LAS VEGAS – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell got back in his pole-qualifying good mojo mode Saturday morning at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – claiming the pole position for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series South Point 400 – his series-best sixth of the year and fourth in just the last eight races.

His No. 20 JGR Toyota turned a lap of 186.335 mph around the 1.5-mile Las Vegas high banks, securing the sixth pole for Toyota in the season’s seven NASCAR Cup Series Playoff races to date.

Bell will start alongside fellow Playoff driver Kyle Larson, whose No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was just a slight .010-second off the top speed.

RELATED: Starting lineup | Weekend Schedule 

“Qualifying has been really fun, really since the introduction of the Next Gen car – especially on the intermediate stuff — because it’s just right on the verge of holding your foot down and going wide open,’’ Bell said. “It’s right on the edge and it’s what I look for.’’

Bell’s posted three top-10 finishes in seven Las Vegas starts, with a best showing of fifth place just this March. A member of the Championship 4 in 2022, he knows a win at Vegas on Sunday would give him an automatic second chance at the sport’s top prize.

“I know we may not be the championship favorite,’’ Bell added. “But I know we have everything we need to do it.’’

“We’re in a good place.”

Six of the current eight playoff drivers advanced to final round qualifying on a coolish Saturday morning at the track. Current NASCAR Cup Series championship leader William Byron – who won at Las Vegas this March – will start his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevy third, alongside Regular Season Champion Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 19 JGR Toyota. Byron holds a five-point edge on Truex atop the standings after a reset for this three-race round.

Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher – also a playoff driver – was fifth fastest in the No. 17 RFK Ford, followed by Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch, 23XI Racing teammates Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick – the latter also playoff-eligible.

Defending race winner and reigning series champion Joey Logano will start ninth and Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain rounded out the top 10 drivers who advanced to final round qualifying.

Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney and JGR’s Denny Hamlin were the only playoff drivers who did not advance to that second round of time trials. Blaney will start 12th and Hamlin will start 15th on the 36-car grid.

JGR’s Ty Gibbs was the fastest qualifying rookie in 11th place.

Chastain fastest in Practice 

Ross Chastain topped NASCAR Cup Series practice Saturday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Chastain drove the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet right to the top of the single-lap speed chart, clocking in at 186.858 mph at the 1.5-mile Las Vegas track. Chastain soared right to the top of the practice charts on his third lap, punching in a lap time of 28.899 seconds.

MORE:  Practice Results | At-track photos: Las Vegas

Playoff driver Chris Buescher showed great speed, being the second-fastest in practice in the No. 17 RFK Racing Ford. Tyler Reddick boasted a strong showing in practice as well, after claiming pole position last weekend in Charlotte. Reddick was fastest in his  respective group and was third fastest overall.

Hendrick Motorsports drivers Chase Elliot and William Byron rounded out the top five in practice. Elliot suffered a blister on his right rear tire on Lap 15 of practice and ran hard into the wall out of the exit of Turn 3. He did not set a time for qualifying and will roll off 35th.

Daniel Suárez also found trouble in the practice session when he lost air in the right rear tire before spinning out. The No. 99 Trackhouse Racing driver did not set a time in qualifying and will start in the back with No. 9 of Elliott.

LAS VEGAS — Sheldon Creed heads into Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs race as a title contender in the Round of 8. He also heads in knowing he won’t be returning to the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet in 2024.

Creed announced his departure from the team on Wednesday, days after clinching his spot in the penultimate round of the postseason. His plans for the new year remain undisclosed, but ultimately felt ready for a new environment after two years of driving the No. 2 car.

“I don’t know, I think a lot of things play a role,” Creed told NASCAR.com Friday ahead of practice at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. “I’ve been happy. We’ve had OK runs, but I felt like it was time for a change for me just to switch things up a bit.”

MORE: Xfinity Series Playoffs standings | Weekend schedule: Las Vegas 

Creed, the 2020 Craftsman Truck Series champion, can earn another national series title in three weeks time at Phoenix Raceway if he advances to the Championship 4 round for the Nov. 4 contest. The Alpine, California native is still seeking his first Xfinity victory and aims to do so before leaving crew chief Jeff Stankiewicz and Co.

“We really want to finish really strong together,” Creed said. “And that’s important for not only myself, but for all the guys. Like, someone’s going to step into this car and have a good shot at winning with these guys and running well. And I want to help them prove how good they are and finish strong. If we can go and win one of these next three (races) and get ourselves in the final four and give ourselves a shot at the championship then yeah, I think everyone would be happy.”

That the announcement comes during the playoffs — and particularly with just four races remaining in the 2023 campaign — isn’t ideal for either party. But Creed’s next opportunity came quickly, he explained.

“Honestly, I thought I was going back to RCR if you had asked me four weeks ago,” Creed said. “Just an opportunity came up to make a change. I don’t know. We bonded on it for a while. RC (Team owner Richard Childress) and everyone at RCR are great people. They gave me my first shot out of trucks. So it’s not an easy decision. If we do make this jump, is it worth it? All those little things go through your head.

“I would have loved to have this behind us in August and then everyone could move forward. But here we are at the beginning of October, later than we all wanted.”

RELATED: Key players in 2023-24 Silly Season

The red and white No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet rolls through technical inspection at Las Vegas
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

Despite a run-in at Bristol Motor Speedway in September, Creed said his relationship with teammate Austin Hill has been strong for years and enjoyed working alongside him. Both drivers are still eligible for the Xfinity championship, with Hill seeded second, 21 points above the provisional elimination line thanks to four victories this season. Creed is seventh, 12 points beneath the line.

