WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — A drive that may have saved his playoff hopes finally left Bubba Wallace proud of his efforts in a road-course race.

Notorious for struggling on twisting tracks throughout his career, Wallace left Watkins Glen International with a 32-point cushion as the final driver provisionally inside the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs grid heading into next weekend’s regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway.

“Exceptional day. Exceptional day,” Bootie Barker, crew chief of Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota, told NASCAR.com. “I mean, I’m super-pleased with how we ran. Stage points, everything was just clean. And Bubba did exceptional. So it gives us, I mean, just a massive chance at Daytona. So I’m real pleased.”

MORE: Playoff standings | Daytona weekend schedule

Wallace left the 2.45-mile, seven-turn road course with a 12th-place finish, netting five stage points along the way to pad his provisional spot in the postseason as he aims to qualify for his first playoff run. That performance followed an 18th-place showing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course one week earlier that kept Daniel Suárez 28 points behind Wallace in the postseason hunt.

“It’s a really good day,” Wallace said. “You know, looking at last week, we gave up 30 points. And I think everybody, including myself, was like, ‘Man, probably gonna be the same thing (Sunday). We’ll go into a heads-up battle with the 99 (Suárez) or whoever it may be.’ But man, we actually gained points. So just thankful for the team, everybody at 23XI (Racing), Bootie continuing to preach to me about how good we actually are and how we don’t struggle as much as I think we do, and just giving me the right resources to get these good results because, man, it’s tough. I’m tough on myself. I think we all know that here. But just good to execute and come out with an OK points situation.”

Bubba Wallace exits his car after the NASCAR race at Watkins Glen
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Studios

Wallace’s place in the postseason picture has endured its fair share of ups and downs over the past several weeks. After the Aug. 7 race at Michigan, the Alabama native was 55 points to the good, a more-than-comfortable margin with three races left in the regular season. But road courses have typically been Wallace’s Achilles’ heel, emphasized by his collective one top five and two top 10s in 25 previous starts. He didn’t add to either column Sunday, but he added where it counts most — the points tally.

A chunk of credit, Wallace said, goes to Barker, who has helped keep Wallace’s chin high when Wallace has needed an extra kick of confidence.

“He’s a warrior, man,” Wallace said. “He leads the troops to battle, and he gets you in the right mindset. And that’s what you need. You know, this is an all-out war from the start of February to the start of November, and you have to just grind. And so to have that mentality that leadership is a massive help for us and for me. So at times where I get down and out, you know, he’s kind of there to get me right back in shape.”

Barker was realistic in his approach to the No. 23 team’s efforts and knew he had a capable driver. Bringing the right pieces together is one thing; getting those pieces and people to execute the job is another.

“We just all tried to get all we could,” Barker said. “I’m not gonna sit around here and tell you we were all just roses and everything was positivity. It wasn’t. It was a battle with all of us helping each other to get all we could. You know, it was tough. But we’re taking it serious, and I’m proud of everybody.”

Focus now shifts to Daytona, where Wallace and 17 others will fight for the final berth in the 16-driver playoff grid on Saturday night (7 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock, NBC Sports App). If Wallace wins or maintains a point advantage at Daytona without a first-time winner of 2023 emerging, the spot will be his. But if any other full-time driver wins at Daytona who has not yet won this season, Wallace would be ousted.

That makes the task at Daytona fairly straightforward.

“Attack,” Barker said. “We got to try to win it.”

RELATED: Playoff watch is on for Daytona

The problem, of course, is that will be most teams’ strategy.

“Hell, anybody can win Daytona, so we’ve just got to go and win,” Wallace said. “That’d be great. You know, it’s not a must-win situation, but it can be. Look at the No. 3 car last year and what happened there. So you know, we’re not safe by any means. Doesn’t matter who’s behind me in points. It could be whoever’s (full-time) wins, so then we’re ultimately out. So long as you just go and execute and run our own race and don’t get caught up in something stupid, we’ll be all right.”

Wallace’s numbers on superspeedways speak for themselves: one win (Talladega-2, 2021) and five top fives since 2018. Daytona has been particularly rewarding for him, the site of three runner-up finishes, including two in the Daytona 500.

