Five races remain in the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series regular season and not only is the drama at the postseason elimination line heating up but so is the tension between drivers on track.

Before Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), check out some trends to watch for the race, Goodyear tire info and interactive ways to follow all the action.

RELATED: See paint schemes for Richmond | Betting favorites for Sunday’s Cup race

WILL TEMPERS CARRY OVER? 😡

Last Sunday’s race at Pocono brought out tension between drivers that would normally coincide with short tracks. A helmet was thrown. A skirmish on pit road broke out. So much happened at the “Tricky Triangle” that it may intensify at Richmond with just five races to go before the playoffs.

Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson are at the forefront of driver disagreements after Hamlin ran Larson up into the wall on a late-race restart. Both are locked into the playoffs with two wins each. Larson is likely out of regular-season title contention as he sits 110 points back of Martin Truex Jr., but Hamlin is just 55 points behind his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate.

Richmond has seen its fair share of retaliation and Larson could send a message to his newfound on-track rival that sees Hamlin fall out of the regular-season title race.

MORE: How the playoff picture looks heading into Sunday

📉 TRENDS TO WATCH 📈

— Kyle Larson won both short-track races this season on pavement, the last driver to win three straight was Rusty Wallace in 1993.

— Eleven of the 19 drivers that won in 2022, have yet to win in 2023

— Six different drivers won the last six Richmond races

— The driver who led the most laps won only one of the last five short-track races

(Via Racing Insights)

NOTABLE MOMENTS 🎥

1986: Dale Earnhardt, Darrell Waltrip wreck from the lead in closing laps | WATCH

2008: Kyle Busch spins Dale Jr. in closing laps | WATCH

2016: Edwards moves Kyle Busch on final lap to win | WATCH

2019: Truex scores first Cup Series short-track win | WATCH

ON-TRACK SCHEDULE 🗓️

Saturday, July 29

— 12:35 p.m. ET: Practice (USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App)

— 1:20 p.m. ET: Qualifying (USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App)

Sunday, July 30

— 3 p.m. ET: Cook Out 400 (USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App)

MORE: Full weekend schedule at Richmond, Road America

RULE CHANGES/GOODYEAR TIRE NOTES 🛞

The GEICO Restart Zone returned to its 2022 dimensions after being extended for this season’s first five races.

Goodyear brings back the same tire that was used at Richmond in the spring. This tire setup has also been used at Phoenix, St. Louis and North Wilkesboro. Teams will be issued one set of tires for practice, one set for qualifying and an additional eight sets for Sunday.

NASCAR implemented safety updates to the Next Gen car.

Along the right-side door bars and extending toward the rear clip, teams are mandated to run a steel plate in addition to the chassis adjustments made for the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The right-side door bar gussets and the removal of the front clip V-brace are changes that remain, in addition to the removal of other front-clip components, to create a softer and larger crush zone for frontal impacts.

Also included in the updates are front bumper strut softening (modifications to existing parts), the requirement of an empty front ballast box and a modified cross brace. NASCAR incurs the cost of all these updates.

In the event of a lost wheel that is contained to pit road, the offending team will be subject to a pass-through penalty under green-flag conditions. If the infraction occurs during a caution period, the offending team will restart at the tail end of the field.

If the wheel breaks free outside of pit road, the new rules guidelines mandate a two-lap penalty plus a two-race suspension for two crew members. Each penalty is series-specific: Violations in one series will not impact those crew members’ eligibility to participate in other series.

RELATED: See rules changes for 2023

FAN REWARDS 🫵

Fans can get in on the action all season long with NASCAR Fan Rewards, a free program that rewards fans for participating in the action when they watch races and play NASCAR Fantasy.

There’s no cost to join. Fans must be 18 years or older to participate in the program.

Earn points by checking into a race from home or at the track, setting your Fantasy Live lineup, making purchases on the NASCAR.com shop and more. Points can be redeemed for race tickets, merchandise and VIP experiences at the track, including pace car rides and waving the green flag at qualifying.

JOIN TODAY

FOLLOW THE RACE 📲

NASCAR Mobile has now added support for fans to “Follow the Race” and access live leaderboard and race information from Live Activities in the current app release (v13.2.0), available now. Android users, we didn’t forget you — the same functionality has been custom-built for Android devices, as well.