“Austin and I were kind of buddies in the Truck Series,” Creed said. “We raced for different teams and manufacturers obviously. We raced  each other really hard. And then I feel like we hit it off like as soon as we became teammates. We both have young families, hanging out. We hang out outside the race track a lot. And me and him were talking the other day actually. There’s a lot I’m gonna miss about just working with Austin and our families being around — which I’m sure we’re gonna hang out outside of this again, but it was super cool to to have a teammate like Austin and I feel like we worked really well together with the simulator and just things that we thought we needed in the cars. It was a fun experience.”

Hill and Creed both came into RCR and the Xfinity Series at the same time to run full-time schedules. Hill has netted six wins in his time at RCR while Creed is still seeking that first checkered flag. Creed said he has grown “so much” as a driver over the past two years as he’s adapted to the Xfinity car.

“The truck doesn’t prepare you well for the Xfinity car. It’s just a totally different deal,” Creed said. “So I felt like the first maybe half of last year was learning and getting used to it and just trying to better at my race-craft. Trying to get more and more and then I make mistakes and stuff. So I’ve tried to clean that up the second half of this year, and we’ve been good at finishing lately.”

Following the past race weekend at Thompson Speedway, the following penalties were issued:

Driver Sam Rameau of the No. 06 Rameau Family Motorsports team NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour entry is indefinitely suspended from NASCAR and any NASCAR-sanctioned events.

The rule infraction is as follows:

12-8

A. NASCAR membership is a privilege. With that privilege comes certain benefits, responsibilities and obligations. Correct and proper conduct, both on and off the race track, is part of a Member’s responsibilities. A Member’s actions can reflect upon the sport as a whole and on other NASCAR Members. Ideally, NASCAR Members are role models for the many fans who follow this sport, regardless of the type of license a Member may hold, or specific Series in which a Member may participate. Therefore, NASCAR views a Member’s conduct, both on and off the race track, which might constitute a behavioral Rules violation under the Rule Book with great importance.

12-8.1 Member Conduct Guidelines

C-2. Member-to-Member confrontation(s) with physical violence and other violent manifestations such as significant threat(s) and/or abuse and/or endangerment;

E-1. Actions by a NASCAR Member that NASCAR finds to be detrimental to stock car racing or NASCAR.

Six drivers have won three or more NASCAR Cup Series races in 2023 – William Byron, Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Kyle Larson and Chris Buescher.

Buescher, an eighth-year driver in the midst of his second postseason run, might be the outlier on that list that features three former champions, the series’ win leader this season and a 51-time winner overall. But his resume speaks for itself in 2023 alone with three wins, eight top fives, 15 top 10s and an average finish of 12.3 that ranks third among full-time racers behind only Byron and Chase Elliott.

There is little doubt RFK Racing’s Buescher belongs in the Round of 8 of the NASCAR Playoffs.

“I think we’re not at a point where we can be ignored anymore,” Buescher said in a Wednesday media teleconference. “We’ve made it a long way this season. We’ve outrun a lot of what were considered favorites from the get-go on the year, and we’ve outrun them very consistently through the second half of the season – even a little more so. 

“To me, like I said, I don’t know what everyone else is feeling. But I would say you’re gonna have a hard time finding somebody that’s not aware that we’re in this round and that we have an opportunity to make it to the next one.”

RELATED: Round of 8 playoff standings | Weekend schedule: Las Vegas

The only other time Buescher was a member of the NASCAR Playoffs was 2016, the result of a weather-shortened victory at Pocono Raceway during his rookie campaign while driving the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford.

Mother Nature has nothing to do with the Texas native’s success these days. Buescher stormed to Victory Lane in three of the final five races of the regular season, a stretch that included back-to-back wins at 0.75-mile Richmond Raceway and 2-mile Michigan International Speedway before snagging another checkered flag at the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway. Not bad for a driver who snapped a 222-race drought at Bristol in 2022.

In fact, that win was key in encouraging the No. 17 Ford’s pilot that he and his crew were capable of a deep playoff run this season.

As one of eight competitors left fighting for the NASCAR Cup Series championship, that belief has manifested into something tangible.

“This started last year for us,” Buescher said. “I was pretty confident where we got to at the end of the season that if we could improve upon where we ended, we would have a very good shot at this. It was set as a goal for our entire company at the beginning of the year was to take both of our cars deep into the playoffs – certainly an expectation for us.

“I think that we figured we were capable of this very early on. Our West Coast Swing was a little rocky to start the season. But it didn’t take but about four or five weeks, maybe six weeks, to start finding some momentum and get in a decent place. We got to the point where two and a half months into the season in, really started feeling like we were in the hunt.

“It came up pretty quickly for us this season. It wasn’t always probably apparent to a casual fan, but we measure our week in so many different ways internally that we could certainly see the progression and the opportunity ahead of us. And finally being able to really grab those wins later in the season really cemented it for everybody in the industry to see.”

MORE: Bubble Watch: Inside the playoffs | Las Vegas 101

With his sudden jolt of wins came well-deserved kudos from his competitors, who have seen the soon-to-be 31-year-old grind in the Cup Series over the past eight years. But performing at this stage of the season with so much on the line? Those congratulatory messages may not be as frequent as they were in August.

“I think at this point, we’ve probably worn out our welcome,” Buescher said. “… A lot of people that would have given advice before now probably aren’t going to at this point as we’ve been able to get this far. So you know, in a lot of ways we’re keeping with the status quo, what we know has gotten us to this point. Again, we’ve been in a good spot through every cutoff through the playoffs thus far. And I think we’re very capable of making it into this next one.”