“Past success doesn’t guarantee future success, that’s for sure,” Wallace tempered. “So we’ve got to go out and just get through qualifying and stages and just run our own race. We know what we need to do there. We showed that at Talladega. Just don’t need to crash on the last corner.”

As for the pressure of trying to make the playoffs? Wallace welcomes it.

“I like when our backs are against the wall,” he said. “People were kind of writing us off. We show up and deliver, so it’s something to be proud about.”

NASCAR and Netflix announced a partnership Monday for a new documentary series that will tell the in-depth story of the 2023 Cup Series Playoffs.

The docuseries — a collaboration that partners the streaming service with production companies Words + Pictures and NASCAR Studios — is scheduled to premiere on Netflix in early 2024. The format is scheduled to showcase the Cup Series postseason with behind-the-scenes insights in five episodes of 45 minutes each.

RELATED: Cup Series schedule | Cup Series standings

Filming has already begun on the series, which will detail the title bids of the 16-driver field through the 10 races that will decide the Cup Series championship. The playoffs are set to start Sept. 3 at Darlington Raceway, and this Saturday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 (7 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock, NBC Sports App) at Daytona International Speedway will conclude the regular season and determine the cast of postseason hopefuls.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. is among the list of executive producers, joining Ben Kennedy, Tim Clark, Matt Summers and Tally Hair of NASCAR Studios on the productions side. That group will partner with Connor Schell and Libby Geist (who both worked on The Last Dance 30 for 30 and OJ: Made in America) and Aaron Cohen of Words + Pictures.

The announcement follows last year’s Race for the Championship series, which featured the 2022 season with an intimate look at drivers’ lives on and off the track.

The still-untitled series is the latest Netflix sports offering, coming on the heels of releases featuring the NFL, Formula 1, the PGA Tour and professional tennis. The streaming service also has plans to feature athletes in track and field, U.S. women’s soccer and rugby.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — William Byron added to his season highlight reel, earning his first career NASCAR Cup Series road-course victory with a dominant win in Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen at historic Watkins Glen International.

It marks a career-best fifth victory of the season, tops in the NASCAR Cup Series and the most for him in a single season in a six-year career in NASCAR’s top series. And the 25-year-old Charlotte native had to earn this one — holding off another championship challenger, Denny Hamlin, by a healthy 2.632 seconds for the win. Byron led 66 of the 90 laps — extending his advantage over the field each lap of the final 10-lap run to the checkered flag.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

“Yeah, I would have to think about that a little bit, though,” Byron said when asked if he felt like it was his most dominant race win. “But it definitely feels really good, just a huge credit to the race team behind me. I want to thank Max Papis. My first road-course win, and we worked years and years for this.

“Thanks to all the guys on the team. I did a lot of laps on iRacing this week, got a new simulator at home. It’s a great win. It shows when we’re at our best, we can perform like this.”

Byron, who won Stage 2 on Sunday, noted the timing is important as the series heads into the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

“We seem to go through that summer slump in July and August, and for some reason, we just can’t put the races together, I think it’s the race tracks themselves. But this weekend, we came with a good mindset and focused on getting ready for the postseason. We’ve had fast cars. Just haven’t executed races, but today was flawless.”

WATCH: Byron discusses the victory | Wallace talks about finish

Hamlin’s runner-up finish keeps the NASCAR Cup Series Regular Season Championship up for grabs. He trails Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. — who finished sixth — by 39 points heading into next week’s Daytona regular-season finale.

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell finished third, with Kaulig Racing’s AJ Allmendinger and JGR’s Ty Gibbs rounding out the top five.

Truex, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher, 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick and Team Penske teammates Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano rounded out the top 10.

With finishes of 15th and 21st, respectively, RFK Racing owner/driver Brad Keselowski and Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick both locked themselves into the 2023 playoffs based on points. That leaves only one position to be decided in Saturday night’s regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway.

23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace solidified his hold on that all-important 16th place in the points standings that could automatically transfer him into his first postseason berth. Although Wallace concedes road-course racing is not his strongest suit, he did exactly what he needed to, turning in a non-dramatic, consistent day. Wallace, who said he had a valuable phone conversation with six-time IndyCar Series champion Scott Dixon before the race, earned points in both stages. His 12th-place finish was his best road-course finish of the five run so far this season.

He now holds a 32-point advantage on Gibbs and a 43-point advantage on Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez.