How to access Live Activities on iPhones:

  1. Make sure your iOS device has been updated to 16.1 or higher.
  2. Available on the leaderboard of all NASCAR Series races.
  3. Click on the three-dot menu near the top right of screen.
  4. Select “Follow the Race.”
  5. Swipe up to access the home screen and you will see the Live Activities at the top.
  6. Lock the device and you will see Live Activities on the Lock Screen.
  7. To turn off, simply visit the leaderboard, click the three-dot menu and “Unfollow the Race.”

FANTASY LIVE 🏆

Want to manage a team and race your way to the top of the leaderboards? Check out NASCAR Fantasy Live, which is open now. The free-to-play game lets you choose your drivers each week and show off your crew-chief instincts by garaging a driver by the end of Stage 2, and there is a $25,000 prize for the winner.

How to play: Fantasy Live | Set up a team today!

ALSO ON NASCAR.COM 💻

Get additional camera views by logging on to NASCAR Drive, where each week a select number of in-car cameras will be available — as well as a battle cam and an overhead look.

NASCAR has partnered with LiveLike to add fan engagement to the NASCAR Mobile App. Log in to the mobile app during the race for polls, quizzes, the cheer meter and more — and see instant results from NASCAR fans like you.

Although AJ Allmendinger is waist-deep in the NASCAR Cup Series postseason hunt, an opportunity to participate in road-course action will not go past him, even if the race is in another circuit and state entirely.

Such will be the case this weekend for the 41-year-old Kaulig Racing driver. Allmendinger will fly Friday morning to Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, for Saturday’s Xfinity race at Road America (3 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Peacock). He will then quickly hitch another plane ride to Richmond, Virginia, to race in Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Due to his participation in the Road America 180, Allmendinger will miss practice and qualifying at Richmond and start at the rear of the field on Sunday. Part-time Craftsman Truck Series and Xfinity Series racer Derek Kraus will practice in Allmendinger’s absence.

RELATED: Playoff Watch | 2023 Cup Series standings 

“It’s something that, between Matt [Kaulig], Chris [Rice] and I, we all decided that we wanted to go do this, and I was going to be on board with whatever Matt and Chris wanted to do, and this is the direction they wanted to go, and yeah. I’m looking forward to it,” Allmendinger said during a virtual teleconference with the media Wednesday. “Going to have a lot of fun with it, especially on Saturday.”

Of course, the option of scrapping Road America entirely was in the cards. After all, with only five regular-season races remaining, it would have been understandable for Allmendinger — who is currently the first driver underneath the provisional 16-driver line for the postseason — to prioritize a points-paying Cup race and start as close to the front of the field as he could.

“We definitely talked about it. At the end of the day, as I said, it was, first and foremost it was Matt’s decision on what he wanted, and then, he kind of left it up to me and Chris, and I told Chris that I was willing to do whatever he wanted me to do, and together, we both decided that we still wanted to do this,” Allmendinger said. “Richmond is a place that, with this car, especially, we probably struggled at, so in a way, whether we practice 20 minutes, at times, it doesn’t really make a huge difference. Starting in the back is a challenge, but I think Richmond is the race track that, if we have the setup right, that you can still move forward.”

Simply wanting to have fun, to Allmendinger, played a part in the decision, too. In what is his first full-time season as a Cup driver since 2018, Allmendinger has found solace in simultaneously vying for a championship and enjoying road racing on the side, too. Allmendinger has won two times in three Xfinity Series starts this season, and one of those wins came at Circuit of The Americas.

Even through the grind of racing a Cup Series regular season in conjunction with trying to clinch a postseason berth, Allmendinger still wishes to abide by the philosophy of doing what he loves. And in Allmendinger’s case, perhaps winning another Xfinity Series race coincides with future success in the Cup Series.

MORE: Richmond, Road America weekend schedule

“Of course, I’m going to show up to Road America and put pressure on myself. We’re not doing this for points, we’re doing this to go win a trophy, and that’s what we want to do,” Allmendinger said. “Hopefully, that’s what we do, but at the end of the day, it’s about enjoying yourself, and that’s the first thing that Matt and Chris have always put on me. Yeah, this is serious, don’t get us wrong, winning is always more fun, but we’re going to enjoy ourselves. Decisions like this, sometimes maybe the outside world is like, why would you do that? Well, we’re gonna do it because A, we want to, and B, we’re gonna enjoy it.