Buescher will need to improve some stats if he wants to advance to Phoenix based on points. In a combined 36 career starts at Las Vegas, Homestead-Miami and Martinsville — the three ovals scheduled for the Round of 8 — Buescher has just two top-10 results with a best finish in the Next Gen era of 13th last year at Homestead.

But setting new milestones is what Buescher has done all season. His eight top fives and 15 top 10s, 15.1 average starting spot and 12.7 average finish are all career bests with still four races remaining in 2023.

“This is not coming as a surprise to us whatsoever,” Buescher said. “We’re thrilled to be here. And I’m happy to be halfway there on our goals for the season and our expectations. But we’ve got work to do yet. We’re not done.”

South Point 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway

(⏰ Sunday, 2:30 p.m. ET | 📺 NBC, NBC Sports App | 📻 PRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the 33rd points-paying race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Las Vegas playoff race 101

📍 Location: Las Vegas, Nevada
📐 Track length: 1.5 miles
🎟️ Buy tickets: Find weekend passes, seats for the race
💰 Cup Series race purse: $7,785,320
📏 Race distance: 267 laps | 400.5 miles
🔢 Stages: 80 | 165 | 267

📋 Starting lineup: Bell on pole at Las Vegas
🚗 Pit stall assignments:
See where drivers will pit
🏆 Defending winner: Joey Logano, fall 2022

Key things to watch 🔑

Saturday’s sessions

Christopher Bell hit the jackpot again in qualifying by earning his sixth pole of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It is also Bell’s fourth pole in seven playoff races. Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson will line up alongside Bell on the front row. William Byron, Martin Truex Jr. and Chris Buescher complete the top five. | Read the full practice, qualifying recap

Big story line

Can Martin Truex Jr. rediscover his regular-season mojo and become a championship favorite again?

To say the least, after a strong regular season, it has been shocking to see Truex’s dip in performance since the start of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. Despite all the bumps along the way, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver still managed to make a deep playoff run into the Round of 8, thanks to the 36 playoff points earned on the way to the Regular Season Championship. While Truex advanced to the Round of 8 by 12 points after finishing 20th at the Charlotte Roval, he does not have a top-10 finish in any playoff race so far. In the last seven races, he has finished 17th or worse.

The No. 19 team will aim to snap out of this cold streak on Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. In 11 of the last 12 races at the 1.5-mile track, Truex has two victories and just one result outside the top 10, including six consecutive finishes of eighth or better. With the current playoff format, winning can solve a lot of problems. If Truex wins at Las Vegas and earns another Championship 4 berth, that string of disappointing finishes will quickly become a distant memory. | Kyle Petty: Can Martin Truex Jr. rediscover early-season success?

History tells us…

William Byron may sweep Las Vegas in 2023 and make his first Championship 4 appearance.

Byron continues to enjoy a career year in the Cup Series, scoring six victories, most of all drivers. In the Round of 12, he finished no worse than second place and picked up the win at Texas to punch his ticket to the Round of 8. The driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet has seven top 10s in the last eight races. In the last 23 races, the remarkable consistency is clear with 15 top-10 finishes and four wins during this stretch.

Looking at Byron’s Las Vegas stats, the 25-year-old led a total of 255 laps in the last seven of nine races in Sin City. In the previous five races, he finished eighth or better three times, including winning the Las Vegas spring race earlier this year. Based on the No. 24 team’s momentum, there is a good chance that he may end up sweeping both Las Vegas races in 2023 and advance to Phoenix to square off for his first Cup title. | Relive Byron’s OT win in the Vegas spring race | Watch the race on NASCAR Classics

He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…

Ross Chastain. 
While the Trackhouse Racing driver will not be a part of this year’s Championship 4, there will still be opportunities for the No. 1 team to end 2023 with some solid results heading into next year. Most of 2023 has been hit or miss for Chastain, in a season filled with ups and downs. Chastain enters Las Vegas with 22-1 odds of winning Sunday’s South Point 400 (2:30 p.m., NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Chastain’s last six races resulted in three top 10s and finishes of 13th or worse three times. In the last three Las Vegas races, Chastain finished in the top three twice. Based on the No. 1 Chevrolet’s inconsistent finishes throughout the year, there is no telling which Chastain will show up to Vegas, but his recent history at this track suggests a respectable day could be a possibility despite no longer being in playoff contention.

The early returns on Saturday were favorable — the Trackhouse Racing driver qualified 10th and was fastest in practice.

Familiar favorites ⭐️

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles. 

• At-track photos: Sights and scenes from Las Vegas | Photos
• Bubble Watch: High stakes in the desert | See the analysis
• Fantasy Fastlane: Will MTJ hit the jackpot in Sin City? | See the picks
• Paint Scheme Preview: See the schemes for Las Vegas | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Which Martin Truex Jr. will we see in the Round of 8? | Latest driver rankings
• Stacking Pennies:
Ben Kennedy joins Corey LaJoie to talk about the 2024 schedule and marquee moments in NASCAR and his career. | Listen to the podcast

💎 NASCAR 75: Learn more about the history of the sport, from pioneers to current stars | Visit NASCAR 75 hub

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy and Fan Rewards.

• Fantasy Live: Participate in interactive gameplay from week to week | Choose your lineup
• Fan Rewards: New in 2023, get rewarded for your participation | Learn more
• NASCAR BetCenter: Don’t miss your chance to make picks each week | Visit the BetCenter
• Going the distance:
2023 Cup Series championship odds | See them here

🔮 Advance to Victory Lane: Racing Insights projects the finishing order

The first clue to solving the mystery of Josh Wise came at dinner. I told him to pick his favorite restaurant, and I would meet him there. Wise, whose company, Wise Optimization, counts as clients some of NASCAR’s top drivers, chose Masala Mastee in Davidson, North Carolina, where he lives, and then checked and double-checked with me to make sure I like Indian food.

