For the sixth time in track history, Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan will host the running of the Money in the Bank 150 this Wednesday evening.

One of the newer events on the Berlin calendar, the Money in the Bank 150 has quickly become one of the most popular races in the Midwest for Super Late Model competitors. It has drawn some of racing’s biggest stars to compete for the $10,000 top prize.

STREAMING: Watch Wednesday’s Money in the Bank 150 live on FloRacing

Local stars have controlled most of the Money in the Bank 150 events held thus far. Brian Campbell and current NASCAR Camping World Truck Series competitor Carson Hocevar have won the race twice. Last year, however, NASCAR Cup Series star William Byron proved his worth by conquering this race for the first time.

More than 30 drivers are slated to hit the track Wednesday for the 2023 running of the Money in the Bank 150, with each looking to take home the $10,000 top prize after 150 competitive laps around one of Michigan’s top short tracks.

Below is everything you need to know about the 2023 Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway.

Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway
Cars race during the Budweiser Super Late Model feature at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan on April 23, 2022. (Photo: Nic Antaya/NASCAR)

What TV channel is the Money in the Bank at Berlin Raceway on in 2023?

All feature racing action from the 2023 Money in the Bank at Berlin Raceway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the streaming home of all NASCAR Roots properties.

The Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin will not be shown on a television network.

Below is the complete schedule for coverage on FloRacing.

Date Start time How to watch
Wednesday, June 7 7 p.m. ET FloRacing

2023 Money in the Bank schedule

This year’s Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin is scheduled for Wednesday, June 7. Tuesday, June 6 will serve as a practice day for Super Late Model teams.

Below is the complete race-day schedule for the 2023 Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway.

(All times ET)

9:30 a.m. Pit Pass Window Opens
10 a.m. Pit Area Opens
11 a.m. Race Tires Sold and Impounded
12 p.m. Super Late Model Driver/Spotter Meeting
1 – 1:50 p.m. Super Late Model Practice
2 – 2:50 p.m. Super Late Model Practice
3:30 p.m. Super Late Model Tech Inspection
4:10 – 4:40 p.m. Sportsman Practice
5:30 p.m. Super Late Model Qualifying
6:27 p.m. Invocation
Following Invocation National Anthem
6:30 p.m. Money in the Bank 150 Last Chance Race (40 Laps)
Following Last Chance Race Sportsman Feature (40 Laps)
Following Sportsman Feature Money in the Bank 150 (150 Laps)
Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway
Cars race during the Budweiser Super Late Models Feature at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan on April 23, 2022. (Nic Antaya/ARCA Racing)

Entry list

The current entry list for the 2023 Money in the Bank 150 features more than 30 competitors.

Headlining the talented group of competitors is defending NASCAR Cup Series Southern 500 winner Erik Jones, who is returning to his home state of Michigan to compete in Wednesday’s event in his own No. 4 Super Late Model.

Money in the Bank 150 at Berlin Raceway
Erik Jones (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Joining Jones on the entry list is two-time Money in the Bank 150 winner Carson Hocevar, who is fresh off his NASCAR Cup Series debut Sunday at World Wide Technology Raceway.

Other notables include inaugural winner Bubba Pollard, ARCA Menards Series East and West competitor Sean Hingorani, multi-time World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing champion Derek Griffith and Kyle Busch’s NASCAR Cup Series spotter Derek Kneeland.

Below is the complete entry list for Wednesday’s main event.

Car No. Driver
3 Mike Garvey
4 Erik Jones
5 Haden Horvath
6 Eric White
8 Tony Elrod
12 Derek Griffith
12 Brian Bergakker
14 Carson Hocevar
17 Zach Telford
18 Keith Herp
18 Chase Burda
20 Austin Hull
20 Sean Hingorani
22 Gio Ruggiero
22 Evan Shotko
23 Billy VanMeter
24 Dylan Stovall
24 Lee VanDyk
25 Tyler Roahrig
26 Bubba Pollard
28 Scott Thomas
33 Wes Griffith Jr.
47 Brian Campbell
50 Jett Noland
53 Boris Jurkovic
66 Nate Walton
71 Kyle Crump
76 Brian Tillema
81 Andre Gresel
88 Andrew Scheid
88 Trever McCoy
90 Derek Kneeland
101 Joe Bush
131 Blake Rowe

FloRacing: Breaking down the 2023 MITB entry list

Past winners

The Money in the Bank 150 being among newest events on the Berlin schedule hasn’t stopped some of the top stars from Michigan (and the nation) from competing in the event at the 7/16-mile paved oval in search of a $10,000 payday.