“Me driving a road course, I am always gonna have fun with it, and that helps everything, so at the end of the day, yeah, especially if we can go get the job done and go win the race, we jump on that plane, I’m way better mentally doing that than practicing 20 minutes at Richmond and then, say you qualify 18th and then you go sit in the bus the rest of the day and wonder, ‘Oh my God, how is the race gonna go tomorrow?’ Because, as I’ve said, Richmond is that type of race track where you never know from one day to the next how good your car is gonna be, so this is way better doing it this way, and we’re gonna have a lot of fun with it, and that’s what it’s all about. This is why we do this. So why not have an opportunity that Matt Kaulig gives me to go run Road America? Hell yeah, I’m gonna go do that.”

Consider it being waist-deep in having fun.

Clash at Claremont 150

Claremont Motorsports Park

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Organization Crew Chief Chassis Mfg Sponsor
01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Racing, LLC Jake Marosz Troyer Pine Knoll Auto Sales
1 Cory Plummer Cory Plummer Cory Plummer SPAFCO Race Chassis Apex Racing; Gene’s Auto Service; McClures Tree Service
3 Jake Johnson Boehler’s Racing Equipment Gregory Fournier Boehler Racing Propane Plus; Lin’s Propane Trucks
06 Sam Rameau Rameau Family Motorsports Randy Rameau LFR Quality Fleet Services; Dennison Lubricants
6 Woody Pitkat Mertz Racing Enterprises Mike Holmes Troyer Koopman Lumber
7 Doug Coby Tommy Baldwin Racing LLC Tommy Baldwin Troyer Mayhew Tools
16 Ron Silk Haydt Yannone Racing Philip Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine; Future Homes
18 Ken Heagy Robert Pollifrone Greg Gorman Chevrolet Buoy One Seafood
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Cam McDermott FURY Race Cars Chalew Performance; MTT; Munns Auto
25 Brian Robie Robie Motorsports LLC Scott Spaulding Troyer Maurice Entrprises
26 Max Zachem Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply Chad McDonald Chevrolet Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply
32 Tyler Rypkema Dean Rypkema Zach Truesdail FURY Race Cars Northeast Drilling, Musco Lighting
43 Matt Kimball William P. Kimball Trucking William Kimball Jr. LFR Adam LaPoint Electrical; J&M Towing Recovery; Poodiack Wealth Management; Edmunds Ace Hardware
46 Anthony Nocella Goodie Racing Doug Ogiejko Troyer Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports LLC Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications Inc.
58 Eric Goodale Goodie Motorsports Jason Shephard FURY Race Cars GAF Roofing
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee Motorsports LLC Mike Stein Troyer Pee Dee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer Dell Electric, Lumiere Electrical, Andrew James Interiors, AP Marquadt & Sons, Hughes Motors
82 Craig Lutz DWR Racing Corp. Ryan Barbieri LFR Horton Avenue Materials

Although Denny Hamlin’s contract with Joe Gibbs Racing is set to expire following the conclusion of the 2023 season, there are no intentions from either the No. 11 driver or Toyota Racing Development (TRD) to end the longstanding partnership.

Hamlin, who raced his first full-time Cup Series season with the organization in 2006, ranks second in all-time wins with the team, behind only former teammate Kyle Busch — who now drives for Richard Childress Racing. The 42-year-old Hamlin earned his 50th career victory in the Cup Series last weekend at Pocono Raceway.

RELATED: Hamlin’s 50th win highlights evolving legacy | All of Joe Gibbs Racing’s wins by driver

“He will be back. There’s no question in our mind, there’s no question in Joe’s [Gibbs] mind,” TRD President David Wilson said during a virtual teleconference with the media Wednesday. “We’re working through some details, and it’s a complicated consideration because now he’s not just a driver for Joe Gibbs Racing, he’s also a team owner, and given that there has to be alignment for Toyota and Denny across both those considerations, just have some stuff that we’re working on, but we’ll get them sorted out.

“We still intend, I know Denny has always wanted to and intends to retire as a driver from Joe Gibbs Racing and continue as a team owner with Toyota. That’s certainly our intent, and we’re working very vigorously to make sure that, in fact, happens.”

Hamlin co-owns 23XI Racing alongside NBA legend Michael Jordan and simultaneously ranks third in driver points (656), behind JGR teammate Martin Truex Jr. (711) and Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron (681).