I arrived a few minutes early and bounded up the stairs to find him already there. Tall and lanky, with a shaved head and blue eyes, he rose to greet me, clearly recognizing me even though we had never met. Starting with that dinner, I spent two days around Charlotte with Wise in pursuit of the secrets that have led his drivers to Victory Lane and the head table at the champion’s banquet. This was no easy task. Wise is simultaneously well-known in the NASCAR garage and an elusive Svengali shrouded in mystery.

MORE: Las Vegas schedule | Playoffs hub

He rarely gives interviews and would rather talk about his team of drivers and coaches and their results on the track than himself or the specific methods he uses to mold his clients into drivers capable of those accomplishments. His clients love working with him so much some won’t talk about him for fear of revealing the advantage he gives them. They’ve even resorted to subterfuge, with at least one driver giving others credit in interviews while privately acknowledging Wise actually deserved the praise.

What, I wanted to know, is Wise doing to create that mystique?

I flew to Charlotte to find out, and in several hours of conversation, I started to wonder who was profiling who. Wise asked me nearly as many questions as I asked him, and he listened to and engaged with my answers.

We discussed taking our daughters to see Taylor Swift, the Dunning-Kruger effect, how fear self-selects drivers out before they reach the Cup level, Comanches, glasses that track where drivers are looking, what he learned visiting with the Los Angeles Dodgers during spring training, and when we got around to it, racing, including the Hail Melon, Chili Bowl (we discovered he raced in it and I covered it in 2003), F1, and how the entire sport is maddening because the relationship between performance and results is not 1 to 1, a fact that, as much as anything, explains the need for Wise’s services.

He is Aristotle of the asphalt, Socrates of stock cars, a simmering stew of a man who is best known for racing, endurance sports and coaching but whose interests run far wider. A world-class driver himself, he brings to Wise Optimization the listening ear of a therapist, the resilience of an endurance athlete and the wisdom gained by on-track failure. He has become NASCAR’s Driver Whisperer, a man whose background in racing and fitness, education in psychology and deep study on optimization have given him unique insight into the human condition that he channels into teaching drivers how to go fast, turn (mostly) left, and live their best lives all the while.

But how does he do it?

The answer, it turns out, is as simple as passion, as complicated as human relationships, and as profound as redeeming pain.

Josh Wise stands outside his Xfinity Series car at Michigan
Rey Del Rio | Getty Images

A superstar in open-wheel cars in the 2000s, Wise arrived in the NASCAR Cup series in 2011 with a world of opportunity laid out in front of him. But from outside the garage it looked like his racing career turned hard right into the retaining wall. In 156 races across six Cup seasons, he had one top 10 and led just seven total laps. He spent untold mental, physical and emotional energy and gathered nothing to show for it.

That’s what he thought at the time, at least. Because the second clue in solving the mystery of Josh Wise is that what he once viewed as failure he now sees as preparation.

When he decided to stop driving after the 2016 season, he dreamed up a business to help drivers optimize their results — to redirect their careers away from the proverbial retaining wall. He would become for others what he had needed himself. As an accomplished triathlete, he already had a reputation for marbling physical fitness with driver preparation. He pitched the idea to Max Jones, a friend and mentor who was an executive with Chip Ganassi Racing at the time.

“I’m going to build a program to help these guys be way better than they even know they’re capable of,” he told Jones as they talked in the garage area.

“Wait right here,” Jones said, and he hustled to the team hauler to round up other Ganassi officials so Wise could pitch them, too. That led to a formal presentation at Ganassi headquarters a few weeks later. Wise was soon working with Ganassi drivers Kyle Larson (now with Hendrick Motorsports) and Jamie McMurray.

Even in those early days, when Wise’s one-man program was a faint shadow of the eight-person operation it is now, there were signs that something was changing, something deeper than Wise doling out lessons about fitness, braking points and resilience. Racing has had psychologists and exercise coaches and performance experts for many years. But nobody had ever done all of that in one holistic program, let alone the way Wise does — with a singular blend of 30,000-foot view expertise, barrel-through-the-corner-sideways experience and put-his-arm-around-you-and-say-man-it-sucks-to-try-so-hard-and-lose compassion.

“It comes down to his empathy and ability to connect with a driver as a person,” says Eric Warren, GM’s executive director of global motorsports competition.

“I don’t know how he’s doing it, but he’s convinced them and next thing you know, they’re more into it than he is,” Jones says.

“Josh’s most important goal is to read each driver and ask, where does he need help, and how can I help him the most?” said McMurray, who is now retired from racing and works as an analyst for FOX Sports.

Wise follows the answers to those questions wherever they lead. With McMurray, it was toward fitness. When Wise first suggested McMurray run to get in shape, McMurray gave him all the excuses in the world why he couldn’t.

Just run for five minutes, Wise suggested, like a fisherman choosing the exact right fly and casting it to the exact right spot, then walk home.

Five minutes — that’s it? McMurray thought, a trout unaware he was about to be hooked. I can do that.

McMurray tried it.
It wasn’t so bad.
He did it again.
And again.
And again.

Five minutes became 10, then 20, and by the end of that year McMurray had ran a marathon. Now McMurray says he doesn’t feel right on days he does not run.

“It changed my life getting to be a part of that program,” said McMurray, who ran 10 miles the morning I interviewed him. “Forever.”

All of Wise’s clients have stories like that, each marked by the fact that whatever change Wise initiated started with his passion for optimizing their lives. This is the third clue to solving the mystery of Josh Wise: No client of Wise Optimization ever has to wonder whether Wise cares. Helping other drivers has become his true calling.

