Smith’s No. 8 Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series race – the nightcap of the first Monday doubleheader in Daytona history. As Patton sprinted the length of pit road with a fresh set of radios while his teammates scrambled to grab new pit guns and equipment, the reality set in quickly.
“I’m like, ‘Holy (crap), I’m living my nightmare right now,’ ” he said with a laugh. “One of the guys on our team was trying to congratulate me, and he’s like, ‘Why are you running?’ Because I’ve got to go pit the next race!
“It was a lot of excitement, emotion and panic.”
Duty called at Daytona amidst the chaos of playing catch up. Though it was roughly 10 laps into the Xfinity race before they actually were ready to service Smith’s car (and another 10 laps before the pit box was complete), the crew members answered the bell and nearly swept the day (Smith led six laps and was contending for the top five before a last-lap incident) – a feat that left Dale Earnhardt Jr. stunned on social media.
While frustrated with the final results for @JRMotorsports, I spent a lot of yesterday evening in awe of the fact our #8 team was crewed by the Daytona 500 champions from @TeamHendrick who came straight from victory lane just as our race was going green. pic.twitter.com/kp9ntmMyjr
Though jokes were made in a pre-race meeting about skipping the Xfinity race if the No. 24 won the Daytona 500, there was no recourse for finding replacements. Plus, the challenge of possibly being crowned 800-mile Daytona champions immediately was accepted, as the crew explained Thursday during a group interview on the Hendrick campus to recount their wild adventure.
“With this group, whatever we do, we want to do our best,” Bishop said. “Even though we just won the 500, we can’t just half-ass it. So yeah, you’re on an emotional high, but we’ve got to refocus, lock in and do a good job for Sammy Smith as well. We can’t just phone it in and say, ‘Oh yeah, we won the 500, so sorry about that loose wheel.’ You still want to do a good job because that’s your reputation and your job.”
But there also still needed to be time to soak in the aftermath of winning The Great American Race, which was a first for Ossowski, Cordero, Bishop and fueler Landon Walker. As the party began with Byron on the frontstretch grass, there was an understanding that every last second of exultation would be used. Told no after asking half in jest if any substitutes had been found for the Xfinity race, Ossowski replied, “All right then. We’re going to be late!”
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
“When we went to Victory Lane, I wasn’t going to take one or two pictures and then bounce to pit the Xfinity race,” Cordero said. “I wanted to enjoy all of it. We got done taking pictures and were just hanging out after we sprayed the champagne. Then the Xfinity cars fired up, and I said, ‘This is fun. But we’ve got to go!’ ”
Walker tried to hustle his teammates to their next gig while also thrashing with a hodgepodge of Hendrick team members to get the No. 24’s pit disassembled and reorganized for transport to Atlanta Motor Speedway (a task normally handled by the full pit crew).
“I didn’t know if they were going to make it to the Xfinity race because Patton still was in the 24 hauler as the cars were literally about to take the green,” Walker said. “Obviously, I wanted to celebrate longer with those guys, but that was the only downside. It was funny how it all worked out.”
Between races, there were moments of absolute frenzy for every crew member.
After realizing he didn’t have their Xfinity pit guns (usually obtained an hour before the race), Ossowski made a mad dash to the supplier’s hauler in the garage and ran into Cordero, who was rolling back their equipment cart. While dropping off the Cup radios at the No. 24 hauler, Patton tore through every locker to ensure nothing was missing. Bishop scrambled to confirm he had the proper jack for the Xfinity car, and everyone hunted headsocks that went missing in the Daytona 500 celebration.
But the scene was relatively calm upon reaching the No. 8 Xfinity pit. JR Motorsports road crew members had done the heavy lifting of assembling the pit box with tires at the ready. Aside from a few personal touches and hooking up their pit guns, the setup work mostly was done.
“They did a really good exponentially helping us get all the basic stuff ready,” Cordero said. “It really took the pressure off us.”
Those orders enthusiastically came from the top down. When he arrived with a champagne bottle in one hand and a bag of Victory Lane hats in the other, Cordero immediately was greeted warmly by Earnhardt Jr. “Dale Jr.’s won that race, and he understands,” Cordero said. “Everyone at JRM knows how important that race is. They gave us a lot of grace when we got there, and they all congratulated us, too.”
Patton never will forget Earnhardt Jr. proclaiming, “Damn, man, I’ve got the Daytona 500 champs pitting my race car!” and Ossowski got a big hug from the Hall of Famer. “That was awesome,” he said. “I looked up before one of our stops, and Dale Jr.’s just standing there on his phone, taking pictures of tires on the wall. In Daytona history, Dale Jr.’s pretty high up, and he’s there with his headset just like ‘Hey man!’ ”
In another massive time-saver, JRM allowed the pit crew to stay in their Cup fire suits instead of changing into their Xfinity sponsor-branded gear.
“It hit me after the first pit stop when Sammy came on the radio and was like, ‘Great stop, boys. It’s good to see you made it,’ ” Patton said. “Kudos to him, because he’s looking for a Pilot Flying J red fire suit, and we’re out there in white Axalta suits. Pulling in with guys wearing different logos and fire suits running in front of him, it was a good heads up on his part not to think he was coming into the wrong stall and clipping one of us.”
Courtesy of Hendrick Motorsports
Monday marked only the second time since the Next Gen era began in 2022 that Cup and Xfinity races were held on the same day (May 29, 2023 at Charlotte Motor Speedway was the first). Cup switched to a single lug nut with Next Gen while Xfinity remained at five lug nuts, and there are distinctions in choreography, processes and speed.
On their first Xfinity pit stop, Cordero and Spencer slightly got crossed up because the jack man follows the tire changer in Xfinity and leads in Cup (where stops are much faster).
Bishop views the series’ pit stops contrasts “as two different sports. It’s almost like a heptathlete where one is shot put and one is discus. They’re similar but different enough. And whenever the car hits pit road, it really doesn’t matter what’s going on around you. You’re singularly focused. It’s just the nature of doing pit stops. If your mind is elsewhere wandering around, you’re not going to be great at your job.”
That includes distractions such as the bone-rattling mid-February chill of Daytona as midnight approaches. As the temperatures plummeted into the mid-40s for the final 20 or so laps, the No. 8 crew was left to shiver inside firesuits still damp with Gatorade and champagne from Victory Lane three hours earlier.
“That’s when it kicked in that the adrenaline was starting to tail off,” Patton said. “Because we hadn’t eaten since before the Daytona 500. We’d been there since 9 a.m. when the garage opened.”
The full wait actually was much longer. The pit crew arrived Saturday morning for Xfinity’s original afternoon start time. After a Sunday morning postponement of Xfinity and Cup, the team fruitlessly tried to pass the time with fun activities that never came to fruition — with everyone idling in Daytona, there were three-hour waits for go-karts and escape rooms. After another long wait to switch to unplanned hotel rooms Sunday night, they at least got a nice steak dinner at Firebirds (where they ran into No. 24 crew chief Rudy Fugle, who picked up their check).