MORE: Full 2023 Cup standingsPlayoff Watch 

“Denny plays a huge role in our family, and I think both Tyler [Gibbs] and I have really enjoyed watching his maturation, and not just as a driver, not just as a team owner, obviously, because he’s very new to that, but as a human being and as a person,” Wilson said. “I’m really proud of that because, let’s face it, 15 years ago, it was difficult to have a conversation about the weather with Denny while you were standing on the grid next to him. But he’s come a long way.

“I know he put out his goal of 60 wins in the Cup Series. From my perspective, that is absolutely achievable given his level of talent and his determination.”

Hamlin and the rest of the Cup Series field will next race in the Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway this Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Denny Hamlin’s victory at Pocono Raceway last weekend — his 50th career Cup Series triumph — didn’t manifest itself solely from the No. 11’s swift on-track speed. A proficient pit crew also played a part in Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota conquering the “Tricky Triangle” for a seventh time.

RELATED: Hamlin’s 50th win highlights evolving legacy | Where Hamlin ranks in all-time Cup wins 

To illustrate how much of a factor pit-road action played in Hamlin prevailing at Pocono, look no further than having the fastest four-tire pit stop among the entire field (9.810 seconds). In fact, the performance in this area — spearheaded by front tire changer AJ Rosini, rear tire changer Deven Youker, tire carrier Dylan Dowell, jackman Joel-Alexandre Bouagnon and fueler Kenneth Purcell — vaulted the No. 11 team into the top five when referring to teams with the best average four-tire pit stop times (11.250 seconds). The No. 11 crew ranked eighth in this category (11.281 seconds), after the race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

See below to analyze additional pit-road statistics through Pocono and before Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

TEN FASTEST FOUR-TIRE PIT STOPS IN 2023

RankTrackDriverTime
1SonomaKyle Busch9.185 seconds
2NashvilleKyle Larson9.281 seconds
3SonomaAustin Cindric9.301 seconds
4RichmondCorey LaJoie9.309 seconds
5NashvilleDaniel Suárez9.333 seconds
6CharlotteWilliam Byron9.383 seconds
7CharlotteTy Gibbs9.443 seconds
8NashvilleWilliam Byron9.443 seconds
9CharlotteWilliam Byron9.504 seconds
10KansasBubba Wallace9.509 seconds

BEST AVERAGE FOUR-TIRE PIT STOP TIMES IN 2023

The National Motorsports Appeals Panel today heard and considered an appeal of a behavioral penalty issued on July 13, 2023, to No. 34 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Driver John “JB” Fortin; Team Owner Nicole Fortin; and Crew Members John Fortin and Amber Fortin.

Upon hearing the testimony, the decisions of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel are:

  1. That the Appellant violated the Rule(s) set forth in the Penalty Notice.
  2. That the Panel affirms and upholds the original Penalty assessed by NASCAR.

In reaching the above decision, the panel provided the following explanation: “The NASCAR presentation confirms the violations were more probable than not, and they were detrimental to racing.”

The Appeals Panel members for this hearing:

  • Mr. Tom DeLoach
  • Mr. David Hall
  • Mr. Steve York

The Appellant has the right to appeal the decision of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel to the National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer in accordance with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Rule Book.

LONG POND, Pa. — Only three active drivers have scored at least 50 wins in the NASCAR Cup Series: Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, and as of July 23, Denny Hamlin.

It’s fitting Hamlin joins an illustrious trio at a three-turned speedway, hitting the half-century mark in career wins in Sunday’s HighPoint.com 400 at Pocono Raceway — becoming the track’s all-time winningest driver in the process with seven triumphs.

That Hamlin’s recent successes have featured a fade from cheers to boos — including a plethora at Pocono — further magnifies the evolution of the 42-year-old’s career.

MORE: Battle with Larson results in Hamlin win | Cup standings

Eighteen years in, Hamlin boasts quite the resume — three-time Daytona 500 champion; three-time Southern 500 winner at Darlington; 2022 Coca-Cola 600 winner at Charlotte; team co-owner of 23XI Racing with NBA legend and global superstar Michael Jordan. But his role in a handful of on-track incidents over the past decade-and-a-half consume some of the conversation surrounding Hamlin.

The list includes run-ins with Brad Keselowski and then-teammate Kyle Busch a decade ago, a fierce battle for the championship against Jimmie Johnson in 2010, and has more recently included a 2022 rivalry with Ross Chastain and collisions with the Hendrick trio of Chase Elliott, Alex Bowman, Kyle Larson — highlighted again in full force Sunday at Pocono.

