Quaker State 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway
(⏰ Sunday, 7 p.m. ET | 📺 USA, NBC Sports App | 📻 PRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race in Illinois, the 19th points-paying race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Atlanta 101

📍 Location: Hampton, Georgia
📐 Track length: 1.54 miles
🎟️ Buy tickets: Find weekend passes, seats for the race
💰 Cup Series race purse: $7,449,067
📏 Race distance: 400 miles | 260 laps
🔢 Stages: 60 | 160 | 260

🚪 Entry list: Cup Series drivers entered
📋 Starting lineup: Aric Almirola lands Busch Light Pole
🚗 Pit stall assignments: 
Where drivers will pit on Sunday
🏆 Most recent winner: Joey Logano, spring 2022

Key things to watch 🔑

Saturday’s session

Fords dominate qualifying on Saturday. Led by an exceptional effort from Aric Almirola, Ford drivers swept the first three rows on the grid, anchored by Almirola’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Kevin Harvick. Harvick is set to make his final start at the venue where he earned his iconic first Cup Series victory in 2001. Breaking up the Ford focus was Ty Gibbs in seventh and Kyle Larson in eighth, each in two very different scenarios heading into this weekend. Gibbs is still searching for his first career win while Larson aims for his third of the season — and to shake his misfortune on superspeedways. With no practice on the docket, a short session was implemented after qualifying for drivers and teams to get familiar with the new pit-road procedures going into effect on Sunday. | Read the full lineup, qualifying recap

Big story line

It’s time to make a playoff push. And no, that’s not a drafting pun. Drivers still needing a win to secure their ticket to the NASCAR Playoffs are simply running out of time. Sunday’s race at Atlanta is the first in a key seven-race stretch before the regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway — and we know, you don’t want to have that pressure at one of the most difficult and unpredictable tracks on the circuit. While the new superspeedway-style revamping of Atlanta, with loads of passing and on-track action, makes it seem like a wild-card race, history suggests the opposite. In the three races since the reconfiguration and repave, the driver who has led the most laps has won all three times. So qualifying and early success in Stage 1 could be another key indicator of which driver will come out on top. But expect the underdogs to be hungrier than ever. | Check out the current playoff outlook

History tells us…

Chase Elliott will be a factor. Georgia native Elliott won at Atlanta last July and finished top seven in his other start on the new configuration (missed March 2023 due to broken leg). The Hendrick Motorsports driver has also won two of the last six races on drafting tracks, making him the only repeat winner in the last 14 races on the track type. Elliott and the No. 9 team head into Georgia on a scorching streak of three consecutive top-five finishes. Still on the outside looking in from a playoff perspective, their points surge up the standings has been exceptional. But expect them to be fully focused to punch their ticket this weekend with their first trip to Victory Lane this season.

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

Corey LaJoie. The Spire Motorsports driver has had incredible success on the new layout, with two top-five finishes and one finish of 21st tainted by an unfortunate wreck while racing for the win on the final lap last season. Building on his success here in March, resulting in a fourth-place finish, LaJoie should be in the mix to capitalize on a rare opportunity for him to reach Victory Lane. And despite his track record, he sits mid-pack with 35-1 opening odds, according to DraftKings — a reasonable pickup for fantasy and if you’re looking to claim your stake on a driver lower on the board. If you’re not convinced LaJoie is your man, take a look at Austin Hill. Hill is a back-to-back Atlanta winner in the Xfinity Series and has a chance to complete the trifecta on Saturday before strapping into the Cup Series car on Sunday. His opening line is 55-1.

Thank You, Fans ❤️

NASCAR is launching a new national campaign called “Thank You, Fans,” celebrating the millions of NASCAR’s dedicated followers.

Familiar favorites ⭐️

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

• Paint Scheme Preview: New designs for Atlanta and Mid-Ohio races | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Joey Logano aiming to sweep the races at Atlanta | Latest driver rankings
• Fantasy Fastlane:
Can Corey LaJoie finally find his breakthrough win? | Best plays, Fantasy Live advice
• Betting odds: Favorites, long shots to win on Sunday | Top bets, underdog picks
• Stacking Pennies:
Looking back at Chicago and a massive win for SVG | Listen to the podcast

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

Hot off the press 📰

Key stories and breaking news from the week leading up to the race.