There still was hope of the Xfinity race as a nice warmup before Monday morning rain pushed its start time from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
“We’d been there since Saturday morning, and now it’s Monday morning, and we haven’t done anything,” Ossowski said. “You’re anxious. We’ve been here three days. Can we pit a race car?”
Aside from a nervous moment on the first stop for Byron — who missed his stall after a near-collision with teammate Alex Bowman, whom he later would outduel for his 11th career win — the Daytona 500 went off without a hitch with most of the pressure on Walker, who made four fuel-only stops among the team’s seven.
“I am used to it, but it doesn’t ever get easier,” Walker said. “When it gets down to that moment of a fuel-only stop to potentially put yourself in position to win the race, it doesn’t matter how many times you’ve done it. It feels like the first time.”
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
The No. 24 pit crew got home at 4:30 a.m. Tuesday and had the day off. They were back at it Wednesday. Their Thursday morning pit practice ended with a red Cadillac Escalade V-Series driving the opposite way through the concrete launch pad. Team owner Rick Hendrick was behind the wheel, personally congratulating each team member who has made its share of history.
After delivering Hendrick Motorsports’ 300th victory last year, Byron gave the team a record-tying ninth Daytona 500 win (matching Petty Enterprises) on the 40th anniversary to the day of Hendrick’s first Cup start.
With so much to celebrate, the team threw another party Thursday night in Charlotte for a proper fete of the Daytona 500 triumph without time constraints.
“There are pit crew guys that go 10 or 12 years in a career and never win a race in all three divisions,” Ossowski said. “Every single one we celebrate like it’s our last because you owe it to yourself to be in the moment.”
MEET THE PIT CREW WHO PULLED THE DOUBLE
Ryan Patton: Tire Carrier
Hometown: Delphos, Ohio
Ohio Northern University
Has been at Hendrick Motorsports since August 2011 and was part of Jimmie Johnson’s championship teams.
Spencer Bishop: Jack Man
Hometown: Pine Hurst, North Carolina
Wake Forest University tight end from 2009-12.
Jeff Cordero: Front Tire Changer
Hometown: Salem, Connecticut
Was formerly at Joe Gibbs Racing from 2018-21 and won a championship with Kyle Busch.
Orane Ossowski: Rear Tire Changer
Hometown: Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada
Attended UNC Charlotte, interning with the chassis and composite shop at Hendrick before transferring to the pit department four years later.
One of a very small group of left-handed tire changers on pit road.
Kyle Busch has been chasing the Daytona 500 since 2005. The man with more than 200 NASCAR national series wins and two NASCAR Cup Series championships has just one thing missing from his personal trophy case — the Harley J. Earl Trophy.
This year was Busch’s 19th attempt in the “Great American Race” to try and get it.
The No. 8 Richard Childress Racing team gave NASCAR.com access to shadow the program at Daytona International Speedway, starting with Thursday’s Bluegreen Vacations Duels through the checkered flag of the Daytona 500.
Follow along for a behind-the-scenes look at the team’s weekend in the 66th annual running of the Daytona 500.
THURSDAY
After starting Duel 2 fourth, Busch was involved in a significant crash on Lap 47 that ended his night in the qualifying race for the Daytona 500
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
POST-WRECK: The No. 8 Chevrolet is towed to the far corner of the auxiliary garage. Most of the splitter is torn away, while scuffs decorate the vinyl wrap of the blue and green Camaro down the right side.
Within five minutes, the crew gets the car on jack stands, opens the hood and begins inspecting the rear deck lid with crew chief Randall Burnett. Car chief Clay Alexander struggles to rip the right-rear wheel off the car. Burnett and a NASCAR official inspect the inner wheel well of the right rear.
Officials reserve the right to decide whether a team fixes its primary car or swaps to a backup. The team’s backup car is already wrapped with the appropriate paint scheme, saving the team hours of additional work.
There’s also a sense of déjà vu: Busch crashed in the 2023 duel and used a backup car for the Daytona 500. He led at Lap 200 — the race’s scheduled conclusion — but the race went to overtime, where Busch was involved in a race-ending wreck.
At 9:52 p.m., Andy Petree, Richard Childress Racing’s vice president of competition, appears at the side of the No. 8 car. He finds Burnett and the two discuss the situation as the crew continues to assess the primary car while prepping parts for the backup.
“It’s just distressing,” Petree says. “We wrecked a lot last year — way too much. Kind of demoralizing to start off the whole thing here wrecking again. It’s just like last year. But I mean we rebounded very well and put ourselves in position to win the 500, just to get wrecked again. But we’re gonna keep fighting. This team’s got a lot of fight left. But it’s just a kick in the gut to have it happen again.”
Petree has been associated with elite superspeedway cars for the last 24 years, dating back to his days as a team owner with Andy Petree Racing and its then-alliance with RCR and Dale Earnhardt Inc. That RCR is a contender at every superspeedway is intentional.
“We do it on purpose,” Petree says. “This is the biggest race of our season so it means a lot to be good here and so we put a lot of emphasis on it. We put a lot of focus on it. I would say some years, maybe we put too much focus on it. You have the most time to prepare for the Daytona 500. You’ve got all offseason. You put all hands on deck. It’s just one of those priorities that Richard had and RCR had over the years.”
By 11:17 p.m., an enormous amount of work has been done. A new engine and all driveline parts are installed on the approved backup car as the crew works diligently. Had it gone unused, this car was previously slated as the team’s primary car for Atlanta. Heads are down, focused on the tasks at hand. The fabric protective cover is laid over the primary car at 11:18, and two minutes later, the backup is covered, ready to rest until tomorrow.
FRIDAY
The team resumes work when the garage opens at 9 a.m., with both primary and backup cars facing nose-to-nose as they were the night before. Roughly two hours into their work, the group is bumping old-school hip-hop classics on their speakers: Eric B & Rakim, Ice Cube, Dr. Dre, and The Fugees, to name a few.
At 1:31 p.m., finishing touches are being put on the backup car, hammering sides of spoiler ever so slightly to get it into the optimal alignment. Engine tuner Matt Lombardi ensures the belt tensions are correct and no fluids are leaking. Burnett says everything has gone as planned this morning. “The team knows the drill.”
Half an hour later, the backup sparks to life, its new Earnhardt-Childress Racing motor ignited. Lombardi is overseeing the engine, tuning as the power supply comes up to temperature. He goes to the car’s rear and works in the trunk with Alexander, and after wrenching in the right-rear portion of the trunk, Lombardi lowers the deck lid with an approving nod and heads back to the engine.
By 2:15 p.m., the car is ready for technical inspection. There is not an obligation to run through tech before Friday’s practice session, but going through now can confirm the car is up to par. Within 15 minutes, the car is back in the garage stall.
“I wouldn’t say clean and green,” Burnett says after the first go, “but not bad.”
Two hours pass before they go through tech a second time. What transpired in between involved walking through every detail again and adjusting based off what they saw in inspection the first time through. Alexander, the car chief, says going through twice Friday might save a step Saturday. This time, through, all is good and they’re ready for practice at 5:35 p.m.