The inaugural event in 2017 was won national Super Late Model star Bubba Pollard. Local legend Brian Campbell won the next two Money in the Bank events in 2018-19, followed by current NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series star Carson Hocevar winning the event in consecutive years in 2020-21.

Last year, NASCAR Cup Series star and Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron powered to his first Money in the Bank 150 victory.

Year Winner
2017 Bubba Pollard
2018 Brian Campbell
2019 Brian Campbell
2020 Carson Hocevar
2021 Carson Hocevar
2022 William Byron

With a sixth-place finish on Sunday, Ryan Blaney left World Wide Technology Raceway atop the NASCAR Cup Series points standings for the first time this season.

Blaney netted 19 stage points in the Enjoy Illinois 300, winning Stage 2 and placing second in the opening stage to tie race-winner Kyle Busch for most stage points at St. Louis.

“Being the points leader is nice,” Blaney told NASCAR.com. “We’ve come from a long way back. Hopefully, we can keep it up through the summer months, having good runs and trying to hunt for a couple more wins too.”

MORE: Race results | Cup standings | Full Race Rewind

Blaney and his No. 12 crew at Team Penske are finding plenty of momentum as the second half of the regular season begins. Blaney’s win in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Monday night propelled the team to another strong run at St. Louis. The Sunday result marked Blaney’s sixth top-10 finish in the past seven races.

Blaney’s season has quickly turned for the better. Before Memorial Day Weekend, the driver of the No. 12 Ford was in the midst of a 59-race winless streak, yet to win with crew chief Jonathan Hassler who took the reins of the group at the beginning of the 2022 season.

Yet for all the near-misses throughout that stretch, Blaney has proven a consistent contender. The 64 points Blaney collected at Charlotte are the third-most in a single race since stage racing was introduced in 2017. And after leading 163 laps in Charlotte, he paced the field for 83 circuits at Gateway.

“You’ve got to put solid days like that together,” Blaney said. “And luckily we had a car fast enough to stick up front all day and work on it. And just one of those things where you just lose a little bit at the end.”

Blaney entered the day just one point behind Ross Chastain for the series lead. And while Blaney was a frontrunner all day, Chastain scored just five stage points before finishing 22nd.

The next three weeks, however, could provide a challenge as the series heads to two road courses in that span: Sonoma Raceway and the brand-new Chicago Street Race. Blaney has one career win on a road course as the inaugural victor on the Charlotte Roval in 2017 and one top-five finish in six Sonoma starts.

Between the two road courses sits the concrete, 1.333-mile Nashville Superspeedway. After crashing out in the inaugural Cup race there in 2021, Blaney returned to finish third at the tri-oval one year ago.

Ross Chastain (L) and Ryan Blaney shake hands in St. Louis
Getty Images

MADISON, Ill. — Kyle Busch collected his 63rd NASCAR Cup Series victory on Sunday at World Wide Technology Raceway, but the driver of the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet had to work hard for the first-place money.

Busch, the pole winner, survived five restarts in the last 40 laps of the Enjoy Illinois 300 and beat Denny Hamlin to the finish line by 0.517 seconds after Bubba Wallace’s broken brake rotor caused the 11th caution on Lap 236 and sent the race to overtime.

SHOP: Get winner gear 

The victory was Busch’s first at the 1.25-mile track and the third in his debut season with RCR. It was a home game for his crew chief, Randall Burnett, who grew up in Fenton, Missouri, and had family in attendance on Sunday.

“That was pretty awesome,” Busch exulted after he climbed from his car. “Man, to sit on the pole, lead a lot of laps and have my guys do such a great job today was pretty phenomenal for us. Great for RCR. Just win, baby! Thanks to Team Chevy, appreciate (sponsor) 3Chi…

“We’re going to have a great time with this one. This one is pretty cool.”

RELATED: Race results | Big burnout for Busch

Busch led five times for 121 laps, including the last 60. Neither Hamlin nor third-place finisher Joey Logano — winner of the inaugural Gateway race last year — led a single circuit.

Kyle Larson parlayed a two-tire call on Lap 178 into improved track position and a fourth-place finish. Martin Truex was fifth, followed by Ryan Blaney, Daniel Suárez, William Byron, Michael McDowell and Kevin Harvick.