“Just executed, really,” Wallace said, noting that no new race winner Sunday certainly helps his cause in pursuing a playoff berth.

“I’m proud of myself, and that’s the first time I’ve felt proud of myself after a road-course race. Just executed and didn’t lose focus, maybe one time. And that’s the difference-maker. You’ve got to stay on it in these places. Hats off to my team for sticking with me and believing in me.

“Great day for the 23-team,” he added. “Now we get to go into Daytona, still stressful as hell, but it takes a little bit of the edge off.”

On the flip side of fortune, it was a troublesome day for two of the other high-profile teams still needing to race their way into the upcoming playoffs and needing a race win.

MORE: Elliott runs out of fuel at Watkins Glen | Watch Elliott incident at The Glen

Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott — the five-time and reigning Most Popular Driver in the NASCAR Cup Series — came into the race already depending on a high-speed Hail Mary of sorts. He was 80 points behind Wallace at the green flag. But Elliott’s team was slowed by an uncharacteristic fuel miscalculation. His No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet ran out of fuel with 23 laps remaining, stopped on-course and brought out a caution flag to push him back to pit road for a fuel-up.

Elliott returned to race a lap down and finished 32nd and is now 21st in the standings.

The three-time Daytona International Speedway polesitter will need to earn his first win at the superspeedway to advance this season and keep his eight-year run of championship eligibility going. Elliott has two runner-up finishes at Daytona, in the 2020 summer race and the 2021 Daytona 500. He finished 29th in the summer race there last season.

Elliott wasn’t made available to comment after the race.

“That’s sort of the agony of a four-car team when one car does so well,” Hendrick Motorsports executive Jeff Gordon said of the day at The Glen. “It just shows you can’t make any mistakes.

“Unfortunately, we had some mistakes,” he added. “Clearly, it was a miscalculation with the 9 car (Elliott), and that was huge.”

Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez started the day only one position out of the top 16 — 28 points behind Wallace. But Suárez was the first of those on the bubble to encounter issues — going off-course at the famous “bus stop” portion of the Watkins Glen course and brushing the wall only five laps into the race.

The rookie Gibbs actually improved his standing among those still within playoff reach as the regular season closes. The driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota — who led a race-best 70 laps in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Watkins Glen — ran among the top five all Sunday afternoon as well. His fifth-place finish Sunday was the best among those in the close fight for a playoff berth. He goes to Daytona Beach 32 points behind Wallace and needs a win.

MORE: 2023 Cup standings | 2023 Cup schedule

“I felt like we were really fast,” the 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion Gibbs said. “I just didn’t do a good job of getting through the guys in front of us. I feel like we were much faster than three of them in front of us, and I just couldn’t get by them.”

The NASCAR Cup Series regular-season finale to set the 2023 16-driver playoff field takes place at Daytona with Saturday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 (7 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock, NBC Sports App). Austin Dillon is the defending race winner. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won the Daytona 500 in February.

Note: Inspection in the NASCAR Cup Series garage concluded without issue, confirming Byron as the race winner.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — A critical fuel miscalculation in the penultimate race of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season left Chase Elliott in a must-win position to make the NASCAR Playoffs.

Elliott finished 32nd, one lap down, in Sunday’s race at Watkins Glen International, the result of his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet running out of fuel at Lap 55 and bringing out the only caution of the 90-lap race.

The defending Regular Season Champion enters next week’s regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway 21st in driver points, 101 points beneath the line to advance into the postseason. Elliott will need to win at the 2.5-mile superspeedway to qualify for the playoffs, which he has never missed in seven previous seasons.

RELATED: Race results At-track photos: Watkins Glen

“Clearly a miscalculation with the 9 car and that was huge,” said Jeff Gordon, vice chairman of Hendrick Motorsports. “He came in a little bit short the first stop (at Lap 17) and so they were trying to stretch it to get closer on the strategy of the others. And you always want to pad yourself here just in case there’s a lot of restarts at the end, and the fuel just wasn’t there. So it was really unfortunate.”

Elliott qualified 15th for Sunday’s race and had worked to 13th place before his first pit stop. The move netted Elliott six positions, getting him to seventh after the running order cycled through. The gamble to stretch it fell short and the No. 9 car came to a halt in the run-off area of the bus-stop chicane, forcing the yellow flag to fly and ending any chance of an Elliott victory.