Busch heads onto the track to make laps by himself to make sure there’s “nothing funny” with the car, Burnett says, and then plans to draft with other Chevrolets.
By 5:40, after completing a few solo laps, Busch is back in the garage. “Let’s go over everything, make sure everything’s good, then join the Hendrick guys and draft,” Burnett radios. But there’s some confusion. The Hendrick cars are still at speed. Spotter Derek Kneeland asks whether the No. 8 is supposed to join, or if they’re supposed to meet on pit road.
“I don’t know. We’re supposed to meet on pit road from 5:45-5:50,” Burnett says. Kneeland speaks to the Hendrick spotters and says they hadn’t been told anything.
There were three other groups on track at that time. The new goal? Blend with one of them. It’s 5:52 p.m. and Busch is the lead car in a draft of seven, with RCR teammate Austin Dillon, JTG Daugherty Racing’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Hendrick drivers Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, William Byron and Alex Bowman.
Over the next 12 minutes, Busch alternates positions in line — middle, trailing, leading. Burnett would like to see a couple more laps, but ultimately feels this is a good spot to get a read on the car’s balance. Busch reports the car drives fine, but a tight condition off Turn 4 is the biggest issue.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images
The session ends shortly thereafter, and the No. 8 Chevrolet returns to the garage. There, the team assesses what they learned during the 50-minute session, analyzes the adjustments they made and ultimately prepares to shut down for the evening.
“Yeah, it’s been a little chaotic,” Burnett says after the session. “Obviously, it’s less than ideal to get your primary car tore up. Fortunately, we had experience going through that last year, so we kind of knew what to expect. So, the guys did a really good job of getting the car together. The guys at the shop did a really good job of making sure the backup car was prepped really well. And so when we unloaded it, it was in really good shape. So that helped a ton.”
Busch’s feedback from the Duel helped inform Burnett’s direction on the backup car: The car started tight and built loose over a run, giving Burnett and engineers Nate Troupe and Andrew Dickeson something to ponder.
“I don’t know that we got it 100% of what he wanted, but I think we got the right direction,” Burnett said. “I think we’ll make a few more changes for Sunday for the 500 to try to help him with that.”
After practice, interior specialist Richard Parks explained this week’s workload was a “little bit worse than usual” because the backup didn’t have all the driver cooling components that were in the primary. But overall, with the help of Joe Mchone as an additional hand this week, “it really wasn’t too bad for us,” Parks said.
“Kyle’s pretty easy with all this stuff,” he added. “He’s not too hard to please, believe it or not. So yeah, it went pretty well for as far as the interior stuff goes.”
Standing in the hauler after snacking on Fritos dipped in Stan’s Pimento Cheese Spread, Burnett is pleased with what he sees at the end of the night.
“Now we can kind of fine-tune and fluff and buff on the car some and get it really right and work on some setup stuff that we wanted to try and go from there,” Burnett said.
As the group prepares to close shop for the night, the overriding sentiment now is optimism.
“We’re very positive. We feel like we’ve got a really good shot,” Parks said. “This is our backup car — not our best car or our best motor. … But we still feel like we got a really good shot at this thing, especially with Kyle driving the car.”
SATURDAY
10:25 a.m.: Cup Series final practice is canceled because of inclement weather, which didn’t change any of the No. 8 team’s plans anyway. The group remains hard at work preparing the car before inspection opens at 11 a.m. So far, “fluff and buff” has referred mainly to attention near the spoiler and deck lid, though Parks and Mchone tend to the front windshield and some center braces in the cockpit.
10:40 a.m.: The atmosphere is generally more tense at this moment, with the spoiler seemingly not cooperating with their preferred angles. Burnett takes a hammer to the back of the spoiler, direct center, trying to make it adhere both to their preferences and within NASCAR’s specifications.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR.com
11:57 a.m.: Over an hour later, the team is now lending some attention to the rear wheel wells and their corners nearest the doors. They’ve still yet to run through inspection and will have to warm the motor before they roll to tech. Parks estimates about another 20 minutes until then, but tensions have otherwise eased.
12:10 p.m.: Jim Campbell, vice president of GM Performance & Motorsports, makes his way to the No. 8 team’s garage as guests of Chevrolet tour the facilities. The timing is perfect as the car is rolled out of the garage and beneath an awning — the rain has steadied — as the engine roars, then purrs, then comes up to temperature. Campbell knows well the effort RCR puts into this race and cherishes the relationship with Childress. There aren’t many 50-year businesses or partnerships, he notes, but this one has lasted.
12:21 p.m.: Inspection time. The vibe is much lighter now than it was an hour ago as the team arrives to the first station. The Camaro is jacked up and placed on stands, wheels then removed and set aside. This station involves an overview of the chassis, so officials will look over the car inside and out — cockpit, wheel wells, trunk, hood, everywhere — to make sure all is compliant.
Here, Parks sparks more conversation. This year marks his 29th in the sport and 17th with RCR after stops at Bill Davis Racing and Petty Enterprises among others. He’s seen plenty of highs and lows at RCR in his tenure — and praised Tyler Reddick for getting them going in the right direction. Reddick still stops by to chat with the group as well, emphasizing the strength of those relationships. Parks also praises Alexander, the car chief, for his role in keeping this team sharp. “He’s made me a better mechanic,” Parks says.
12:41 p.m.: After 20 minutes, it’s onto the next inspection station. Former driver and now longtime official David Green inspects the cockpit, measuring the headrests and their clearances. Then it’s ahead to templates: spoilers, roof, side panels, windshields — all have a designated template that the car must fit. One official points to the left-rear deck lid and its aerodynamic shark fin before speaking with a crewman about it. There’s no significant hubbub here, but it does appear to be an area of concern.
1:04 p.m.: The car is back to the garage stall and scaled but will need to go through inspection once more. The underwing scanner showed the car was failing by thousandths of an inch. A first failure is harmless; a second could result in a crew member being ejected for the rest of the weekend.
1:50 p.m.: Back to the underwing scanner and holding their breath. “It’s just so tense because there’s so much that can go wrong,” Burnett explains. He reiterates Parks’ earlier praise of Alexander as the “unsung hero” of this team. Meanwhile, it’s time for the car to roll up the ramp and be scanned again. A minute later, it’s all smiles from mechanic Scott “Burt” Widener and Burnett.
2:05 p.m.: Back in the garage and all clear. The No. 8 car passed on its second run through tech. Now the car is jacked with only three team members allowed inside the stall at a time, overseen by one official. The crew removes the struts used for tech and installs the race shocks. This is the final step, then the car is ready for the “Great American Race.”
The relief is palpable as we step from the stall to the hauler. Burnett explains the relief of passing tech is “massive” because he doesn’t want his guys in trouble. It falls back on him as the crew chief, plus sponsors call asking why you can’t get through tech. “Just a mess.” The weight is off everyone’s shoulders now.
2:35 p.m.: The team is officially done for Saturday. No extra team meeting and everyone’s happy — ready for lunch. Today’s spread is tri-tip beef, barbecue chicken, beans and potato salad. One last “Nice job, guys,” from Burnett signals the end the day.