• Pit-road procedures: NASCAR alters rules, speed limits for Sunday | Read more
• Safety updates:
New updates to Next Gen structure set to debut | Read more
• New-look Cindric:
Austin Cindric shifting to glasses Sunday night at Atlanta | Read more
• Chase Elliott:
Confidence in team, momentum growing with solid finishes | Read more
• Playoff bubble:
As weeks wind down, standings come into focus | Read more
• James Small on Chicago winner SVG:
‘An incredible, natural talent’ | Read more
• Dale Jr.:
Hall of Famer sets another Xfinity date at Homestead | Read more
• New sponsor:
Relay Payments signs on with No. 24, William Byron | Read more
• Untold Stories:
Cale Yarborough’s engine noises | Learn the story
• eNASCAR:
NASCAR announces new partnership with Gen.G | Read more
• Daytona 500:
Tickets on sale for 2024 race | More info, buy tickets
• Trackhouse:
Big win for Project 91 highlights organization’s innovation | Read more
• Inside the Race:
Dissecting the Lap 49 pileup at Chicago | Watch the video

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
• The Action Network: Early betting favorites for Sunday’s race | Expert analysis

Georgia on my mind 🍑

From Richard Petty’s final start to both Elliotts finding Victory Lane, there’s plenty of incredible racing history in the Peach State.

• Party of two: Fraternity of Georgia-born winners at Atlanta is a small one | Read more
• Winner, winner:
All-time wins at Atlanta Motor Speedway | See the list
• Do you remember?:
Memorable moments at Atlanta | Relive them here
• Race Rewind:
Last-lap pass sends Logano to Victory Lane | Watch the highlights

Take some notes 📝

Five hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

This is the first time there will not be a scheduled 500-mile race at Atlanta in a season.
The driver leading the most laps won all three races at Atlanta since the reconfiguration.
Corey LaJoie and Ross Chastain are the only drivers with two top-five finishes at the “new” Atlanta.
Toyota is the only winless manufacturer on drafting tracks in the Next Gen era.
Ford drivers led 221 of the 260 laps at Atlanta in March, with Logano winning the race.

🔮 Advance to Victory Lane: Racing Insights projects Sunday’s finishing order

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Fans can now secure their tickets for the 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway, the track announced Friday. NASCAR’s 2024 season opener is set for Feb. 18, capping off Speedweeks presented by AdventHealth.

“The 2023 Daytona 500 kicked off a historic NASCAR season with great fanfare, entertainment and excitement,” said Frank Kelleher, President of Daytona International Speedway. “We’re thrilled to build off that energy as we prepare to welcome fans back for the 2024 Daytona 500.”

BUY TICKETS: See the 2024 Daytona 500 live!

Fans are encouraged to secure their tickets now to be a part of history at The Great American Race, as tickets have been selling out earlier each year. The track announced a sellout of grandstand tickets in mid-January for the 2023 edition of the race.

Limited hospitality options remain, including spots in 31 Degrees – an area that debuted with the 2023 Daytona 500 and is located mere feet from the 31-degree banking of Turn 1. The area includes sight lines of pit-out and the famed front trioval, as well as premium bar and food and a souvenir gift.

Additionally, fans looking to take in all the excitement of Speedweeks presented by AdventHealth may purchase four-day packages to make sure they don’t miss a minute of the action. For those still hoping to camp at DIS, there are a limited number of campsites remaining in the West Lot, located outside Turn 2.

The season opener of NASCAR’s 75th Anniversary was the longest Daytona 500 in NASCAR history, as Ricky Stenhouse Jr. took the checkered flag after two overtimes, snapping a streak of 199 races without winning.

RELATED: Official race results | At-track photos

NASCAR will also be back at Daytona International Speedway one more time in 2023, for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 weekend on Aug. 25-26, with tickets still available.

Drivers in the NASCAR Xfinity Series will tackle the 2.5-mile trioval once again in the Wawa 250 powered by Coca-Cola on Friday, Aug. 25. Then, on Saturday Aug. 26, the NASCAR Cup Series returns to Daytona in the final race of the regular season, the Coke Zero Sugar 400.