Blaney led 83 laps and Byron 30. Byron pitted from the lead on Lap 178 but fell to fourth with an uncharacteristically slow stop and faded in traffic after the subsequent Lap 184 restart.

Corey LaJoie finished 21st in a substitute role for Chase Elliott, who was serving a one-race suspension for wrecking Hamlin in Monday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Subbing for LaJoie in his usual ride — the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet — Carson Hocevar started 26th and gained 10 spots with an impressive drive through the field before a brake rotor failure on Lap 90 knocked him out of the race.

Hocevar was running 16th and chasing Austin Dillon for position when the right front rotor broke into pieces. The No. 7 Camaro made jarring contact with the Turn 1 wall to cause the fourth caution of the race, which was delayed for two hours with just seven laps complete because of lightning in the area.

“I thought it was great,” said Hocevar, who was racing a Cup car for the first time. “I had a blast. Just so thankful for the opportunity. I don’t have a job for next year. I know Al Niece and Cody Efaw want me to run for them (in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series), and I will forever run a race or however many.

“But man, I’m just so thankful that (Spire) gave me the opportunity — the opportunity to drive an Xfinity car (on Monday at Charlotte) and now driving a Cup car. I was running 16th … just so surreal for the first time ever. I thought we were going to have a good day and be in a good spot for the No. 7 Chevy team. Hopefully, that call for a Cup ride isn’t the only one I get in my life.”

Overheating brake rotors weren’t an issue confined to Hocevar’s car. Tyler Reddick slammed the outside wall after his right front rotor exploded on Lap 175. On Lap 198, the same fate befell Noah Gragson, who took the hardest hit of all when his No. 42 Chevy slid up the track into the fence in Turn 1.

Bubba Wallace had the same issue with five laps left in regulation and his contact with the Turn 1 wall set up the final two-lap run to the finish in overtime.

WATCH: Austin Dillon, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. collide in battle for 12th

Hamlin felt the lightning delay played against him and the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team.

“Yeah, I thought we were super dialed in if it was 95 degrees like it was supposed to be, (but) with those delays, it kind of took away from the advantage I thought that we had,” Hamlin said.

“I’m proud of this whole Sport Clips Toyota team — pit crew did a phenomenal job keeping us in it and doing really good on the money stop with about 60 to go. We are going to have to wait (for) another (race) to get that 50th (win).”

MORE: Best photos from the weekend

The Cup Series will next take on Sonoma Raceway in the Toyota/Save Mart 350 on June 11 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Post-race inspection concluded without issue, confirming the No. 8 Chevrolet of Kyle Busch as the race winner. The No. 17 Ford will be taken to NASCAR R&D for wind-tunnel testing, while the Nos. 38 and 43 cars will undergo further inspection.

LE MANS, France – Wherever Jimmie Johnson walked trackside at the Circuit de la Sarthe in Le Mans, France on Sunday, fans wandered over for a photograph with the seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion. Good-luck handshakes, cheers and autograph seekers stopped him in the crowded paddock.

Truth be told, Johnson was equally as enamored with the setting and people, constantly snapping photographs and taking videos of the historic track and scene where he will compete June 10-11 as part of the Garage 56 NASCAR effort in the 100th anniversary of the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans race.

RELATED: At-track photos: Le Mans | Race week schedule

The smile on Johnson’s face was genuine and enduring – both as he anticipated his first-ever laps at the 8.467-mile road course on Sunday morning and again after he climbed out of the cockpit of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 after his maiden outing around one of racing’s most renowned circuits.

“The atmosphere is insane,’’ Johnson said of his first full-day at track. “I was chatting with someone yesterday, a fan, that said Americans have always been loved at Le Mans. He said our reputation is very accommodating, hospitable, very kind to the fans.”

Even 4,000 miles away in Europe, fans certainly know Johnson, who actually won his most recent NASCAR Cup Series race on this day six years ago at Dover – his 83rd victory in a NASCAR career that included an unprecedented five consecutive series championships among his seven titles.

“I signed a 2006 championship hat someone had,’’ Johnson said. “Even diecast cars, all this different NASCAR stuff.’’

In Sunday’s test session, the Garage 56 team drivers combined to turn 58 laps in the Chevrolet, which is being designated for the race’s special one-car “Innovative Car” class – a collaboration of NASCAR, Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet, Goodyear and IMSA; the effort led by Johnson’s former crew chief Chad Knaus, now a Hendrick team executive.