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. — The 66th annual Daytona 500 is officially postponed to Monday at 4 p.m. ET because of rain. Teams will be able to access the haulers at 10 a.m. Monday and their cars in the garage at 11 a.m. The crew uses the free day to rest and recuperate.
MONDAY
10:04 a.m.: It’s race day. Team members file into the hauler shortly after the garage area opens. Burnett snacks on Pringles and a can of Diet Coke while water-cooler chats commence around the hauler. All the car needs are race tires and an engine warmup. Then it’s ready for the grid.
10:25 a.m.: Kneeland makes his way to the hauler. After the Duel races, he and Busch spent an hour reviewing film and discussing takeaways from their qualifying race. Examining the wreck, Kneeland says it was a racing incident, the result of lost momentum from cars in front without much place to go.
We chat about his role, experiences and the significance of getting Busch to Victory Lane in the Daytona 500. “There is no secret everybody’s talking about that this week,” he said. That undertone has persisted through the race weekend. Today could be the day.
10:40 a.m.: A sense of gratitude is evident through the hauler. There are tired bodies but not worn-out spirits. Parks makes it a point to emphasize: “We get to work on this team. We don’t have to. We get to.”
Alexander, the car chief, has a similar reflection. He was a mechanic on the No. 3 Chevrolet in 2018 when Austin Dillon won the Daytona 500 and has the tattoo to prove it. Clay tried his hand at racing behind the wheel but realized that wouldn’t be his long-term path. So when opportunity knocked around 2012 for him to work at Phoenix Racing in North Carolina, he sold just about everything, including his truck, to move from Franklin, Tennessee, to make it happen.
“Yeah, we complain about the small details because we want everything to be perfect,” Alexander says, “but at the end of the day, I’m one of 40 people doing this at the top level.”
12:32 p.m.: Fitted with its race tires, the car is rolled into the procession, waiting for its turn to be placed on the grid. There are still three and a half hours until this race begins, but the sun is finally shining. There’s a nervous energy. Eight minutes later, the job is done: The No. 8 Chevrolet glistens in the sunshine, parked perfectly between the Chevys of Austin Dillon and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. at pit entry.
3 p.m.: While the drivers’ meeting begins in the media center, the No. 8 team meets in its hauler. Outside, Sheryl Crow’s “Soak Up the Sun” blares on the track’s PA system, fitting for the sunny Monday afternoon after two dismal days of rain.
Burnett leads the meeting with a succinct, “Welcome to Daytona.” He thanks the team for its hard work to get the backup car prepared after Thursday with a successful Friday practice. He cautions the team doesn’t have a great pit stall for Monday’s race — pit stall No. 20 behind Tyler Reddick and in front of Ryan Preece. That shouldn’t be an issue during green-flag stops, he adds, but something to be mindful of under caution. Burnett breaks down the stages and anticipates fuel-only stops — but be ready with tires in case Busch locks his tires coming to pit road and they need to call an audible.
“Today’s the day,” Burnett said. “Today’s the day we start our season. Let’s come out here strong. We got the best driver in the garage. That’s for sure. So, let’s do this proud and have a great day. Been fortunate enough in my career to win one of these things, and it’s something you’ll never forget.”
3:40 p.m.: Busch is introduced at the stage. Fans standing next to his car cheer loudly. Unlike past years, they are not anomalies. There is a notable pickup in cheers over jeers, a sign of changing times around Busch. Jared Reid, the tire technician, checks tire pressures at the same time, the air wheezing through the tire gauge. At 3:46 p.m., Parks is prepping the interior, getting tape stripped for Kyle to use when he straps in, safeguarding the data-collecting mouthguard Busch will utilize and more.
3:54 p.m.: Busch arrives to his machine, just minutes after his wife, Samantha, and their two children, Brexton and Lennix, arrived. They join Kurt Busch at the car, who was eagerly waiting to see his brother. Kurt knows what this race’s glory means, having won the Harley J. Earl Trophy in 2017 and speaks to Kyle separately at the left rear of the car. Perhaps today is Kyle’s day. He heads to the front of the car and takes five photos with sponsor guests — Zone, Chevrolet, RCR. Someone poses the basic-but-imperative question: “You gonna win?” “We’re gonna try,” Busch says with a laugh.
3:57 p.m.: With obligations complete, it’s family time for Busch. In his arms is 21-month-old Lennix while Brexton, 8, inspects the car. Samantha returns from a separate conversation and the four are ready for family pictures — first with backs to the tri-oval then backs toward Turn 4.
3:58 p.m.: Burnett and team owner Richard Childress have a brief conversation, jovially interrupted by the towering Brad Daugherty, co-owner of Stenhouse’s No. 47 just next door. The trio shares laughs and hugs and wish each other luck. NASCAR President Steve Phelps drops in as well, sharing a pleasant conversation with Childress.
4 p.m.: Reddick stops by on the way to his car, laughing with the group he worked with from 2020-22. Childress, meanwhile, has found the Busches, chatting with Samantha while Brexton and a friend laugh at their side. Kyle is still holding Lennix, who looks content in dad’s arms.
4:05 p.m.: The Busch family gathers just outside the driver-side door, heads bowed as the pre-race prayer gets underway. Then their hands land over their hearts for the national anthem. The Thunderbirds rocket over the tri-oval to end it and the family shares one last moment together before Kyle climbs in.
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR.com
4:31 p.m.: The starter gives the signal: One lap until we go green. Alexander, Widener and Mchone take seats in front of the live monitor. Reid stands behind them looking at his laptop. An anxious energy has persisted from the grid to this moment. All they want is to see that green flag.
4:34 p.m.: The green flag is out for the Daytona 500.
Lap 6: Caution. Harrison Burton gets turned near the front of the field with Carson Hocevar, spins through the tri-oval grass and back into traffic where Austin Dillon and Kaz Grala hit him. Busch escapes without damage and now sits 26th. “All good so far,” reports Busch. Alexander signals to the pit crew they will stop for fuel only, which is completed with no issue at Lap 9, rejoining in 27th.
Lap 41: “We’re real close,” Burnett says about fuel. Busch will need to save. Through the on-track jostling, Busch pushes Chase Elliott all the way to the lead, but Busch needs to fall back a bit to the front bumper of Josh Berry.
Lap 54: “Pit this time. Do not slide your tires. Fuel only.” That’s the message delivered to Busch, who’s also reminded to adjust his brake bias before hitting pit road.
Lap 55: It’s a clean stop and Busch escapes with the lead of the Chevy mates he pitted with, ahead of William Byron, Elliott, Daniel Suárez, Kyle Larson, Alex Bowman and Ross Chastain.
Lap 62: The Chevys — tailed by three Toyotas — storm at full throttle past front-runners David Ragan and Ryan Preece, who are in fuel-save mode. Busch leads for the first time today.
Lap 65: It’s a photo finish for the stage win, but Elliott takes it over Larson. Busch crosses the line sixth to score five stage points as the caution flag waves. Busch describes the balance of his race car “unpredictable.” He says it’s a little tight because he loses the nose, so he’s using more wheel to pull it down with the front tires. “10-4, pal,” Burnett says. “We’ll pit for four (tires) when it opens.” Busch can go when the jack is dropped but will wait a second on fuel.