“I love this more than I ever loved driving a race car,” Wise says. “Driving a race car is a very selfish activity. You are alone. It’s all about you. I absolutely love making it about other people. It’s the most fulfilling years of my life, for sure.”

It’s that passion that’s allowed Wise to look back on his racing career with new perspective.

“I feel like I only raced cars to prepare me to do this. That’s really how I feel,” he says. “It was an important part of my life experience that allowed me to do something that I really love, and I feel like I’m just made to do.”

He paused. He knows how that sounds, so he answered the obvious question before I asked it.

“Try telling me that 12 years ago when I was a race car driver,” he says. “I would have laughed in your face.”

Josh Wise fist-bumps Justin Allgaier on the grid at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Studios

As Wise’s reputation grew, so did demands for his business, his sense of what was possible and his recognition of what more he could offer. His drivers shared with him problems from their personal lives, issues he was unqualified to comment on, let alone solve. He believes it’s better to not say the right thing than to say the wrong thing.

“So I was just quiet a lot,” Wise said. “But in that silence, I knew, I couldn’t help you if I wanted to.”

If he was going to optimize their lives, Wise realized, he had to help the whole person, not just the driver. So he earned a degree in psychology.

He also hired former F1 and NASCAR driver Scott Speed to teach driving skills, Olympic gold medal winning speed skater Dan Jansen to run Wise Optimization’s physical training and former soccer coach Matt Spear to oversee mindfulness and resilience. All of that, he says, has energized his business and the quality and diversity of what it offers. The operation expanded beyond just Ganassi drivers: Wise now works with two dozen Chevrolet drivers ranging from Kyle Larson to aspiring young drivers he shepherds in a program akin to a driver academy.

That growth yielded stunning results for his clients. Larson won the Cup Series championship in 2021, and Sheldon Creed won the Craftsman Trucks championship in 2020. Tyler Reddick won the Xfinity Series championship in 2018 and 2019, though Wise doesn’t count Reddick’s titles because Wise “only” served as a consultant for Reddick back then and was not working with him full-time.

The morning after dinner, I met Wise at GM’s Charlotte Tech Center, also the home of Wise Optimization headquarters. He gave me a tour of the pristine 130,000-square-foot facility that sits close to both Hendrick Motorsports and Charlotte Motor Speedway. I peeked into one room and saw a NextGen car painted with NASCAR’s 75th anniversary logo sitting on a shaker rig. In another, Wise client Austin Dillon and others worked on simulators. In a third, mechanics fiddled with an open-wheel chassis.

Inside his headquarters, which Chevy provides as part of his deal to work exclusively with its drivers, a rowing machine and treadmills lined one side, with weights stacked along the other. The sauna contained books by Anthony de Mello (an Indian Jesuit priest), John Maxwell (an American pastor and business writer) and Don Miguel Ruiz, who writes about Toltec wisdom (the Toltecs ruled Mexico 1,000 years ago). Wise proudly pointed out a collage of pictures — one each of all the drivers who have won a race while working with him.

Inspirational quotes were also displayed prominently at the headquarters.

There was one from Danish-American journalist Jacob Riis: “When nothing seems to help, I go look at a stonecutter hammering away at his rock perhaps a hundred times without as much as a crack showing in it. Yet at the hundred and first blow it will split in two, and I know it was not that blow that did it, but all that had gone before” …

It shared space with a quote from basketball superstar Kobe Bryant: “Everyone wants to be a beast, until it’s time to do what beasts do” …

And there was one attributed to Albert Einstein that Wise says sums up his philosophy about racing and life and his attempts to optimize both: “Energy is everything. That’s all there is to it.”

We talked far more about striving, failure and achievement in the context of racing than we did about the actual nuts and bolts of driving. Which makes sense, because the service he provides goes far beyond simple driving instructions. He seeks to optimize the whole person, starting with the space between their ears.

Before he works with a driver, he asks them to fill out a 13-page questionnaire, from which he builds a psychological profile that is at least as important as the person’s ability to wheel a race car. He translates those questionnaires based on his formal education and his own ongoing quest to understand what makes drivers good at their jobs.

Reading is an important part of the process for Wise. He reads three times a day, including scientific literature three times a week, and writes at least once a week. He prefers to own hard copies of books and likes to keep them in sight because their presence sometimes kick-starts some serious deep-thinking sessions.

“I’ll see it, and it’ll bring a thought back to my mind — all these concepts and thoughts will come flooding in,” he says. “I like that experience.”

Wise is insatiably curious, and open to new ideas. During our interview he pulled out his phone and bought a book I recommended moments after I brought it up. He delights in discovering questions to ask at least as much as answering them. Let’s assume, for simplicity’s sake, that the most important question he asks in pursuit of driver optimization is, “What makes a driver good?”, an important but ultimately unanswerable question. But Wise loves trying anyway.

“I could scroll like this for four minutes and not run out,” he says, showing me a document on his phone that contains questions he wants to chase the answers to. “Every one I answer, I get three new ones.”

The fourth secret to solving the mystery of Josh Wise was sitting right across from me all this time. Our conversations about life and curiosity and passion and longing for that which is temporarily out of reach reveal at least as much about why he’s successful as his coaching secrets would.

As Jones told me: “There’s a lot of people who have tried to copy what he’s doing. But the key to it is Josh.”

Or this from Warren: “I’m here to tell you, I don’t think (his coaching skill) is unique to just racing. I think he has a skill set to encourage any athlete.”