Fans are encouraged to reserve their place at the 2024 Daytona 500 by logging onto Daytona500.com or by calling 1-800-PITSHOP. Tickets may be purchased for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 race weekend at daytonainternationalspeedway.com.

Months ago, James Small had offered a hint of what Shane van Gisbergen, given a competitive NASCAR Cup Series ride, might be capable of. Small, the crew chief for Martin Truex Jr. and Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 19 Toyota, provided that early glimpse on social media last September, saying that team owners would be wise to give the New Zealander ace from the Australian V8 Supercars ranks that opportunity.

Trackhouse Racing co-founder Justin Marks ended up being that car owner, and van Gisbergen did the rest, dazzling the stock-car racing community with a stirring victory in his Cup Series debut last Sunday in the inaugural Chicago Street Race. The performance accelerated the 34-year-old wheelman’s “get to know you” process for fellow drivers and broadcasters alike, who sometimes struggled to pronounce his name but who certainly knew who he was — in full name or initial form as “SVG” — once the weekend was up.

For Small — a Melbourne, Australia native with a similar racing background Down Under — van Gisbergen was a known entity.

“If you knew how good he was, he’s just an incredible, natural talent,” Small told NASCAR.com. “He always has been, and when he’s on, he’s unbeatable. And he can still be beaten like a lot of other people. It’s not like he has a free-for-all down there or anything like that, but yeah, I think it just set up perfectly for him. It was a track that nobody had any laps at. He is one of the all-time greats on street circuits in Australia. That’s his kind of bread and butter, and all those things, and the cars being a lot closer than they’ve ever been with the new Next Gen car versus what a V8 Supercar is like these days, it kind of all set up really good for him.

“That’s why I was pretty confident, but so long as he had a clean race, he was always gonna be up there, and yeah, he proved that.”

RELATED: Weekend schedule: Atlanta | At-track photos: Chicago

Small says he and Shane van Gisbergen had mostly operated on parallel paths when climbing up the ranks of the Australian racing scene. Small recalls seeing one of his first starts nearly 15 years ago, but that the two never worked together on the same team, finding themselves on competing operations.

“To be perfectly honest, I’ve never had really a relationship with him or spoken to him that much, and the first time I had a proper, full conversation with him was in Nashville, when he came and found me,” Small said, referring to the Cup Series race weekend before Chicago. “But we have a lot in common and friends that are in common and everything.”

Still, he knew how stout van Gisbergen’s credentials were without needing to look them up for verification. SVG has raced to three Supercars championships — in 2016, 2021 and just last year in 2022 — and has 80 victories, good for fourth-most all time.

The suggestion that van Gisbergen suddenly surfaced out of nowhere has some flaws. Small says that any unfamiliarity in the USA stems from a lack of exposure, and that when stateside coverage provided by the Speed Channel ended 10 years ago, American eyes on the Supercars tour dwindled. “It’s a hard series to watch if you live in the U.S. unless you’re really dedicated,” he says.

Two prime examples stand out among van Gisbergen’s predecessors who have made a splash here. Marcos Ambrose was a two-time Supercars champ who pivoted to stock cars, winning twice in the Cup Series and five times in Xfinity competition, but often in mid-tier equipment and in an era when road courses — his specialty — were not as prevalent on the NASCAR schedule as they are today. More recently, Scott McLaughlin won three consecutive Supercars titles (2018-2020) before giving the NTT IndyCar Series a go. After netting just one podium as an IndyCar rookie, McLaughlin has won four times in the last season and a half for Team Penske.

“He and Shane were at it year after year there, winning all those championships before Scotty left,” Small says. “To see what he has done coming over here from a V8 Supercar into an IndyCar, you know, it looks like he’s spent his whole life racing open-wheel when he’s been racing open-wheels for about two and a half years, so the talent level there is super high. And I feel like there’s probably another three or four guys, definitely three that can come over here and probably do exactly what Shane did if they’re in the right equipment and you had that same opportunity again on a fresh street circuit.”