Lap 67: “Tire, tire, tire. Grab it, grab it, grab it.” The tire was wrangled, but not in enough time to avoid a safety violation for interference with the No. 45 group pitting Reddick’s car. That will be a penalty and send Busch to the tail of the field. “I don’t think we waited on fuel, did we? Did we get it?” asks Busch. “No, we didn’t get it all the way full,” Burnett confirms. “I’ll let you know how short we are in a minute.”
Lap 68: Kneeland laments losing the stage win but Burnett pumps him back up. “You did a great job there, though, man,” Burnett said. “Last to first almost.” Moments later, the fuel situation is also clarified: “It’s not cram-packed full of fuel, but it’s pretty full. We’re gonna stay out and race from here, pal.”
Lap 69: Well, staying out was the plan until the penalty is called from the tower. With a trip to the back of the field in sight, Burnett calls Busch back to pit road to top off for fuel ahead of the restart.
Lap 100: Halfway home in the Daytona 500. Burnett tells Kneeland they’re about 15-18 laps away from needing to pit. “We gonna have anybody to pit with?” Kneeland asks. “I’m working on it, Derek,” Burnett says. “Give me a minute.”
Lap 113: “Pit this time! Pit this time!” It’s a fuel-only stop as Busch arrives to the box without issue, on pit road the same time as Dillon, Stenhouse, Suárez, Hemric, Zane Smith, AJ Allmendinger and David Ragan. Busch leads the group off pit road.
Lap 123: Busch surges to the lead by himself and maintains the top lane with pushes from Byron and Allmendinger while Cindric, Blaney and Suárez push to their left. Cindric is aggressively side-drafting off through the corners, nearly pinching the No. 8 car to the wall through the 31-degree banking.
Lap 130: In the outside lane, Byron shoves Busch, trying to urge them to the front and win Stage 2. But the Penske teammates on the bottom have other thoughts. Blaney jives left from behind Cindric exiting Turn 4, sending Cindric to the outside lane as Blaney goes on to win the stage. Busch is fourth at the line for seven stage points. “Well, hell of a job again,” Burnett radios. “I would’ve never guessed the 12 would’ve shucked the 2 like that.”
Lap 133: Disaster looms. Busch leaves the pit box on the jack, but the left-front wheel was never tightened. Somehow, Busch nurses it all the way back around the 2.5-mile speedway with the wheel still attached to the car, despite sparks and a flat in the process.
Lap 134: Busch returns to the stall and gets a new left-front tire — safely secured this time through — with a top-off of Sunoco gasoline. He stays on the lead lap and returns to the tail of the field for the third time today, including the start.
Lap 149: Hello, Rowdy. Busch surges back to the lead in a three-wide move in the tri-oval. He continues to lead the middle lane with Alex Bowman in tow as the bottom falls back, while Denny Hamlin and LaJoie work to move the outside lane. Is this the year?
Lap 161: Trying to fit into the hole between LaJoie and Christopher Bell in the outside lane exiting Turn 2, Busch loses the nose of his car and scrubs the retaining wall with the right side of his car. No harm, no foul, but a scare nonetheless.
Lap 176: It’s crunch time. Burnett hurries off the pit box and over to the No. 45 team’s command, where they discuss which lap pit stops might occur. Burnett hustles back to his box and formulates a plan.
Lap 177: The call is to pit this time — but it’s too late. Busch is stuck on the high side and can’t get down to pit with the Chevys from Kaulig Racing and Spire Motorsports.
Lap 178: It’s the Toyotas’ turn to pit, including Reddick’s No. 45 car. Burnett’s goal was not to pit at the same time as Reddick so neither team was slowed, and the No. 8 car stays on track for one more lap.
Lap 179 : Finally, Busch hits pit road with only Hamlin and Haley as companions. That Busch made it to pit road was a near-miracle in the team’s eyes, nearly out of fuel after last pitting at Lap 134 to rectify the left-front issue.
Lap 183: With pit stops complete, Busch reignites his charge toward the front. Within a lap, he goes from 25th to 15th using the inside line off Turn 4 before rocketing back to the outside exiting the tri-oval.
Lap 192: And it struck. At the head of the field, an errant bump from Bowman to Byron triggers a 23-car melee at the end of the backstretch, eliminating several contenders from this Daytona 500. Busch was able to slow to a near-stop and escaped unscathed, navigating through the minefield of debris in Turns 3 and 4. The No. 8 team has life in it yet — fittingly scored eighth as the red flag waves.
Lap 196: Back to green. It’s a four-lap shootout to decide the Daytona 500. The two lanes remain in parade formation as they build to speed, gridlocking Busch in 10th.
Lap 197: Finally, an opportunity to jump to the third lane out near the wall arises in Turns 3 and 4. Busch jumps right of Bell with a head of steam as help comes from rookie Zane Smith and four others to the stripe.
Lap 198: Across the start/finish line, Elliott comes up in front of Busch. The outermost lane previously led by Busch has to check up for Elliott, but the middle lane led by Chastain and Bowman now has no momentum, allowing the inside lane to advance further with Byron out front. The middle lane reforms and pulls up to battle for third, but Busch is effectively out of it. The jostling killed his momentum, and now he dives to the bottom lane at the back of the pack coming to the white flag.
Lap 199: Coming into the tri-oval, Busch gets a massive run and leaps to the center lane — perhaps there’s a chance to salvage a decent finish out of this after all. But there’s another crash at the front of the field. Chastain and Cindric collide across the stripe and slide through the tri-oval grass. Moments after the front-runners took the white flag, the caution flag is displayed. Race over.
Lap 200 is here. It’s the lap that Busch led in 2023. Then, it just meant an overtime finish was imminent. This year, Byron led at the time of caution and won the Daytona 500.
James Gilbert | Getty Images
So ends another chapter in the story of Kyle Busch’s search for the Harley J. Earl Trophy. There was no question his car was capable. There was no question the driver was capable. But when the green flag flew, circumstances favored others once again.
The procession down pit road post-race was subdued, traditional for the runners-up in the glorious-yet-merciless “Great American Race” — stunning and celebratory for one, dismal and heartbreaking for 39 others. Busch parked the car in line and removed his helmet and head sock. It was a hasty exit from the rubber-tarnished No. 8 Chevrolet after 500 miles, but an exit he can’t make without witnessing the 26-year-old Byron who once drove for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the Craftsman Truck Series performing exuberant donuts in the frontstretch grass.
Busch’s legs return to earth, he removes his mouthguard and meets with his public relations representative. He collects his hat, confirms he has no further media obligations, and begins the walk back to his motorhome through the Xfinity Series garage. En route, the reporters face the difficult job of finding the words to navigate another fresh heartbreak.
What can he say about the team’s rally through this year’s adversity?
“What about it?”
He was in position to capitalize on the restart that mattered most. What did he need for it to have gone right?
“I have no idea. I don’t know what could’ve been done different.”