“You can’t do the same thing and expect a different result than everybody else, right?” crew chief Alan Gustafson said.

The risk was necessary, though, with Elliott entering the contest 80 points out of a playoff position and just Watkins Glen and Daytona left as their opportunities to advance to the postseason.

“To win, you have to have very little margin, right?” Gustafson said. “I mean, that’s what winning is. You’re gonna make sure you exploit everything to the highest percentile possible, so anytime you’re trying to push, yeah, you’re cutting margin. So that gets riskier and riskier.”

Asked if the empty fuel tank was indeed the result of a miscalculation, Gustafson said: “I’m not going to go over our internal stuff in the media.”

Elliott, who was not available for comment post-race, has three career wins in superspeedway-style races, with two at Talladega Superspeedway and one at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The 2020 Cup Series champion will search for his first Daytona triumph en route to a playoff berth on Saturday night (7 ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock).

Going into Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen Cup Series race at Watkins Glen International (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), it was predicted the win would go through Hendrick Motorsports. Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson have combined to win the last four races at The Glen, but it was Toyota that stood out in practice and qualifying. Kaulig Racing also found speed in AJ Allmendinger’s entry, potentially putting him in a position to contend for the victory on Sunday.

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Kyle Larson

Starter 2: Michael McDowell

Starter 3: Chase Elliott

Starter 4: Tyler Reddick

Starter 5: AJ Allmendinger

Garage pick: Daniel Suárez

NEXT IN LINE: William Byron, Denny Hamlin, Christopher Bell, Martin Truex Jr.

RELATED: Set your lineup | Odds for Sunday’s race

RISING: When Allmendinger spoke about his car at Indianapolis last weekend following practice and qualifying, he was dejected with the speed — or lack thereof — of his No. 16 Chevrolet on road courses. He flipped the script on Saturday in Central New York as Allmendinger led the way in practice and qualified sixth. I’m back on the Allmendinger bandwagon at road courses after being away earlier this week.

Hamlin is becoming quite the qualifying ace on road courses, now having won three of the last four pole awards when turning left and right. The No. 11 team hasn’t managed a full race in the previous two at Sonoma and Chicago as he wrecked out in Sonoma and hit the wall early in Chicago on wet tires and never recovered. Of all the road courses on the Cup schedule, Hamlin’s stats are the best at Watkins Glen, with four top-five finishes in the last six races, including his lone road course win in 2016.

FALLING: Many people within the industry — some drivers included — thought this weekend would be dominated by Elliott. But the No. 9 team will have to overcome a 15th-place starting position on Sunday. Elliott felt like he messed everything up during his qualifying run but thinks his car has potential, ranking seventh in practice. Still would advise keeping Elliott available for use on Sunday, believing he and Alan Gustafson will do their homework and regain their typical Watkins Glen mojo.  

Suárez had his most complete weekend of the season at Indianapolis last week, which bumped his confidence level up going into Watkins Glen. The No. 99 car wasn’t as strong as anticipated in practice, turning just the 23rd best lap. He improved to 14th in qualifying, still off the pace compared to what was expected entering the weekend. With three top-five finishes in five starts at The Glen, one could assume Suárez will figure it out for the race and be a factor

FEATURED MATCHUPS:  

Michael McDowell vs. Daniel Suárez

Suárez hasn’t fallen out of my lineup completely, but my feelings have switched on this matchup. The No. 34 team is riding a wave of momentum from winning at Indianapolis last weekend and looks to be among the best cars in the field again this week. McDowell thinks he can contend for another win, while Suárez had a lackluster Saturday.

Chase Elliott vs. Kyle Larson

Larson was among the drivers that stated he believed Elliott would dominate the weekend. However, it was the No. 5 Chevrolet that made it to the final round of qualifying and will take the green flag from fifth on Sunday. This is among the hardest matchups of the season, with both dominating at Watkins Glen recently. Something tells me Elliott will rebound from Saturday and be in contention for the win. Staying with the No. 9 car. 