MORE: Johnson soaks in Le Mans with in-town parade

Johnson and his championship teammates on the Garage 56 team – former Formula One champion Jenson Button and former Le Mans winner Mike Rockenfeller are keeping dibs on who is fastest in each session. Button took the honors in the opening session. Rockenfeller was quickest in the afternoon. Four-time IMSA champion Jordan Taylor, who made his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut at Portland, Oregon on Saturday, is flying in to serve as the reserve driver.

“I wouldn’t say everything’s going as planned because, you know always when you plan, there’s things that have some hiccups here or there,’’ said Greg Ives, the Garage 56 crew chief, who also formerly served in that role for Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Cup Series.

“Today is relatively going well and we had some pace in the car. The drivers are relatively happy and it seems like the balance of the car is very similar to how we ended at most of these tracks. So we were able to mimic, not only the simulation but get the lap time kind of where we thought we should be and could be in top speed and all that stuff.

“So, we’ve still got some lap time to go,’’ Ives continued during a break between Sunday’s two sessions. “But you know, right now it’s the first three hours of Le Mans and we just got off the track that had semis and cars and bicycles on it, so I feel like we’re in a decent spot. Trying to get as many laps for the drivers as they can to make sure they’re comfortable and work through the bugs of the car.’’

Ives said the team had not settled on a driver order just yet. In Sunday’s practices, it was Rockenfeller then Johnson and then Button. He said the team planned to run double stints for most of the race, after single stints early on to get every driver some track time.

MORE: Garage 56 timeline, coverage

The Hypercar Class No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari posted the top overall speed on Sunday. There is a day off from track activity on Monday, when Johnson will travel with his teammate Button to Paris. The team – primarily made up of Hendrick Motorsports NASCAR team members – will participate in the pit stop competition on Tuesday. Formal practice and qualifying for the race begins on Wednesday.

“I think first of all it was so nice to finally be on track in Le Mans in this car after all the work we did,’’ Rockenfeller said after Sunday’s final session. “The whole team can be proud of today. I know it’s only a test day but I’m happy we were driving without any problems. We were fast and that’s where we want to be. The car looks amazing on track and sounds great.

“We were just doing our work, learning the track, track evolution and making the car faster, trying stuff out. It’s still a long week ahead of us, but I think today we just take that and make the right conclusions. I feel pretty happy with everything.’’

A sellout crowd of more than 300,000 spectators is expected for the weekend’s “Centenary” race weekend. The famous grandstands and grounds surrounding the massive road course in central France were packed with people even for Sunday’s unofficial test sessions.

“It was really good for a lot of reasons,’’ Johnson said of his first day on track. “One, just my desire to come and compete here and be in the event. That reality hit me and then after a few laps I realized the pace the car had as well, all the hard work everyone at Hendrick has put into this showed up.

“We feel good about the speed. The concerns were that we’d be really fast on the straights and slow on the high-speed turns and relative to the GT cars we’re much closer in the high-speed turns than we ever thought and actually a little slow on the long straights. But we can optimize that. It’s just gone so well on so many levels.’’

“Granted there’s still 18 hours of practice and a race and so much can go wrong. But for day one, it’s just gotten off to a great start.”

Through 14 races, Ross Chastain sits atop the NASCAR Cup Series points standings.

It’s a spot he’s still not particularly used to being in, though perhaps he should be by now. Including penalties dished to other teams along the way, the driver of the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet has ranked first or second in points since the second race of the season in Fontana, California.

“It’s big,” Chastain told NASCAR.com Friday via teleconference. “It’s almost indescribable for me just to be running well enough in the Cup Series to be in contention for getting the most points. I mean, there’s no way around it, right? There’s nothing other than acquiring points that gets you to where we’re at. So, to this date, we’ve got more than anybody else.

“No matter how all this goes, like these moments, I will remember forever. And that kind of sounds silly to say that out loud when we have, like you said, bigger aspirations. But still, the small victories along the way are not unnoticed by us.”

MORE: St. Louis schedule | Cup standings

This weekend, Chastain returns to World Wide Technology Raceway, where on-track disagreements with Denny Hamlin and Chase Elliott took center stage a year ago. In his own words, there was a lot of “content” that came from that day that lingered throughout the rest of 2022 and into the 2023 season.