“I don’t know when it was over per se,” he said of the end of the race. “We got down, we got back in line, we got out of the pits and we were seventh, eighth in line and tried to pick off a couple. Got shucked out of line. Got shoved to the back. I don’t know.”
The pursuit of questioning ends, and Busch walks away after two decades trying to claim the trophy that has eluded him in his NASCAR Cup Series career.
Petree walks behind pit wall toward the garage area, backpack in tow as he prepares to put this race behind him and head to the FOX Sports broadcast booth to help analyze the upcoming Xfinity Series race.
“We felt good about what we had today and it just didn’t work out,” Petree said. “These things, sometimes they work in your favor; sometimes they don’t. They just didn’t tonight. I’ve got to give Kyle a lot of credit. We got caught in a really bad spot with about 10 or 12 laps to go and he was like, the only thing we can do now is just be in a position to avoid the wreck which he knew was coming — then it did happen. And then that restart didn’t work out the way that I think that Kyle had figured it would. I think he probably thought there would have been a third lane forming sooner than it did, and it just didn’t work out.”
At 8:18 p.m. ET — as fitting a time as any for the longtime driver of the No. 18 car — the No. 8 Chevrolet arrives back at its hauler at the hands of Parks, Mchone, Burnett, Alexander and Lombardi. Twenty-hours later than scheduled, it’s time to load this car up and go home. But they sure wish it was being kept in Daytona instead as the centerpiece of the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America.
“I mean, the road crew guys did a great job,” Burnett said. “Everybody at RCR and ECR did a great job of overcoming some adversity this week to give us a car we could contend with after we got wrecked up in the 150 (duel) there. Had a great car for qualifying the car and good car for the 150 and got tore up and brought the backup car out and was capable of winning the race. So that says a lot about our team.
“On the flip side of that, we didn’t do a great job of executing. We’ve got some stuff to clean up on pit road for sure. Had really good speed. Kyle did a great job, drove his butt off all night long and just, disappointing. We had a car we were capable of winning with, and we just didn’t get it done tonight.”
Burnett was a member of Chip Ganassi Racing’s No. 1 team when Jamie McMurray drove that orange and black Chevrolet into Victory Lane at Daytona. He knows the glory of the Harley J. Earl. But he knows, too, the crushing weight of the losses Daytona more readily hands out — and has to Kyle Busch for 20 years.
“It’s just, it’s one of those things, man,” Burnett said. “It’s so much that’s gotta go right to win this race, and we didn’t have enough go right today. So we’ll come back again next year and try it again. You know, they give one of them Harley J. Earls out every year. So hopefully we’ll come back next year and carry it home with us.”
NASCAR.com’s 36 for 36 continues at Atlanta 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 — embark 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?
Standings after Race 1
Rank
Name
Points
Behind
T-1
Steve Luvender
284
—
T-1
Dustin Albino
284
—
3
Cameron Richardson
235
-49
4
r/NASCAR Community
219
-65
Race 2 of 36: Atlanta
Daytona yielded mixed results for our pickers to kick off the season. Cameron Richardson’s selection of Harrison Burton (No. 21) didn’t make it past Lap 6, while Dustin Albino and the Reddit community pick of Riley Herbst (No. 15) earned 13 points after a 24th-place finish. Steve Luvender’s ninth-place-finishing Noah Gragson (No. 10) pick yielded 28 points for an early points lead.
Now, with Daytona in the books, it’s time to focus on Atlanta — another drafting track that could come up big for the underdogs. How did our pickers plan this one?
Jayski’s Dustin Albino: No. 51, Justin Haley
Dustin’s pick last week (Daytona): No. 15, Riley Herbst Points earned last week: 13 (24th-place finish) Total season points: 13 (second place)
Dustin: Did you watch the Daytona 500!? At one point, Haley had driven up to second position for Rick Ware Racing. Haley is one of 11 drivers to have multiple top-10 finishes on the reconfigured Atlanta track. The Indiana native is known for being an elite superspeedway competitor, so would it really be surprising if he had another solid outing? After all, J.J. Yeley finished seventh for RWR in the most recent Atlanta race. Granted, it was cut short due to inclement weather.
NASCAR.com’s Steve Luvender: No. 2, Austin Cindric
Steve’s pick last week (Daytona): No. 10, Noah Gragson Points earned last week: 28 (ninth-place finish) Total season points: 28 (first place)
Steve: Is it a little unwise to waste a Team Penske driver on Race 2 and at a draft-heavy track where an underdog could shine? Maybe, but my early strategy is to make ‘bargain’ selections where I think a driver can bring in as many points as possible, like my Noah Gragson pick at Daytona that netted 28 points. (Yes, I’m bragging. The points leader is bragging.) Austin Cindric should be a solid bet for Atlanta. Not only is he quite adept at drafting — he was in contention for a second Daytona 500 win until a last-lap crash — he’s fared reasonably well in the current superspeedway-esque configuration at Atlanta, leading laps in each of the last three races with an average finish of 8.7 to show for it.
Cameron’s pick last week (Daytona): No. 21, Harrison Burton Points earned last week: 1 (39th-place finish) Total season points: 1 (fourth place)
Cameron: Sure, my Daytona 500 pick may have only completed five laps, so get your laughs in now. But that all changes now heading to the Peach State as I’m rolling with Todd Gilliland. The driver of the No. 38 led the third-most laps (16) in the “Great American Race” last Monday and was working his way to the front as the race wound down before getting collected in the 23-car pileup with nine to go. I expect the Fords to once again be fast at Atlanta, and Gilliland started inside the top 10 in the Cup Series’ last visit to Atlanta.
r/NASCAR Community: No. 7, Corey LaJoie
r/NASCAR’s pick last week (Daytona): No. 15, Riley Herbst Points earned last week: 13 (24th-place finish) Total season points: 13 (second place)
Corey LaJoie is far and away the subreddit choice of the week. And for good reason, too: Driver No. 7 has been a standout at Atlanta’s new configuration, earning back-to-back top fives in the spring race — the only driver to achieve such a feat. From the voting thread:
u/Striking-Insurance-3: “I believe Corey is a great vote for Atlanta, hasn’t shown same strength on other tracks as he has on ‘Superspeedways’ solid bet while saving some of the big dogs for later in the season”
u/Comprehensive-Bat760: “Picking LaJoie because he’s really underappreciated.
Plus, his 4th place finish in the Daytona 500 is going to help him.”
u/SBMVPJustinHerbert: “New New Atlanta history for LaJoie:
2022 1: 5th
2022 2: Blocked going for the win on the last lap
2023 1: 4th
2023 2: Running just outside the top 10 when he crashed
Pretty clearly his best track in my opinion, and coming off a strong 500 effort, is my personal suggestion for the week.”
Check back next week to see how our pickers fared at Atlanta as we begin the season-long 36 for 36 journey.
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!
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 for NASCAR exclusively since 2008 but has been involved with the sport since 1982, overseeing various projects. He 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 the Ambetter Health 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
The 13th stop on the 1964 NASCAR Cup Series schedule saw 39 drivers battle the attrition during a tough day in Hampton, Georgia.