Through the noise, the winning hasn’t stopped for the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

A conversation with former teammate and NASCAR Hall of Famer Matt Kenseth this week helped Hamlin contextualize the ebbs and flows of a successful stint through the 38-week grind NASCAR’s Cup Series entails.

“I was like, you know, that’s one thing that we’re always guilty of is not appreciating it (success) in the moment,” Hamlin said. “Like it’s always when you’re retired, and you’ve got a bunch of time, and you’re sitting there on your rocker on your back porch when you’re thinking about, well, what have I accomplished in the sport? These things take a long time to set in. They really do. We’re in the heat of the moment now. I mean, I’m answering questions about if what I did was fair or not. I mean, give me a break.

“It takes time. And I just never thought I’d get an opportunity in the Cup Series. But luckily, JD Gibbs and Joe Gibbs took a chance on me nearly 20 years ago. And to get my 50th when it comes down to the track that I got my first, it certainly is special.”

Indeed, the first two victories at Hamlin’s Cup career came at the 2.5-mile “Tricky Triangle” in 2006, sweeping the track’s two races in his rookie year. Jeff Gordon previously held the track’s winning record with six checkered flags — and Hamlin seemingly broke the record a year ago, crossing the start/finish line first but failing post-race inspection and receiving a disqualification for a technical infraction instead.

His Pocono record aside, few drivers have found long-term homes the way Hamlin has at JGR. Since the autumn of 2005, Hamlin has been the driver of the team’s No. 11 car and largely with FedEx emblazoned as a primary sponsor.

“I’m just really happy to win it for the team — the whole team: (Crew chief) Chris (Gabehart) and his team on the pit box, guys in the war room, the guys in the fab shop,” Hamlin said. “Like, I’ve been really lucky to be part of an organization that carried me for many years to many, many victories — like a lot. Not everyone gets the opportunity to go from racing late models to racing for Joe Gibbs Racing in 18 months in the Cup Series. It’s hard to do. It really is. But luckily, they believed in me, they gave me time to get going, and the rest is history.”

MORE: Playoff Watch | Race Rewind: Pocono’s full highlights

The appreciation is mutual, as team owner Joe Gibbs explained Sunday.

“I think Denny is really patient. I see him, and he’s a vet,” Gibbs said. “He understands it. I think he understands how to win. He’s certainly been a great representative for us.

“The other thing I’ve always admired about Denny, he has been so loyal to us, our family. We had a picture there taken in the winner’s circle where JD used to come up behind Denny and squeeze him. Denny had me come up there and do that. I just appreciate Denny in every way.”

Hamlin’s legacy has grown to include team ownership with his 23XI Racing team firmly aligned with Toyota and Joe Gibbs Racing, a partnership that has seen all of its full-time drivers visit Victory Lane in Bubba Wallace, Kurt Busch and Tyler Reddick. In fact, Pocono’s performance was an ideal Toyota day: Hamlin was celebrating the win while his driver Reddick was second, JGR’s Martin Truex Jr. was third, and Ty Gibbs, Joe Gibbs’ grandson and a Cup Series rookie, scored his first top-five result in fifth.

And Hamlin’s resume isn’t exactly complete. A NASCAR Cup Series championship remains the most significant unchecked box. But with two wins this season and 22 playoff points, Hamlin seems likely to have another opportunity at Phoenix Raceway this November.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Clash at Claremont 150 was postponed as a result of a gloomy weather forecast for Saturday, July 29 at New Hampshire’s Claremont Motorsports Park. A potential new date and time for the race will be announced at a later date.

For just the fourth time in NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour history, the series heads to Claremont Motorsports Park this Saturday night for the running of the Clash at Claremont 150 (8:30 p.m. ET on FloRacing).

The race, which serves as the 10th round of the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season, also doubles as the finale of JDV Productions’ Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup bonus program. The Cup offers bonus money to teams that have compete in three events promoted by JDV Productions in the state of New Hampshire.

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour made its debut at Claremont during its inaugural season in 1985, with Richie Evans besting Jimmy Spencer to earn a trip to Victory Lane. The series didn’t return until 2007, when James Civali secured one of his four Tour victories. Last year, Jon McKennedy earned his lone victory of the 2022 campaign at Claremont on his way to the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship.