———-

After the tour of the tech center, Wise and I jumped in his SUV and drove to GoPro Motorplex in Mooresville, North Carolina, a karting track owned by Justin Marks, co-owner of Trackhouse Racing. There we met Speed and Creed, an Xfinity Series driver who won the 2020 Truck Series championship with a dash from ninth to first in the final three laps of the last race of the season.

Speed instructed Creed to run three kinds of laps: “wide-ass open,” in which he should push himself to the limits of control; “no slip” in which the car and tires should always be pointed in the same direction; and in between those two. I watched Speed and Wise as they watched Creed. Wise watched with an all-but blank mind, trying not to let any preconceived notions of what Creed should or shouldn’t do cloud his assessment. Speed watched more like a batting coach assessing a hitter’s swing.

During the “no slip” portion, Creed’s squealing tires suggested there was plenty of slipping going on. His sawing of the wheel offered more proof. Creed’s background is in off-road racing. He drove as if he defined “no slip” as in control, which he surely felt he was, as opposed to the more literal definition of the tires not slipping. No slip to him might be damn near rolling over for someone less experienced in off-road racing.

Making that discovery, and learning from it, was the point of this drill. As Creed prepared for another set of laps, Speed told him to over-exaggerate the no slip — to lean in to being deliberate about it. “If it’s 7/10ths slower a lap, it doesn’t matter,” Speed told him. “I want it to look like a slot car.”

“Slot car,” Creed repeated back, like a child ordered to eat broccoli.

It was at least as much of a mental exercise as it was a physical exercise for Creed. But the point was not that a no slip lap is fast or slow or that a wide-ass open lap is fast or slow. The point was for Creed to expand what he believes he is capable of. There should be a huge gap between no slip and wide-ass open. For Creed, before the exercise, there wasn’t. Sometimes that gap is similarly narrow but it’s the other way around, and a driver has to be pushed to be more wide-ass open.

“That’s the beautiful thing about what we do,” Speed says. “Every one of our drivers has their own perspective on everything. I can tell them all the same thing, and they’re all going to have their own perception on what that means. If they’re biased in one direction, I try to build something that they can explore on the other side.”

Josh Wise chats with Ross Chastain on the grid at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Studios

Wise says he doesn’t like to have his life depend on external input, so he occasionally quits drinking coffee. He told me on the way to a coffee shop that he ended his most recent fast the day before. “I had like three sips, and I was calling people, telling them how much I love them,” he said.

From this, he extrapolated deep meaning.

“I have this simple philosophy. Everything comes at a cost,” he says. “If I drink coffee, the cost to me is I become dependent on it. If I don’t drink coffee, I miss the joy of drinking coffee.”

In a different form, he explores this topic when he meets with a new client.

“We have that talk right out of the gate: ‘What do you want? Be specific. What do you think that costs — your time, your energy, what do you have to give up, what do you have to be uncomfortable with?’ There are a lot of things that spiral off of that conversation.”

He asks himself those same questions and builds his life around the answers. He has a system for everything — from where he puts his keys to the clothes he wears (only black, white, gray and blue). He created those systems to free his brain energy. He never has to think, what should I wear, or where did I put my keys, because he knows the answer to both questions.

“I want to do as little thinking about things that don’t matter as possible so I can use my brain for things I care about,” he says.

What he cares about most in his professional life is right there in the name of his own company: optimization. And perhaps the best proof of the power of his program came when he became his own client.

One day a few years ago, two of his clients, Alex Bowman and Larson, pestered him about driving again. He had slammed that door shut … but left it unlocked. The most fun he ever had racing was a pavement midget at Indianapolis Raceway Park. Maybe — maybe — he’d do that, but only that, he told Bowman and Larson. It was, he admits, a dodge. Pavement midget races at IRP were, as he put it, “extinct,” so it didn’t matter.

And then they came back to life.

Bowman called to tell him he had ordered a midget for him before Wise had even heard the announcement.

He tried to back out but eventually decided to do it. He saw it as a chance to have fun, to show his kids what he used to do, and to validate his ideas about optimization. He wrote a system to prepare himself physically, mentally and technically, just like he would for any driver. That system called for him to study video of himself at IRP. One night, he watched an old race on YouTube while in bed. Like a seasoned artist aghast at an early painting, he recognized right away that he entered the corners all wrong.

He added to his system a plan to work with Speed — who has world-class braking and cornering skills — to learn how to drive deep into corners. After starting in the back during his first race, Wise used braking skills he learned as part of his system. Wise knifed his way to the front, dive-bombing the leader with four laps left to win the race.

For Wise, it was a mic-drop moment. He proved to his kids, and to himself, that he could still wheel a race car, and also that his systems work. And here, then, is the final clue to solving the mystery of Josh Wise.

He has become for his clients what he wished he had for himself.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series begins its all-important push to the 2023 championship with Saturday afternoon’s Alsco Uniforms 302 (3:30 p.m. ET on the USA Network, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) — the first race in this final three-race round to set the Championship 4.

JR Motorsports driver Sam Mayer closed out the last round with one of the most clutch performances of the season. The 20-year-old led 50 of 67 laps to claim victory in what was a “must-win” race for him at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course and earn him a position in this vital next round of competition. Not only did it send him to the penultimate playoff round, but it also vaulted him into the fourth-place bubble position two points up on Stewart-Haas Racing driver Cole Custer in fifth.

RELATED: Xfinity playoff standings | Full Las Vegas schedule

Only two drivers in Saturday’s field have won an Xfinity Series race at Las Vegas — Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill, who is ranked second in the playoff standings 21 points above the elimination line — and JR Motorsports’ Josh Berry, who was eliminated from the playoffs last weekend.