Only 10 drivers were running at the finish of the 334-lap event, with 10th-place finisher Ken Spikes coming home 65 laps behind race-winner Fred Lorenzen. It was the series debut for the 29-year-old Spikes, who hailed from Cordele, Georgia.
It was the fourth time that Lorenzen had visited Victory Lane at Atlanta over his previous seven starts at the track. He led a race-high 206 laps, holding off the likes of Bobby Isaac, Ned Jarrett, Junior Johnson, Buck Baker and a handful of other legendary drivers who finished inside the top 10.
Many other drivers weren’t as lucky, as Cale Yarborough, David Pearson, Dan Gurney, and Parnelli Jones were just some of the 29 drivers who saw their days end early.
Cale Yarborough joined Richard Petty and David Pearson as the only drivers with at least 70 NASCAR Cup Series victories after his victory in Atlanta.
Yarborough exchanged the lead multiple times with rising star Harry Gant, before holding onto the lead for the final 47 laps en route to Victory Lane.
Gant, who started the race on the outside of the front row, was driving the No. 47 Race Hill Farm car for Jack Beebe. His strong run at Atlanta, one in which he led a race-high 94 laps, caught the attention of Hal Needham and Burt Reynolds. This was the final start for Gant in the No. 47 car for Beebe, with the North Carolina native making two one-off appearances the following two weeks at Bristol and North Wilkesboro before joining forces with Needham and Reynolds.
Reigning Cup Series Champion Dale Earnhardt finished third, while Bobby Allison and Benny Parsons rounded out the top five.
A.J. Foyt, driving his first race outside of Daytona since 1978, came home seventh. It was also his first appearance at Atlanta since he finished 34th in 1977.
You can watch these three races and hundreds more by visiting NASCAR Classics.
During the first race of the season last summer at Virginia’s Langley Speedway, Hunter Waltrip was involved in a wreck that tore half of the side off his truck.
After working tirelessly to fix the damage and get back on the track the next week, a few months later, adversity struck again. Waltrip was involved in another crash in which he hit the wall head-on, doing damage both to the car and himself.
“I thought my season was done after that,” Waltrip said. “But the crew, the family, we all came together and rebuilt the whole front end and we got it done just in time for the next race.”
For any other driver, two major wrecks in one season would have been enough to make them give up. But it was the work of Waltrip’s team, and the belief that no setback is too big, that pushed him to keep going.
“You never want to give up and I never wanted the mentality of, ‘Well this is how our season’s going to end so let’s just be Debbie Downers the whole season,'” Waltrip said. “Instead it was more of, if we can recover from this, then we can do anything. And sure enough, that was the mentality we had all season long. Every time we hit a speed bump or something came up, we always reverted back to, look what we came from the first wreck. If we can get through that, we can get through anything. So we saw it as more of an uplifting momentum and inspiration to do better.”
Despite two DNFs, Waltrip finished the season with four wins on his way to a Super Trucks division championship at Langley Speedway, a NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track in Hampton, Virginia.
After the first wreck, Waltrip’s season calmed down as he battled in the points with Chris Roberts, who finished with five wins and was fifth the final point standings.
Hunter Waltrip during the 2023 season at Langley Speedway in Hampton, Virginia. (Photo: Bill Carnes/Langley Speedway)
When the second crash happened, Waltrip was “ready to just take a break.”
He was hesitant to put the work in to fix the truck, and on top of that he was injured. There was also the thought that the accidents were signs a second championship just wasn’t in the cards for him. Waltrip won his first truck title at Langley in 2023.
Despite his hesitations, Waltrip’s team had the truck in the shop the day after his wreck and began putting it back together.
“Even when I was down, thinking the worst of the worst, my crew did such a good job uplifting me, telling me we got this,” he said.
Waltrip led the division by a couple points heading into the championship race. He made sure to coast that night, staying out of trouble as much as possible. He finished the night fifth and won the title by four points.
“I was confident as long as everything held together and we stayed out of trouble,” he said. “I didn’t want the demons and the gremlins to kind of wear on me thinking, ‘What if this happens? What if this happens?’ It was just, let’s take a deep breath. Let’s go out there for 25 laps and let’s get it done.”
Waltrip called his second championship “a humbling experience this year.” He can’t say which of the two titles were easier or harder to get, but said, “We definitely had to earn it this year.”
Hunter Waltrip Racing is a close-knit team that includes Waltrip’s dad, Brian, family, friends, and young crew members who are interested in learning more about the sport.
Racing has brought much of Waltrip’s family closer together. There are cousins he never saw much who now come to the shop twice a week and cheer from the stands and infield every weekend. Waltrip’s mom and sister also recently moved back to Eastern Virginia, giving them the opportunity to watch his races, too.
Bill Carnes/Langley Speedway
One of Waltrip’s high school friends came to a race last year, and now helps out in the shop, bringing his two young children along.
“They’re 2 and 4 and they’re running around the shop holding tools and wrenches and stuff, and they’re just loving it,” Waltrip said. “And that makes me feel good because it’s a family oriented environment and that makes me feel really happy that my friends and crew can bring their personal lives along with them and we’re welcoming them with open arms. That makes me feel really good.”
“There’s a passion in this team and an ambition not only to win, but just to race,” said team member Aiden Coleman. “At the end of the day, that’s what we’re here to do. We’re here to race, and winning is just something that fuels that passion and ambition. We’re always working together, we’re always around each other. We’re always open to ideas because that’s what you have to do to get it done.
“You have to be creative, you have to be innovative when you race or else you’re just not going to make it. You’re not going to be able to come back from hitting the wall or the opening night crash. You have to have that passion to be on that track.”
The 2024 season will bring new challenges to the Waltrip team. One of the sponsors told Waltrip if he won a second championship they would help him move up to the limited late model division. The sponsors stayed true to their word, and the team is now waiting for a new motor and looking for a transmission to build a new limited late model car this winter.
Waltrip has never driven a limited late model, so he bought an iRacing rig and is spending time racing on that before they can test their own car.
He knows racing in a new division will take time to get accustomed to, but Waltrip is confident he has the team behind him to make for an easy transition.
At the end of the day, the team will have fun no matter what comes their way on the track.
“I tell all the guys, don’t think of it as a job. We’re here to have fun,” Waltrip said. “As long as we keep that and we have fun, we can do almost anything. Because there are race teams, I’ve seen them and I’ve been a part of them, where it’s just like a job to them and they don’t have fun. They’re so stressed out and if they don’t win, they’re upset. That’s not us. We just do it for the fun. And the fact that we are successful somehow is just … that makes it so much more sweet.”
Powerball®, the Official Lottery Game of NASCAR, has brought back its highly anticipated national promotion, the NASCAR Powerball Playoff! The Powerball promotion will culminate with four lottery players winning a VIP trip for two to NASCAR Championship Weekend, Nov. 8-10, at Phoenix Raceway and a chance to win $1 million during a special drawing televised live from the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race on Sunday, Nov. 10.