Tickets to Saturday’s Clash at Claremont 150 are available here. Below is everything you need to know about the 10th race of the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.


Clash at Claremont 150 at Claremont Motorsports Park

What to watch for:

The second edition of the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup comes to a close this Saturday night at Claremont Motorsports Park during the Clash at Claremont 150. One driver and team will walk away with a $5,000 bonus courtesy of JDV Productions and promoter Josh Vanada.

Doug Coby and Tommy Baldwin Racing currently lead the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup standings following finishes of first at Monadnock Speedway and sixth at Lee USA Speedway, making them the favorites to secure the cash bonus.

With Jon McKennedy not scheduled to compete Saturday night, that makes defending Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup champions Matt Hirschman and PeeDee Motorsports Coby’s closest pursuers. They’re only four points behind Coby in the battle for the $5,000 bonus.

Both of those men are among the drivers entered to compete in the Clash at Claremont 150, but several others are in the mix to claim the crown, as well.

MORE CLAREMONT: Watch on FloRacing | Get tickets

Austin Beers and the No. 64 KLM Motorsports team find themselves only six points back of Coby entering Claremont. The team, which already has a win this year at Richmond Raceway, will look to secure their second victory of the season while also claiming the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup.

Ron Silk, the current NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship leader who has three wins this year, is seven points back of Coby. Not only does he want to capture the Whelen Granite State Short Track Cup, he also wants to pad his place at the top of the series standings as he pursues his second championship.

Other notable entries include Eric Goodale, Anthony Nocella, Woody Pitkat, Kyle Bonsignore, Craig Lutz and Tyler Rypkema.

The complete entry list for the Clash at Claremont 150 is available here.

The green flag waves at the start of the Clash at Claremont 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Claremont Motorsports Park on July 29, 2022 in Claremont, New Hampshire. (Photo: Rachel O’Driscoll/NASCAR)

RACE FACTS

Race Clash at Claremont 150
Date Saturday, July 29, 2023
Track Claremont Motorsports Park
Layout Third-mile paved oval
Location Claremont, New Hampshire
Start Time 8:30 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Posted awards $83,845
Live stream FloRacing (Live)

Schedule: Saturday, July 29 … Final practice from 2:25 to 3:25 p.m. ET … Qualifying at 5:45 p.m. ET … Clash at Claremont 150 at 8:30 p.m. ET (FloRacing).

Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. (EIRI) Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the 2nd Annual Clash at Claremont 150 is limited to 28 starters including Provisional Positions.

Tire allotment: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eight (8) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. The tire change rule is zero (0) tires, any position.

LONG POND, Pa. – Kyle Larson’s rebound from an early spin went for naught Sunday at Pocono Raceway after an unfriendly push up the track sent him from second to a 20th-place finish in the HighPoint.com 400.

Despite a Lap 46 slide, Larson found himself on the outside of the front row on a restart with eight laps remaining. A shove from Denny Hamlin launched Larson to the lead entering Turn 1, but Hamlin dove to Larson’s left on corner entry and drew alongside the No. 5 Chevrolet.

Hamlin drifted high on corner exit, forcing Larson wide – with apparent slight door-to-door contact – and into the outside SAFER barrier on the Long Pond Straightaway.

When the yellow flag flew for Justin Haley’s crash in the next corner, Larson pulled up alongside Hamlin’s car and brushed him on the frontstretch as the field slowed.

Hamlin went on to score a record seventh Pocono victory, his 50th career win and the 600th national series triumph for Toyota. Larson was relegated to a 20th-place finish.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Pocono

The move was eerily similar to the move Hamlin used on Ross Chastain at the 2.5-mile triangular track one year ago, when Chastain slammed the wall, spun and exited the race prematurely in 2022. Larson was plenty conscious of that going into Turn 1.

“I was nervous of the move that happened because he made it work on Ross last year and he dirtied him up,” Larson said. “He knows and Ross deserved it last year for all the times that he got into Denny.

“I felt like I didn’t. I deserved to be raced with respect at least through Turn 1. But he knew that was gonna be his only opportunity to beat me with how bad dirty air was. So I got used up.”

Hamlin, on the other hand, believed his car never touched Larson’s and simply forced the 2021 Cup champion into a choice.