Alex Bowman vs. Denny Hamlin

Admittedly, Bowman has struggled at Watkins Glen with a best finish of 14th (three times). On the flip side, this is Hamlin’s best road course on the circuit. Earlier this week, the mindset was Bowman needed a win and ran incredibly strong at Indianapolis last weekend. The No. 11 team had a better outing in practice and qualifying, and should he keep track position, this shouldn’t be much of a fight. 

Ty Gibbs vs. Bubba Wallace

Wallace qualified 12th, which is his second-best starting position on a road course (11th at COTA earlier this year). In what will be his 40th Cup start, Gibbs will begin the race from inside the front two rows for the fourth time in his career. No matter what series he competes in, Gibbs is often strong on road courses, which gives him the advantage.

Four times in the last six years, a driver has gotten his first win of the season in the final two races of the regular season. Chase Elliott hopes to make it five times in seven years as he bids to win his way into the NASCAR Playoffs.

FANTASY LIVE: Set your roster | Weekend schedule

History is on Elliott’s side, with Hendrick Motorsports having won the last four races at Watkins Glen International, the site of Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Elliott’s teammate Kyle Larson took top honors in 2021 and 2022, while Elliott made it to Victory Lane in 2018 and 2019.

Elliott is also coming off a runner-up performance at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, where he just didn’t quite have enough for Front Row Motorsports’ Michael McDowell. However, the No. 9 Chevrolet figures to be right there in the mix again this week, having finished in the top four in the last four Watkins Glen races.

If Elliott wins, he’ll be in and won’t have to worry about the race the following week at Daytona International Speedway. Better to get things locked in this week so as not to leave it to chance in the regular-season finale.

OTHERS TO WATCH

MICHAEL MCDOWELL: There are a mountain of numbers that strongly suggest he could go back-to-back, but the most impressive, perhaps, is that he leads all drivers in points earned on road courses in the 10 races with the Next Gen car.

BRAD KESELOWSKI: Keselowski and Kevin Harvick are on the precipice of clinching playoff berths and are separated by just two points in the standings. The problem is Keselowski has an average finish of 20th on road courses with the Next Gen car.

CHRIS BUESCHER: Buescher couldn’t extend his winning streak or his top-10 streak on road courses, but he still could be a factor in this race. He finished ninth last year at The Glen.

KYLE LARSON: Larson has the second-most points at road courses this season (138) and is tied with Elliott for tops with four straight top-10 finishes at The Glen.

MARTIN TRUEX JR.: Before his 23rd-place finish last year, Truex had five straight finishes of seventh or better at The Glen, including his win in 2017.

Projections as of Sunday, Aug. 20.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE GO BOWLING AT THE GLEN

Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula includes current track, current track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to arrive at a projected winner and full race results.

FinishCar NumberDriver
19Chase Elliott
245Tyler Reddick
35Kyle Larson
417Chris Buescher
534Michael McDowell
616AJ Allmendinger
724William Byron
820Christopher Bell
98Kyle Busch
1019Martin Truex Jr.
1199Daniel Suárez
1211Denny Hamlin
1354Ty Gibbs
1448Alex Bowman
1522Joey Logano
162Austin Cindric
171Ross Chastain
184Kevin Harvick
1912Ryan Blaney
206Brad Keselowski
213Austin Dillon
2251Cole Custer
2314Chase Briscoe
2431Justin Haley
2543Erik Jones
2623Bubba Wallace
277Corey LaJoie
2847Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
2941Ryan Preece
3010Aric Almirola
3138Todd Gilliland
3221Harrison Burton
3342Mike Rockenfeller
3477Ty Dillon
3578Josh Bilicki
3615Andy Lally

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Rodney Childers, crew chief of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, will not be atop the pit box for driver Kevin Harvick for Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen at Watkins Glen International due to a family emergency.

Childers, who has combined to win 37 races and a championship since being paired with Harvick, will work remotely from SHR’s “war room” at the shop in Kannapolis, North Carolina, for Sunday’s race. Engineer Stephan Doran will serve as the team’s interim crew chief at Watkins Glen, the team confirmed.

MORE: Starting lineup | Watkins Glen schedule

The longtime crew chief was in Upstate New York for Saturday’s NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying sessions when he received news his mother was taken to the hospital, Childers shared in a social media post.

Harvick will start Sunday’s race from 33rd position. Live coverage will begin at 3 p.m. ET on USA Network, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio and the NBC Sports App.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Ty Gibbs did just about everything right in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Watkins Glen International.