Throughout the 2024 NASCAR regular season, lottery players will have the opportunity to enter the Powerball® promotion through their local lottery. Lotteries participating in the 2024 NASCAR Powerball Playoff include:
NOTE: Additional lotteries may join the promotion at a later time.
What is the NASCAR Powerball Playoff?
The NASCAR Powerball Playoff™ is a national Powerball® promotion that first debuted during the 2023 NASCAR season. Back for its second installment in 2024, the NASCAR Powerball Playoff will, again, culminate with four lottery players winning a VIP trip for two to NASCAR Championship Weekend™, Nov. 8-10, at Phoenix Raceway and entry into a special drawing to win the $1 million grand prize.
The $1 million drawing will be broadcast live prior to the start of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race™ on NBC.
Players can follow the NASCAR Powerball Playoff on Facebook and Instagram.
How do I enter?
Entry into the national Powerball® promotion begins at the state level, with participating lotteries holding in-state contests and second-chance drawings throughout the 2024 NASCAR regular season to form a national pool of entrants. Entry periods and method of entry will vary by lottery. Players should follow their local lotteries for entry dates and requirements. Lottery entry periods can be found here.
At the end of the 2024 NASCAR regular season, 16 semi-finalists will be randomly drawn from the national pool to advance to the Powerball Playoff drawings.
How do the Powerball Playoff drawings work?
The Powerball Playoff drawings are a series of elimination drawings that mirror the elimination rounds of the NASCAR Playoffs. In the NASCAR Playoffs, the top 16 drivers at the end of the regular season are eligible to compete for the championship title. After each NASCAR playoff round, the bottom four drivers are eliminated until the field of eligible drivers decreases from 16 to 12 to 8 to 4. The final four drivers, known as the Championship 4, are the elite group competing for the championship title during the final race of the season at Phoenix Raceway.
Likewise, the NASCAR Powerball Playoff™ starts with 16 national semi-finalists. As the NASCAR Playoff field of drivers is reduced, Powerball will reduce its playoff field of semi-finalists eligible to win the $1 million grand prize. Through a series of elimination drawings, the field of semi-finalists will be reduced from 16 to 12 to 8 to 4 – with the remaining four finalists winning a VIP trip for two to the NASCAR Championship Weekend at Phoenix Raceway and entry into the $1 million drawing in Victory Lane.
The results of each Powerball Playoff drawing will be revealed during select race broadcasts, beginning with the Round of 16 announcement on Sept. 1 during the NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out Southern 500 race at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, SC. Cash prizes will be awarded to all 16 national semi-finalists based on their elimination position, ranging from $2,500 to the $1 million prize:
What’s included in the VIP trip to 2024 NASCAR Championship Weekend?
The VIP trip experience includes roundtrip airfare for two to Phoenix, three nights hotel accommodations – double occupancy, two Ally Curve Hospitality Club passes for both the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship™ race on Nov. 9 and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship™ race on Nov. 10, two passes for VIP experiences at Phoenix Raceway during NASCAR Championship Weekend including NASCAR Cup Series™ VIP access, NASCAR team hauler tour, MRN radio booth tour, pace car rides, Victory Lane access, two Official NASCAR Championship Weekend™ Event Programs, two scanner rentals for use while at Phoenix Raceway, two souvenir gift bags, welcome dinner and all meals, and ground transportation to scheduled events and activities.
2023 NASCAR Powerball Playoff Coverage
Last year, four finalists from the Hoosier Lottery, Mississippi Lottery, New Mexico Lottery, and South Dakota Lottery traveled to Phoenix for a VIP experience at the 2023 NASCAR Championship Weekend. Before the green flag dropped at the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Championship™, Stephanie Walker of West Point, MS, was declared the inaugural NASCAR Powerball Playoff Champion and $1 million winner during a special drawing held in Victory Lane.
Nick Sanchez’s victory last weekend at Daytona International Speedway to open the 2024 Craftsman Truck Series season was meaningful for a handful of reasons.
It marked the first national series win for both Sanchez and Rev Racing, Sanchez no longer has to worry about points racing until the playoffs begin in August and the 22-year-old driver received a congratulatory message from one of motorsports’ icons.
Sanchez revealed in a media teleconference on Thursday that he received a text message from Mario Andretti after his Daytona triumph among numerous people who reached out to him.
“I have a couple of friends on Sundays, not too many though, but I had a couple of people reach out. I think this is hard to top. I got a text from Mario Andretti and I don’t really know if you could top that,” Sanchez said. “He’s a legend. To get a text from him and to just have his support and to know he’s watching is the best feeling ever.”
Andretti also posted a message on X shortly after the Truck Series race to congratulate the second-year driver.
Last weekend wasn’t the first interaction between the legend and rising star as Sanchez and Andretti met at Darlington Raceway last May as Sanchez and Rev Racing paid tribute to Andretti with a throwback scheme that paid homage to Andretti’s 1967 Daytona 500 win.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
Sanchez will look to make it back-to-back victories to start 2024 as the Truck Series heads to another drafting-style track at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Saturday (2 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
MOORESVILLE, N.C. — JR Motorsports today announced that two-time and defending zMAX CARS Tour Late Model Stock Car champion Carson Kvapil will make his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut at the famed Martinsville Speedway on April 6 behind the wheel of the team’s No. 88 Chevrolet.
As a product of JRM’s vaunted Late Model organization, Kvapil becomes the fifth driver from the program to make his NXS debut for the organization, joining Richard Boswell, Josh Berry, William Byron and Sam Mayer.
“Our Late Model program at JR Motorsports has been a huge part of the success we’ve had as a company,” said Dale Earnhardt Jr. “We’re excited to be able to give Carson the opportunity to take the next step in his career.
“Helping young drivers with opportunities to climb the ladder is part of the foundation of JRM. Carson is part of a long list of drivers who deserve the chance to take that step forward in the sport.”
Carson Kvapil and Dale Earnhardt Jr. pictured ahead of the ninth annual IceBreaker at South Carolina’s Florence Motor Speedway on Feb. 10, 2024. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)
A native of Mooresville, North Carolina, Kvapil started his foray into NASCAR competition last season, making starts in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and the ARCA Menards Series, scoring a career best ARCA finish of second at Kansas Speedway.
“I’m really looking forward to making my NASCAR Xfinity Series debut at Martinsville,” said Kvapil. “My dad (Travis Kvapil) made his NASCAR Cup Series debut there back in 2004, so it’s cool to make my first Xfinity start at the same track.
“I’ve run there in the Late Models for JR Motorsports and done well, and hopefully I’ll be able to use that experience to hit the ground running again with JRM in April.”
Kvapil heads into his third season with JRM’s storied Late Model program fresh off of back-to-back championships, nine wins, 27 top-five finishes and 951 laps led in his combined 34 starts in the CARS Tour. Kvapil’s two titles gave JRM their fourth and fifth championships for the Late Model team, which dates back to 2004.
He joins Berry as the only drivers to earn multiple championships for JRM across the Late Model and NXS competition.
Additional details regarding partners for Kvapil and the No. 88 team will be announced in the coming weeks.