Van Gisbergen’s star turn in Chicago touched off a wave of speculation that more opportunities in the U.S. might be forthcoming. Jamie Whincup, the managing director of his Triple Eight Race Engineering team, fueled the conjecture by telling FOX Sports Australia that the team would not stand in SVG’s way should a Cup Series ride present itself.

Van Gisbergen said he remained committed to Supercars through 2024, a statement he made post-race in Chicago and then reiterated days later in the wake of Whincup’s remarks. “But in ’25, who knows?” he said Sunday.

If the NASCAR Cup Series became his destination for more than a one-off appearance, van Gisbergen could thrive again in the circuit’s road-course events. But it’s the various ovals — superspeedways, intermediates and short tracks — that Small said would provide the biggest challenge in the event SVG makes a full-time bid.

“I think the oval thing would be incredibly difficult, but I think even as Scotty has proven in IndyCar, the bridge can be gapped, you know what I mean?” Small says. “Especially now in the current day with all the simulation and the SMT data and having good teammates and people to lean on, and the cars just being a little more like a race car these days. They’re not sloppy, compliant things that we used to run in the past. I think all of that sets up in any of these guys’ favor if they want to come and try and do it.

“You look at it like, you could have a Xfinity Series rookie that’s run on ovals with not much race craft or racing experience or working with teams, all that kind of stuff. Or you could have someone like Shane, who you could maybe guarantee a road-course win no matter what, and it takes a little bit of the pressure off in learning all the other circuits. I think, hopefully, somebody gives him an opportunity or somebody else in the future, because I think given time, they could be competitive on all tracks, but certainly, they’re not going to jump in straight away and be winning races in my mind.”

MORE: Cup Series standings

The Chicago event showcased Shane van Gisbergen’s skill, but it also demonstrated another phase of the current-generation Cup Series car’s adaptability. A quarter-mile track inside a football arena, a dirt track on top of Bristol’s concrete and now a temporary street circuit have joined the Cup Series schedule in the last three seasons. That versatility should be a boon if or when NASCAR’s top series goes global, said NASCAR Chief Operating Officer Steve O’Donnell, who added after the Chicago race: “I think we’re all confident at NASCAR that we could take the Cup Series anywhere we want.”

Other areas of North America might provide the easiest route for international expansion, but O’Donnell was asked about the possibility of Europe or the Australian and New Zealand markets as a potential landing place. NASCAR drivers participated in a pair of exhibition events at the Calder Park Raceway Thunderdome — a 1.119-mile oval — in 1988, and Champ Car was a regular participant at the Surfers Paradise street circuit from 1991-2007. The Calder Park oval though, Small says, has fallen into disrepair in recent years.

Small also added, however, that van Gisbergen’s Chicago triumph has sparked a bit of a frenzy, plus plenty of rekindled intrigue back home.

“I think the people would love it down there,” Small said. “There’s a huge amount of interest, and then I’ve had so many messages all week from people just saying the media coverage this week has been out of control for NASCAR racing. It’s just, everybody’s all-in on what happened was Shane and everything, and that’s all anybody’s talking about. So, that’s certainly given it a bump, but yeah, there’s a huge fan base out there, and there’s still a lot of diehard NASCAR fans left from the ’80s and ’90s and early 2000s, when they used to run the oval down there as well. So I think definitely, it would be well-received.”

Small and his No. 19 group’s shorter-term focus back in the States rests with a more traditional NASCAR venue for this Sunday’s Quaker State 400 (7 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The race officially signifies the start of the Cup Series season’s second half, and just eight events remain in the regular season.

So far, Small & Co. have had reason to cheer, since Truex heads the Cup Series standings with two victories to his credit. With a playoff berth locked up, Small says the team’s prep hasn’t shifted ahead to the postseason just yet. There remains a push toward the Regular Season Championship and the buffer of 15 playoff points that accompany that title.

“Same stuff, as we always do — one week at a time. We just try and go to every event and get the maximum out of it,” Small says. “In our mind, we go to every race still trying to win, and if we can’t do that, it’s how do we score as many points as possible and execute on all the things that we can control ourselves, you know what I mean? So there’s so many things that are out of our control, that can kind of happen on the weekend as well, that can derail your race. So the aim right now is just to try and win some more races, get more bonus points and really try and clinch the regular-season points because you know that comes with the 15 bonus points.