The 20-year-old won the pole in qualifying and dominated the Shriners Children’s 200 at The Glen, leading 70 of 86 laps around the 2.45-mile road course and seemed destined for his second win there.

Instead, while leading on a restart in NASCAR Overtime, Gibbs was tagged in the rear bumper by Sam Mayer entering Turn 1, sending Gibbs’ No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for a spin in the run-off area. Gibbs plummeted down the leaderboard with just two laps remaining and finished 17th. Mayer, meanwhile, claimed his second career Xfinity Series win.

MORE: Race results | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

“I really wasn’t looking at my mirror like that,” Gibbs said of the restart, in which Mayer lined up behind him on the inside lane. “You know, I was like a car length or so in front of them, and I think he wheel-hopped and wrecked us there. So just something he did with that was a mistake on his part and completely cleaned us out.”

The run-in is far from the first between Gibbs and Mayer, a pair of 20-year-old racers who largely grew up racing one another hard. Their emotions came to a head in April 2022 when the two fought on pit road after an Xfinity race.

Saturday’s rekindling of any remaining fire between the two sparked on the penultimate restart with four laps remaining. Mayer lined up on the inside of the front row with Gibbs right behind him. Gibbs darted as low as he could against the inside wall to challenge Mayer for the position and exited the 90-degree, right-handed Turn 1 with the lead until Mayer charged back to his right.

At the top of the esses, Gibbs nudged his right-rear quarter panel against Mayer’s left-front fender, nearly sending Mayer’s No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet out of control before Mayer saved it.

“If I was able to stay there and side-draft him down the back, I would have beat him into the bus stop and probably had the lead there,” Mayer explained. “So as a Cup driver, he knows that; he’s really intelligent when it comes to that. He’s aware. And so he fed me a little fender, and it about wrecked me and put us in a really dangerous spot, so I was pretty upset about that because of my point of view.

“Kevin (Hamlin), my spotter, said over the radio that he’s a Cup spotter, and he would have said to his driver to do that, too. So it’s just part of the really aggressive race that we see nowadays.”

A caution came out moments later to send the race into overtime, allowing Mayer another shot at Gibbs. With their contact fresh on his mind, Mayer planned to be aggressive — but said he did not mean to send Gibbs spinning.

“I mean, that’s the reason why I chose right behind them is because I wanted to be the aggressor and put him three-wide middle,” Mayer said. “Obviously, that didn’t turn out the way I was intending, but it’s, like I said, part of just making mistakes as a young driver.”

That mistake sent Gibbs around and resulted in the same for Austin Hill, the latter of whom shared the front row with Gibbs for the green-white-checkered restart. Hill slowed to avoid Gibbs in the smokescreen and was turned by Cole Custer.

Cognizant of their past run-ins, Mayer emphasized the move he made Saturday is one he would make on any driver, Gibbs or not.

“It would be the exact same thing because I’m going there for the win,” he said. “I’m trying to do my best to get Victory Lane for my team and my organization. If the same restart happened and he got a better restart than me again — whoever it is — I would try to get to the inside of them as well. Obviously, I wouldn’t try to wreck anybody, including Ty.

“We have a history, and everyone looks at that differently, and I don’t. I just want to race the race car driver. Definitely sucks that it’s him because I don’t want that. I don’t want that for anybody. But it’s just part of making mistakes as a young driver. I can only use that excuse so many times, and today’s one of those days.”

MORE: Cup Series schedule | Xfinity Series schedule

As for Gibbs, he’ll go back to the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), eyeing a potential playoff run in his rookie season. So despite his disappointment on a dominant Saturday, he’s moving forward.

“I mean, doesn’t matter,” Gibbs said. “I’m racing Cup on Sundays and start fourth tomorrow, so I’ve got a lot bigger things to look at.”

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — JR Motorsports driver Sam Mayer survived a full-contact afternoon at Watkins Glen International – contributing his own bump and run on the final restart to take the lead in overtime and hold off the field for his second career NASCAR Xfinity Series win Saturday in the Shriners Children’s 200 at The Glen.