“How can you wreck someone you don’t touch?” Hamlin said. “They make a decision to either let off the gas and race side-by-side, or hit the gas and hit the wall. I mean, I put them to those decisions. I didn’t overshoot the corner. I was behind them. I tried to get position on them. I knew it was going to be tight off of two, but always made sure I left a lane or more – more than a lane.

“These Next Gen cars, for whatever reason, you get in that spot near the car on the outside, it sends them very tight. It just tightens their aero balance. Everyone knows it. You know, Kyle is one of the best aero blockers in our field. I knew once he got the lead and it was green, there’s just no way I was gonna go around him and so I just backed off and just waited and tried not to burn up my (expletive) for a restart later because he knows how to put you in a situation to just kill your car.”

This isn’t the first time Larson and Hamlin have battled one-on-one for the win. In May, the duo fought for the victory at Kansas Speedway – which resulted in contact from Hamlin that sent Larson into the wall.

The two are friends off-track, but Larson’s frustration lingered longer Sunday afternoon.

“We’ve had a handful of run-ins. I’ve never had to reach out to apologize,” Larson said. “He’s always been the one that’s reached out to me and been like, ‘Hey, man, sorry. You know, I messed up there a little bit or sorry I put you in a bad spot, whatever. Sorry I hurt your day.’ I’ve never had to do that to him.

“Sure, maybe there’s been times where he’s been frustrated with me. But I’ve never hurt his results. You know, I should have at least been top two. I finished (20th). In my eyes, I mean, hey, I could have 10 more playoff points, two more wins right now if not for the 11. So yeah, I’m pissed. I should be.”

Hamlin disagreed that the two have had “run-ins,” but acknowledged past incidents where they’ve collided.

“I got in the back of him at Atlanta (in 2022) trying to push him,” Hamlin said. “That’s in a draft. We’re drafting. So that was a draft gone bad. And then like once again, we’re racing for the win at Kansas and he gets in the fence, comes off the fence and I tagged him in the left rear.

“I mean, I get it. I know (where) you guys are trying to go with this. But you know, I’ve been on the (bad) end of so many of these results. And when it comes to getting (win No.) 50 for me, 600 for Toyota, I’m going to make sure that I drive as hard as I possibly can – and respectful. That’s why I left him more than a lane off the Turn 2.”

But asked if he raced Larson with respect at Pocono, Hamlin was incredulous.

“We’re racing for the win. Are you (kidding) me?” he said. “For sure, I mean, if I’m gonna give anyone in the field respect, it’s Kyle Larson just because I respect him as a race car driver and I think he’s probably the best. So certainly, he’s got my respect, but damn, I mean, we’re all racing for a win and I guarantee you, roles reversed, it goes the same way.”

Still, Larson doesn’t anticipate much change in their relationship, noting Hamlin “races me like a (jerk)” but that he’s still a friend and separates what happens on-track from off-track life well. But he admitted he’s unsure when enough is enough.

“As we’ve all heard him say, eventually he has to race a certain way to get some respect back,” Larson said. “I’m an aggressive racer, I get it. But I tend to race my friends with more respect. But I just feel like I haven’t gotten that respect from him, especially this year.”

Denny Hamlin prevailed in a tight door-to-door, bump-and-go pass on Kyle Larson with seven laps remaining to claim a historic all-time-best seventh NASCAR Cup Series victory at Pocono Raceway – the win in Sunday’s HighPoint.com 400 also marking Hamlin’s 50th career Cup trophy and second of the 2023 season.

The race ended under caution for a last-lap incident elsewhere on track, and the Pocono crowd voiced its displeasure, booing loudly as Hamlin celebrated after exiting his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota on the 2.5-mile track’s frontstretch after the checkered flag. Hamlin, 42, maintained the action was just close-quarters racing for a win. Larson, who finished 20th after the contact, disagreed and was none too happy with his good friend and golf partner.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos: Pocono

“Both guys wrecked themselves,” Hamlin said of his run-in with Larson and an earlier brush with Larson teammate Alex Bowman. “There was a lane. He [Larson] missed the corner first and evidently didn’t have his right-side tires clean, and when he gassed up and got going again, you have an option in those positions to either hold it wide open and hit the fence or lift and race it out. Those were choices they made. I didn’t hit either one of them. Didn’t touch them.

“I love it, I love it,’’ Hamlin added, acknowledging the boos. “I thought we had the best car, and the strategy worked out. Just so happy we’re winning these races we should win.’’

Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion, did not mince words after climbing out of his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. Instead of a top-five finish – or a possible victory – he recovered from the incident to cross the finish line near midpack.

“First off, really proud of my team, they got us in position to race for the win,” said Larson, who led 24 laps and earned the Stage 2 win – his third of the year. “We got spun early [in the race], and the car was never really the same after that, but we played the strategy really well to get us up there. Just unfortunate.

WATCH: Larson discusses Pocono finish, voices frustration

“I’ve been cost a lot of good finishes by him throughout my career, and I know he says that I race a certain way, but I don’t think I’ve ever had to apologize to him about anything, not that I’m sure he’ll say ‘I’m sorry’ after this, but it is what it is. Just move on and try to go to Richmond, where we won earlier this year. It is what it is. Yeah, we’re friends. Yes, this makes things awkward. But he’s always right. All the buddies know Denny’s always right. It is what it is. I’m not gonna let it tarnish our friendship off track. But I am pissed, and I feel like I should be pissed.

“I think at this point I have the right,’’ Larson said of potentially racing Hamlin differently on track going forward. “Like I’ve said, I’ve never had to apologize to him about anything I’ve done on the race track. I can count four or five times where he’s had to reach out to me and say, ‘Sorry I’ve put you in a bad spot there.’ So eventually, like he says, you have to start racing people a certain way to get the respect back.”

Hamlin earned Toyota its 600th career win in the three NASCAR national series combined. Tyler Reddick, who drives for the 23XI Racing Toyota team co-owned by Hamlin, finished second, with his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. coming across the finish line third. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick and the remaining two JGR cars of rookie Ty Gibbs and Christopher Bell rounded out the top six. Gibbs’ fifth-place result marked a career-best.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Harrison Burton and Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott rounded out the top 10. It marked the second top-10 of the season for the 22-year-old Burton. And the effort from Elliott leaves him 59 points out of the 16-driver playoff pool, with five more regular-season races remaining for the 2020 series champion to race for another trophy after missing six races in 2023.

Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate, polesitter William Byron, led the most laps (60) of the day but finished 24th. He now trails Truex by 31 points for the regular-season title.

Varying pit strategies – and in particular on the final green-flag run – changed the leaderboard in the last 30-40 laps of the race. Some drivers who hadn’t run top five all day postponed their last stop, hoping for a caution flag. However, the day’s strongest cars were in position to settle the trophy, with some – such as Larson and Hamlin – on a two-tire pit stop and some – such as Truex and Byron – with four fresh tires.

There were 11 cautions on the day, and incidents on three consecutive restarts after the Stage 1 break impacted the playoff situations of multiple drivers.

The first restart after the stage break not only involved the Stage 1 winner Joey Logano but also collected Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez, who went into the race a single point behind Michael McDowell for the provisional 16th and final playoff position. Suárez’s No. 99 Trackhouse Chevy made just one additional lap but was too damaged to continue. He finished last in the 36-car field. Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford was flagged off the track for failing to meet the minimum-speed requirement, and he finished 35th after completing just 48 laps.

MORE: Suárez, Logano exit early at Pocono

With five regular-season races remaining, Suarez dropped to 18th in the championship standings and his deficit to 16th-place McDowell now stands at 23 points.

“At the end of the day, it’s our fault we shouldn’t be back there with those guys, squirrels,’’ a frustrated Suarez said, adding, “It was a racing incident, but we shouldn’t be racing those guys. We can only control what we can control.”

Austin Dillon was involved in a pair of incidents in Turn 1, brushing the outside wall on Lap 42 and then smashing into it on Lap 106 after tangling with Reddick. After a nudge from Reddick’s No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota, Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet made heavy contact with the barrier.

Dillon exited his car unhurt, then threw his helmet at the No. 45 car of Reddick, who was his Cup Series teammate at RCR from 2020-22.

RELATED: A.Dillon irate after Stage 3 crash

The Cup Series’ next race is the Cook Out 400, scheduled next Sunday, July 30 (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) at Richmond Raceway. Kevin Harvick is the defending race winner. Kyle Larson won at Richmond this spring.

Note: Post-race inspection in the Cup Series garage at Pocono concluded without issue, confirming Hamlin as the race winner. The Nos. 4 and 19 will return to the R&D Center for further inspection, while the No. 47 will return to Concord, North Carolina, for a wind tunnel test.

Contributing: Staff reports