“It’s so tight at the top now, so anything can happen. You might finish first or ninth, who the hell knows? So there’s some tricky races coming up here with Atlanta and you’ve still got another speedway race (in Daytona) after that. So we’ll see, but hopefully we can get a couple more wins and set ourselves up.”

It’s crunch time for the NASCAR Playoffs as the Cup Series heads to a free-for-all at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the form of Sunday’s Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart (7 p.m. ET on USA Network, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App).

Eleven drivers are all but assured of qualifying for the postseason based on victories in the first 18 races of the regular season.

Kevin Harvick (151 points above the playoff elimination line), Chris Buescher (+104) and Brad Keselowski (+91) — currently 12th, 13th and 14th, respectively in the playoff standings — all seem comfortably situated, barring a spate of new winners in the next eight races.

MORE: Latest points standings | Playoff watch kicks off as postseason nears

Beyond that, however, the field is tightly packed. Bubba Wallace is 15 points to the good in 15th, and Ty Gibbs is six points above the cut line in 16th, the last playoff-eligible position. Gibbs gained 16 points and moved up two spots on the playoff grid with his ninth-place finish in the inaugural Chicago Street Race last Sunday.

Drivers in the 17th through 25th positions all are within striking distance, with 24th-place Chase Elliott 55 points out of a playoff spot and 25th-place Ryan Preece 66 points in arrears.

Given the superspeedway competition package in use for Sunday’s race on recently repaved Atlanta Motor Speedway, the universe of potential winners — and hence, potential playoff qualifiers — is expanded, at least according to conventional wisdom.

Wallace, for example, expressed confidence in his No. 23 team, despite four straight finishes of 15th or worse following his fourth-place run in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte in May.

“These last few races haven’t gone really well, and it wasn’t because we were looking at points,” said Wallace, who has three career second-place finishes at Daytona to his credit. “We just haven’t executed. We know the situation that we’re in, and we know we’re right there on the cusp of our first win of the season.

“We’ve just got to put it all together… We’ve just got to regroup. Our team can do it. I believe one thousand percent in this group, and it’s just a matter of time. We’ll be there.”

Elliott is the defending winner of the summer Atlanta race, but the 2020 Cup Series champion didn’t compete at Atlanta in March because of a broken leg suffered in a snowboarding accident.

The first 18 races of the season have highlighted the importance of stage racing. Harvick is 151 points above the playoff cut line in part because he has accumulated 106 stage points, most among currently winless drivers. AJ Allmendinger, on the other hand is 24 points below the line in 19th place in part because he has scored a mere 33 stage points in the first half of the season.

One interesting aspect of the Quaker State 400 is a first for NASCAR — a variable pit-road speed. Under green, drivers will be able to run up to 90 mph in the first two sectors of pit road, entering from Turn 3. From the third sector on, pit road speed drops to 45 mph.

MORE: Details on Atlanta’s pit-road procedures 

Under caution, pit-road speed is a constant 45 mph. In addition, one minute will be added to the Damaged Vehicle Policy clock for both the Cup and Xfinity Series. Cup teams will now have eight minutes to effect repairs. Xfinity teams will have seven minutes.

When the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series heads to the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on Saturday, the list of former road course winners in the field will be exactly two names long.

Reigning Series champion Zane Smith and 2021 title winner Ben Rhodes will try to add to their road course victory totals in Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 150 (1:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Truck standings | Full Mid-Ohio, Atlanta schedule

Rhodes won the Daytona Road Course race from the pole in 2021. Smith has scored back-to-back victories at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas.

Smith also finished second to Parker Kligerman in last year’s race at Mid-Ohio. Kligerman is not defending his win.

“I love road course racing,” Smith said. “Winning COTA two years in a row was cool, and racing Parker last year for the win (at Mid-Ohio) was fun. I expect another great truck this weekend, and hopefully this time we get the win.”

Another short list is the number of Craftsman Truck Series races left before the Playoff field is set — three.

Six drivers already have clinched berths with victories: Smith, Rhodes, Christian Eckes, Carson Hocevar, series leader Corey Heim and Grant Enfinger.