Hill won at Vegas this spring and a repeat performance would place the Georgia native in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship 4 for the first time in his career. The driver of the No. 21 RCR Chevrolet could also become only the second driver in track history to win back-to-back races — matching a mark by Chase Briscoe, who swept the 2020 season races there.

As has been the case all season, Hill can expect stiff competition from Joe Gibbs Racing’s John Hunter Nemechek. The driver of the No. 20 JGR Toyota has a notable history in Round of 8 opening races wherever they may be, winning that race on the schedule twice — when he was not playoff-eligible.

Nemechek shows up in Vegas with a series-best and season-high seven victories and 22 top-10 finishes through the opening 29 races. His 956 laps led is nearly three times that of any other driver. He has three top 10s in five series starts at Las Vegas with a best showing in his first series race there — a runner-up in 2019.

JR Motorsports veteran Justin Allgaier is ranked third in the championship. He’s also a multi-time winner in 2023, claiming three victories and holding a reasonable 17-point cushion inside the top-four standings. He has yet to win at Vegas but has four runner-up showings, including one in March.

Also, championship-eligible this weekend are Stewart-Haas Racing’s Cole Custer, Kaulig Racing rookie Chandler Smith, RCR’s Sheldon Creed and JGR rookie Sammy Smith. Chandler Smith, in particular among those four, boasts a promising Vegas resume — winning the pole position and leading 118 of the 200 laps to claim a third-place finish in his March debut there.

Practice for the Alsco Uniforms 302 is slated for 7:05 p.m. ET on Friday, followed by qualifying at 7:35 p.m. ET — both televised on the USA Network.

Throughout the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, Advance Auto Parts is spotlighting a series of Home Track Heroes from NASCAR-sanctioned short tracks around the country. Each Home Track Hero, nominated by his or her peers as a result of contributions made to the race track, will have his or her name appear on the C-Post of Ryan Blaney’s No. 12 Team Penske Ford Mustang in a Cup Series Playoff race. Erika Bills, the Pit Boss at Alaska Raceway Park, is the Home Track Hero whose name will appear on Blaney’s car during the South Point 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Those at Alaska Raceway Park have a simple word to describe Erika Bills: “Invaluable.”

A banker by trade, Bills serves as the NASCAR Home Track’s Pit Boss, working mostly in concessions and sales. But, more or less, she does it all.

Bills keeps Alaska Raceway Park’s pits in order, assisting new drivers, training other track officials and assisting wherever else needed. She even trains other employees across the state of Alaska.

Bills handles sales during Alaska Raceway Park’s offseason, and on the drag strip side, she recently took over concessions management. Perhaps her most important role at the track, though, is her ability to serve as a mentor and coach to Alaska Raceway Park’s young drivers.

A former Legend Car driver herself, Bills is the perfect role model for kids who look to race in Alaska.

Bills is not only a Home Track Hero at Alaska Raceway Park; she’s a hero in the community.

She helps with seemingly everything, from the Food Bank, delivering meals to the youth during the summer, to volunteering with the local baseball league and assisting with the Special Olympics.

She’s famous for her peanut butter balls, many of which she donates for fundraisers.

Erika Bills epitomizes a Home Track Hero.

Kyle Larson turned his first official laps in an Indy car on Thursday, passing his Rookie Orientation Program (ROP) test at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and checking off the first requirement for his 2024 Indianapolis 500 bid.

RELATED: Photos: Larson at Indy test | 2024 NASCAR schedule

Larson drove a No. 6 Arrow McLaren/Hendrick Motorsports entry on the 2.5-mile oval, successfully completing the three phases of his rookie test — 10 laps between 205-210 mph, 15 laps at 210-215 mph and 15 laps faster than 215 mph. The 31-year-old driver, a 22-time winner as a regular and former champion in the NASCAR Cup Series, will attempt to qualify for his first Indy 500 start next May.

Larson’s best lap speed in the final session was recorded at 217.898 mph, and his best clocking through the speed traps at the end of both straightaways was 221.187 mph.

“Building up to that speed and pace and confidence was nice to do in ROP, but yeah, just getting to feel what an Indy car feels like, being low to the ground, feel the acceleration through the gears was pretty crazy,” Larson said. “All of that was eye-opening and an experience that I know for sure I’ll never forget, and now I look forward to kind of getting around cars and feel how the dirty air affects things.”

Larson is set to become the fifth driver to attempt the Memorial Day Weekend double on May 26, 2024, aiming to compete in the Indianapolis 500 before traveling to Charlotte for NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600. The designs of the cars and “Hendrick 1100” branding for Larson’s two-race effort were unveiled at the Indianapolis track on Aug. 13, seven months after the Indy 500 bid was confirmed.

A full delegation of Hendrick Motorsports dignitaries made the trip, including team owner Rick Hendrick, vice chairman Jeff Gordon and team president and general manager Jeff Andrews. For Gordon, the visit was partly a reconnection to his Indiana roots and the site of some of his biggest stock-car successes – with the inaugural Brickyard 400 triumph counted among his five IMS wins.

The track’s historic significance was one focal point, but the task of getting Larson up to pace was the primary thrust.

“On the other hand is just Kyle, watching him in his craft and his element,” Gordon said. “I could tell he was a little bit nervous. Heck, my palms were sweating before he got out on track myself, but then immediately you just see it click when he made those first few laps, and he just went into Kyle Larson mode of, ‘all right, now how do I get up to speed and go fast.’ … He doesn’t want to just come here and compete. He wants to come here and compete competitively.”

The moment also held a surreal feel for Hendrick, who stood alongside Larson for the reveal of the liveries back in August.