Mayer’s No. 1 JRM Chevrolet tagged the back of the day’s most dominant driver and then-race leader Ty Gibbs, spinning Gibbs’ No. 19 Toyota, which then collected a handful of other lead pack cars. The 21-year-old Wisconsin native pulled away from the mayhem behind and raced off to a 0.909-second victory over Richard Childress Racing’s Sheldon Creed.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos: Watkins Glen

Gibbs, who races full time as a rookie in the NASCAR Cup Series, led a race-high 70 of the 86 laps and won both Stage 1 and Stage 2 on the 2.45-mile, 11-turn historic road course in upstate New York. But it was Mayer using that aggressive move forward that eventually helped hoist the trophy.

“On that first one, I got used up, thought I had a good one there,’’ Mayer said of the two overtime restarts. “All glory to God for this one because we had to work our tails off for it.

“I wheel-hopped it, that’s unfortunate, and I feel bad for doing that. Obviously, you don’t want to take out any car like that,’’ Mayer added. “Just trying to get another win in the Xfinity Series. I’ve got a lot of catching up to do. I was in there, I put my nose in there, and that’s part of it.

“That’s an accident, but I think everyone can agree it’s okay for an Xfinity Series regular to win this race.’’

There is a history between Mayer and the 2022 Xfinity Series champion Gibbs. There was even a physical confrontation between the two after a race at Martinsville Speedway last year.

Gibbs, 20, none too surprisingly, didn’t take kindly to the race ending. He was credited with 17th place on the day.

“I think when you have to race out of desperation like that and you wheel-hop and take the leader out, I guess you can call it a racing incident, but it just really sucks,’’ Gibbs said. “We had a really fast Toyota Supra, and I really appreciate all the team’s hard work. We had a really good time out there and wish that caution didn’t come. Definitely sucks to get cleaned out there.

“It’s a part of life and a part of racing, and you just get over it, and when stuff like that happens, desperate moves like that happen, it’s just part of it, and you try to keep going. We were really fast.

“I don’t know really know how much of a conversation you can really have with him in that situation,’’ Gibbs said when asked if wanted to have words with Mayer.

“We kind of grew up racing around each other, and I think he has more starts than I do, and this is his second win, so congratulations to him on his second win. Definitely wish I could have gotten my 13th there.’’

WATCH: Mayer discusses Watkins Glen victory | Gibbs discusses OT finish

Parker Kligerman came through the wreck to finish third in the No. 48 Big Machine Racing Chevrolet, followed by NASCAR Cup Series regular Ross Chastain in the No. 91 DGM Chevrolet and Connor Mosack in the No. 24 Sam Hunt Racing Toyota.

Kligerman’s third-place showing was important as the series heads toward the playoffs next month. He pulled to within three points of Riley Herbst for that final transfer position. Herbst’s No. 98 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford had a rough day, retiring on Lap 37 and taking a 35th-place finish. He had led Kligerman by 17 points coming into the Watkins Glen race.

“We had a great finish and salvaged great points,’’ Kligerman said. “We kept ourselves in the fight, but I’ve got to sort through this one.

“To me, three [points], 15 [points], it all feels the same. It’s so close that can happen in a stage, essentially. We’ve just got to keep doing what we’re doing. We scored stage points in all stages today, so that is a big deal for us.’’

“I think we’re doing the right things, just need a little more,’’ he added with a smile.

Herbst was frustrated but said he was optimistic about upcoming races – at Daytona International Speedway, Darlington Raceway and Kansas Speedway to set the 12-driver Playoff field.

“I don’t think we should be in this situation as it is, it’s just frustrating,’’ Herbst said. “We have some good tracks for us and good tracks for Stewart-Haas Racing, I’m excited. It’s just frustrating that things like this beyond our control keep happening, but it’ll turn around one day, and when it does, we’ll be happy.”

MORE: 2023 Xfinity Series standings | Xfinity Series schedule

John Hunter Nemechek, Cole Custer, Chandler Smith, Alex Bowman and Jeb Burton rounded out the top 10. Austin Hill, who was among those collected in the overtime restart, finished 14th and now holds a nine-point advantage over Nemechek atop the championship standings.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series moves to Daytona next week for Friday’s Wawa 250 Powered by Coca-Cola (7:30 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Jeremy Clements is the defending race winner. Hill won at Daytona in February.

Note: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage concluded without issue, confirming Mayer as the race winner.