That leaves four spots available. Ty Majeski, 86 points above the cutoff, is well-positioned, but eighth-place Matt DiBenedetto is just 14 points to the good, with Matt Crafton 10 points above the line and Nick Sanchez holding a six-point edge over Stewart Friesen for the final Playoff-eligible position.

For the first time this season, the NASCAR Cup Series makes its encore performance at a track. On Sunday, it will be under the lights at Atlanta Motor Speedway for the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart (7 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

After a stunning result in last Sunday’s debut in downtown Chicago, Cup veterans will look to get back on track at a familiar venue.

Before the action in the Peach State gets underway this weekend, check out some trends to watch ahead of Sunday night, a special occasion for Goodyear, Next Gen updates debuting this weekend and interactive ways to follow all the action.

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

🛞 GOODYEAR TIRE NOTES 🛞

Sunday will mark the 2,000th win for Goodyear. In honor of the milestone for the tire manufacturing company, an extra trophy will be awarded to the winner of the race.

Cup cars will run the same tire code used in March that is specific to Atlanta. Teams will be allotted one set for Saturday’s qualifying session and an additional eight sets for Sunday evening’s race.

RULE CHANGES 📝

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

Beginning Sunday at Atlanta, NASCAR will implement safety updates to the Next Gen car.

Alongside the right-side door bars and extending towards the rear clip, teams will now be 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 will incur the cost of all these updates.

Pit-stop speed-limit procedures will also look a little different this weekend with the pit entrance moved to Turn 3 in March. For green-flag stops this weekend, sections 1 and 2 will be limited at 90 mph while sections 3 through 18 will be policed at 45 mph. Under the yellow flag, pit-road speed will be 45 mph for the full distance of pit road, starting from the white commitment line in Turn 3 to pit exit in Turn 1.

Additionally, NASCAR will extend its Damaged Vehicle Policy by one minute in each series, which is consistent with the sanctioning body’s approach to the March event. Cup teams will have eight minutes to repair damage to their vehicles and meet minimum speed requirements, up from its standard seven minutes. Xfinity teams will have seven minutes to fix their cars, up from six.

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

📉 TRENDS TO WATCH 📈

— Three different drivers have won the three races on the reconfigured Atlanta.

–Ford swept the first eight starting positions in the spring at Atlanta, it was the first time they started 1st-8th since 1965.

— Chevrolet won seven of the last eight drafting track races.

— The driver leading the most laps won the last four Atlanta races.

(Via Racing Insights)

NOTABLE MOMENTS 🎥

2021: Kurt Busch holds off brother Kyle to win at Atlanta | WATCH

2022: Chase Elliott scores thrilling first victory at home track | WATCH

2023: Joey Logano outduels Brad Keselowski to checkered flag | WATCH

ON-TRACK SCHEDULE 🗓️

Saturday, July 8

— 5:35 p.m. ET: Qualifying (USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Sunday, July 9

— 7 p.m. ET: Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart (NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

MORE: Full weekend schedule at Atlanta

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.

NASCAR officials announced Thursday an alteration to its pit-road speed-limit procedures for this weekend’s Xfinity Series and Cup Series events at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

After extending pit entrance to Turn 3 for the spring race in March — a product of Atlanta’s 2022 reconfiguration that resulted in superspeedway-style racing at the 1.54-mile oval — NASCAR is implementing two separate pit-road speed limits under green-flag conditions for this weekend’s races.

MORE: Cup standings | Atlanta schedule

During green-flag pit stops, sections 1 and 2 of pit road will be limited at 90 mph, while sections 3 through 18 will be policed at 45 mph. Under caution-flag conditions, pit-road speed will be 45 mph for the full distance of pit road, starting from the white commitment line in Turn 3 to pit exit in Turn 1.

The extended length of pit road saw a steady 45 mph speed limit at all times during the March race weekend, resulting in cars falling laps down during green-flag conditions. NASCAR’s goal in implementing two separate pit road speed limits is to help minimize a team’s chances of falling off the lead lap during such pit cycles.