“It didn’t really hit me until I saw him,” Hendrick said. “We had the car here when we had the unveiling, but when you hear it and see it come by, and he’s in it, that’s when it really … it was goosebumps. It was goosebumps, it was pride, happy for him because it’s a bucket list for him and probably Jeff and I, too. But just to hear it, see it and watch the speed when it came then, that brought it all to life.”

The test was conducted under the watch of IndyCar officials but also Arrow McLaren sporting director Tony Kanaan, who hoisted the Indy 500 trophy in 2013. Larson’s next on-track steps at the Speedway will come in an Indy 500 open test next April. Kanaan said that so far, Larson’s talent has made his coaching and consulting role an easier job.

“I don’t think Kyle Larson needs evaluation as an IndyCar driver,” said Kanaan, an IndyCar champion in 2004. “He’s a complete race car driver. It’s probably, out of his generation, the best I’ve seen. I’ve tasted a little bit what these guys do, like he does trying different cars lately, and I know how much I struggle, and he wins in everything. … He’s just one of the best race car drivers in the world right now, and I’m very fortunate to actually get the chance to work with him.”

As for Larson’s next steps on the NASCAR side, his quest for a second Cup Series championship continues this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway with Sunday’s South Point 400 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). The race is the opener for the postseason’s Round of 8.

At first blush, the transition from an Indy car at Indianapolis to a full-bodied stock car at Las Vegas might seem like a tight and potentially jarring turnaround. But Gordon brushed off the suggestion that rookie testing at Indy might stretch the team thin, noting Larson’s penchant for extracurricular racing of all types of vehicles – including a drive to a championship two days ago in the High Limit Sprint Car Series at Lincoln Park Speedway in Putnamville, Indiana.

“For Kyle, I mean, that guy’s off racing all the time. He’s all over the place,” Gordon said. “So the team is well prepared. He and Cliff (Daniels, crew chief) have been prepping and planning for this weekend, and they’re very well prepared for this next round. Feel very good about this next round. It was this last round that was the nerve-wracking one, and we saw it all the way down to the final lap at the Roval.

“So from our standpoint, we’re fortunate to have enough great people and depth at our organization to be able to prepare for what’s ahead and really make sure that’s the priority, and the focus for the company is to go win a championship this year, get through this next playoff round and go to Phoenix, but also be up here and be able to enjoy a day like today.”

For most drivers, a 21.3 average finish through six playoff races would mean that their title hopes ended in the Round of 16 or last Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Not the case for Martin Truex Jr.

The 2023 Cup Series Regular Season Champion scrapped and clawed through the opening rounds of the postseason. Survive and advance is rarely a superlative slung at someone who performed the best out of anyone through the first 26 races of the year, but when you look at the numbers, it’s stunning that Truex is one of eight drivers eligible to hoist the Bill France Trophy at Phoenix.

RELATED: Cup playoff standings | Las Vegas schedule

Off the bat, Truex didn’t record a single top-five or top-10 result in the first two rounds. His best finish in the postseason so far is a 17th-place effort to open the Round of 12 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Looking deeper into Truex’s current slump, he ranked 17th in points scored among all Cup drivers during the Round of 12, below Brad Keselowski, Ross Chastain and Bubba Wallace, who were all eliminated in the round. Truex currently ranks 24th in total points scored in the playoffs and is averaging 17.7 points per race in the playoffs after averaging 34 points during the regular season. (Stats provided by Racing Insights.)

The most jarring numbers show just how much of an outlier this performance has been for the driver of the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

Truex has finished outside the top 15 in the last seven races, which is his worst streak since 2009 — his fourth full-time Cup season. Given how his outings have been, it’s no surprise Truex is just the first driver to advance to the Round of 8 despite not having a top 10 through the first two rounds.

One could make the argument that Truex benefitted off the mistakes of his fellow competitors, and there’s a case to be made for that.

It seemed as though the writing was on the wall for Truex after crashing in the opening laps at Kansas put him below the elimination line heading into the Bristol Night Race. While not having the best of races himself with a 19th-place showing, Kevin Harvick finished 29th and 2022 Cup champion Joey Logano crashed out, allowing Truex to overtake Logano to put him through to the Round of 12.

Texas and Talladega were Truex’s ticket to the Round of 8. Kyle Busch wrecked out at Texas in the closing laps of Stage 1, and Ross Chastain wrecked at a near-identical point of the race at Talladega after Ricky Stenhouse Jr. spun entering Turn 3.

Despite capitalizing on the downfall of others, Truex’s strong regular season is more the reason why he’s currently on a never-before-seen playoff run — never before has being the Regular Season Champion been so valuable and important to a playoff run.

What also flies under the radar is Truex Jr.’s ability to finish races. It’s not always the top 10s, top fives and wins that get the job done.

During the regular season, Truex failed to finish only once after getting involved in a late-race crash at Darlington in the spring. On the other hand, Kyle Busch — who also has won three races — DNF’d on five different occasions (Daytona 500, Bristol Dirt, Kansas spring, New Hampshire, Michigan).

The DNFs and stage points were the biggest difference as to why Truex’s title hopes are still alive and why Busch was eliminated at the Roval.

With Truex still in the hunt, he’s arguably still among the favorites to win his second championship despite the woes — he has, after all, won at all four tracks remaining on the Cup Series calendar in Las Vegas, Homestead, Martinsville and Phoenix.

At Las Vegas specifically, Truex has finished inside the top 10 in the last six races at the Nevada oval, and is the only driver to finish top 10 in all three races there in the Next Gen car.

Truex can only go up after how he’s fared in the playoffs so far, but no better time to start the turnaround than at Sunday’s race in Vegas (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

He’s made it this far on the strength of his regular-season title. If he finds himself back on the right side of results this weekend, the championship still looms for the No. 19 team.