“It’ll certainly be different having two gears,” 2020 Cup champion Chase Elliott told reporters Thursday. “Having a taller gear for your fast section and then having to downshift to get to your normal pit-road speed is definitely something that I don’t think I’ve ever done before. I don’t know that that’s going to change the dynamic of the race a whole lot. I think it’s going to take a little getting used to from a driver’s standpoint just to do that and to do it efficiently.”

Due to the unique circumstances, NASCAR will hold one pit-entry practice per series following their respective final rounds of qualifying. The sessions will see drivers sent in groups of three to test the 90-mph green-flag entry speed from the Turn 3 white entry line to the traditional yellow pit entry line in Turn 4 where the limit drops to the standard 45 mph. Teams will also be able to run the first few sections of pit road to get a feel for going from the 90-mph entry speed to 45-mph pit road speed.

Additionally, NASCAR will extend its Damaged Vehicle Policy by one minute in each series, which is consistent with the sanctioning body’s approach to the March event. Cup teams will have eight minutes to repair damage to their vehicles and meet minimum speed requirements, up from its standard seven minutes. Xfinity teams will have seven minutes to fix their cars, up from six.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series competes in the Alsco Uniforms 250 on Saturday (8 p.m. ET, USA Network, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). The NASCAR Cup Series races in the Quaker State 400 available at Walmart on Sunday (7 p.m. ET, USA, PRN, SiriusXM, NBC Sports App).

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s destination for his second scheduled start of the Xfinity Series season was announced Thursday, with the NASCAR Hall of Famer planning to compete at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Since his retirement from the NASCAR Cup Series in 2017, Earnhardt has competed in one race each season in the Xfinity tour. This year, the 48-year-old driver is set for two events — Sept. 15 at Bristol Motor Speedway and now also the Contender Boats 250 on Oct. 21 (3 p.m. ET, USA, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App) at the 1.5-mile South Florida oval.

RELATED: Xfinity Series schedule | Homestead-Miami tickets

Earnhardt’s appearance at Homestead-Miami is a return trip in his post-retirement tour. He finished fifth there in 2020. Since his transition from the Cup Series to an analyst role with NBC Sports, Earnhardt has also raced at Richmond Raceway (2018, 2021), Darlington Raceway (2019), and Martinsville Speedway (2022). His most recent Xfinity Series effort ended in an 11th-place finish, topped by a post-race cooler of beer on Martinsville’s pit road.

Earnhardt has won 24 times in the Xfinity Series, racing to the circuit’s championship in 1998-99. His best Xfinity finish at Homestead was a runner-up outcome that capped his second title march.

Earnhardt’s most recent Xfinity Series win came April 23, 2016 at Richmond, where he dominated by leading 128 of 149 laps.

Many things had to go right for Justin Bonsignore to reach this point in his career.

The driver from Holtsville, New York, a three-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion, will make his 200th series start Saturday night at New Jersey’s Wall Stadium Speedway.

The importance of the moment isn’t lost on Bonsignore, who also didn’t miss an opportunity to make a joke at his own expense.

“It shows how quick time flies and how old I’m getting,” the 35-year-old said with a light laugh. “It’s not anything I ever dreamed of, making it this long in the series, and having the success we’ve had is another thing you just couldn’t have ever imagined.

“It’s been a great ride, and I’m hoping to make it to 300.”

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Bonsignore made his NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debut 16 years ago. At 19 years old, he drove his family-owned No. 23 to a fourth-place finish at his home track, New York’s Riverhead Raceway.

The field included some of the best the Tour had to offer, including winner Donny Lia, Matt Hirschman, Jamie Tomaino, Ryan Preece, Mike Stefanik, Jimmy Blewett, Ted Christopher, Todd Szegedy and Jerry Marquis.

In his first Tour start, he beat all of them but Lia.

Justin Bonsignore celebrates in victory lane after winning the 2018 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Championship on October 14, 2018 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park in Thompson, Connecticut. (Photo: Ruby Wallau/NASCAR)

“We were having a pretty good year in 2007 with the weekly stuff at Riverhead Raceway, and it was always the dream to try and make some starts at the time at Riverhead and see how we stacked up against the Tour regulars,” Bonsignore said. “We really had an amazing night finishing fourth in our first ever start.

“We kind of hovered around the top 10 and then had a really good car at the end of the race and some of the most tire left on it and was able to charge through the field and run fourth. It was just an amazing accomplishment because we were on a really tight budget at the time. We had an older car and not a lot of help. We really made the most of it.”

Bonsignore made his next Tour start two years later, once again at Riverhead, on Aug. 1, 2009. He again finished fourth.

He couldn’t have known it at the time, but that day changed his life. His future car owner was watching from the grandstands.

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“Ken Massa was in the grandstands that night with a friend of his,” Bonsignore said. “At the time, he was sponsoring a charger car at Riverhead and was looking into getting into it a little bit more and starting his own team.

“That friend of his came up to me at the end of the night after the race and said, ‘I have someone I need you to meet.’ You are kind of always a little skeptical when people say stuff like that. Sure enough, that week that gentleman called us and had me, my father and a good friend of ours, Danny Jones, who was a big sponsor of ours at the time, meet Ken at his office.”

A few weeks after the meeting, Massa purchased his first modified. He then called Bonsignore and offered the seat for the full NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season in 2010.

“That was late September of 2009. I think by the end of that month we had a car, and during the offseason we got a big trailer and a second car,” Bonsignore said. “We were ready to go for 2010. It’s been amazing that we’ve been together ever since.”

Justin Bonsignore at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on April 10, 2010 in Thompson, Connecticut. It was his first start driving for team owner Ken Massa. (Photo: Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

The pairing of Massa and Bonsignore has proven to be one of the most successful combinations in Modified Tour history. The pair has won 36 times in Modified Tour competition, with their first victory together coming in 2011 at Riverhead Raceway.

In their ninth season together with the Modified Tour, Bonsignore and Massa reached the mountaintop by capturing the 2018 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship. They’ve since added two more championships in 2020 and 2021, and they are in the hunt for their fourth title this season.

“I met Ken, and it’s been a dream ever since,” Bonsignore said. “He’s helped me open a business and just a lot of things he’s done for me personally that are equally as important, if not more important than the on-track stuff we have together. It’s a really tight-knit group that we have together between his family and mine.

“I’m so blessed they came into my life.”

A lot has changed for Bonsignore since he was a 19-year-old kid making his first Modified Tour start at Riverhead Raceway in 2007, but the one thing that hasn’t changed is his drive to win.

He’s hoping to make his 200th Modified Tour start a memorable one by claiming his first series victory at Wall Stadium Speedway, a track known as one of the Northeast’s most challenging venues for modified competitors.

He won in his 100th Tour start at Riverhead Raceway in 2016, and Bonsignore has no reason to believe he can’t win in his 200th Tour start this weekend.

“If we could go out again and win in our 200th start, that would be awesome,” Bonsignore said. “Wall Stadium is a really special place with a lot of history. I would love to win there just in general. The Turkey Derby is such a historic race, and Wall Stadium in general is such a historic facility, and I’ve never been able to win there.

“That would be special, and that would top off the 200th start in a big way.”

Hendrick Motorsports announced Thursday that Relay Payments has joined the organization as a sponsor for the No. 24 Chevrolet and driver William Byron this season in the NASCAR Cup Series.

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Relay Payments — an Atlanta-based fintech company that strives to modernize and streamline payments for the transportation, logistics and supply chain industries — will be featured as the primary sponsor of the No. 24 for two races in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs: Sept. 16 at Bristol Motor Speedway and Oct. 15 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The Bristol Night Race sponsorship coincides with Truck Driver Appreciation Week.

Associate sponsorship is set to begin with this Sunday’s race (7 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Atlanta Motor Speedway, near Relay Payments headquarters.

“Truck drivers are the unsung heroes of our industry,” said Jeff Gordon, Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman, in a news release from the team. “The race cars Hendrick Motorsports fields each weekend are driven hundreds or thousands of miles to the race track to compete in front of our amazing fans. But truck drivers are vital to many industries, and the efficiency of Relay helps deliver products and services to businesses and customers in a quicker manner that benefits a lot of people. Hendrick Motorsports is of the same mindset – be the first to the finish line.”

Byron ranks second in the Cup Series standings at the season’s midway point. The 25-year-old driver is tied for the series lead with three victories this season.