“When I watch it, it is … it’s hard to watch,” Chastain said. “But I remember what was going through my mind in those moments, and it wasn’t just that day. It was a build-up to that, and I made a decision to move Denny and hit him too hard and wrecked him. Never wanted to do that.”

WATCH: Contact from Chastain sends Hamlin into wall

Intent aside, what resulted was a rivalry between Chastain and Hamlin that carried into the March 12 race at Phoenix Raceway this year, leading Hamlin to intentionally wall Chastain and incur a $50,000 fine and 25-point penalty. Oh, and the contact with Elliott at Gateway in 2022? For that, Chastain was a bit less remorseful, chalking it up as a product of close-quarters action.

“The three-wide in the race, all that, it’s just racing,” Chastain said. “But I’m really glad going into the race this year that, funny enough, the two guys that kind of tag-teamed me last year, one of them’s not even gonna be there. And they’re so focused with themselves, they’re just probably eating watermelon today and not even worried about me.”

A competitor in the Championship 4 one season ago, Chastain has found plenty of success at NASCAR’s top echelon since joining Trackhouse Racing, including his first two victories in the Cup Series. But the most recent of those came at Talladega Superspeedway in April — of 2022. Next week’s race at Sonoma Raceway marks one year since Trackhouse went to Victory Lane at all, that week courtesy of Daniel Suárez’s breakthrough triumph.

Goose eggs in 2023 be damned, there is a high level of belief Trackhouse is ready to snap back to Victory Lane in an instant.

“We feel strong. We know we’re strong,” Chastain said. “We’ve both had opportunities to win this year. Hasn’t worked out. But we just keep going to the race track and driving some of the fastest rocket ships in the Cup Series. And as long as we keep preparing to win, and our team keeps preparing and building cars that can win, it’s just a matter of putting it all together.

“(Cup Series racing) is really tough. And there’s things that I have learned this year that I wish I knew at the beginning of the year. But you know, getting caught up in the anniversaries of things, I’m not a big birthday celebration guy for myself. I’ll go to someone else’s party, but I don’t really care to have one for me. And same goes with wins. I’m not sad, and I didn’t celebrate a year after the COTA win, for example. It’s just we go, we move on, and we remember the good times, but we don’t dwell on the bad ones.”

RELATED: Analysis: Gobs of talent, aggression create opportunities — and challenges for Chastain

Daniel Suárez (L) and Ross Chastain walk through driver introductions
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Thanks to their explosive 2022 campaign, it’s sometimes easy to forget this is just Trackhouse Racing’s third season in NASCAR. In many ways, it’s actually still its sophomore year. Trackhouse’s 2021 debut with Suárez and crew chief Travis Mack on the No. 99 team stemmed from a building on the campus of Richard Childress Racing, utilizing older RCR chassis while racing the Gen 6 Cup car.

Then came last year, which saw Trackhouse take over the building and operations that formerly belonged to Chip Ganassi Racing, where Chastain drove the No. 42 Chevrolet in 2021. Chastain’s commute never changed. It did for the No. 99 team.

“Nothing changed other than the name on the front of the building and the upper management of my bosses in the shop from my crew chief to shop managers and car chief; like we kept a lot of that the same,” Chastain said. “So as Daniel came in and Travis and they assembled that 99 group, that was a totally new group to our shop. They had to change where they were going to work from 2021 to ’22. But we didn’t. So I’d say they had more learning to do to get up to speed with how the shop operated.”

Coupled with the addition of the Next Gen vehicle that debuted in 2022, there was plenty of change afoot. A year and a half later, Chastain and Suárez continue to evolve as teammates — a tenacious pair of drivers; hungry, passionate and fast, which can (and has) lead to disagreements.

“I take definitely a less vocal role compared to Daniel,” Chastain said. “He definitely is more vocal about a lot of things. And sometimes I’m like it, ‘Yes, yes. What he’s saying! Yes, that. I agree.’ He’s just a lot more vocal about it.

“We’re professionals. So as we race, and we race really competitive cars, there’s bound to be human nature, to be incidents — and there have been — and we’re professionals, though. We move on and handle our business at the shop. We really couldn’t come from further upbringings as far as NASCAR teammates are concerned. I don’t think anybody has two drivers that came up (this) differently. But then again, we’re more alike than either one of us will probably ever admit. But when it comes to interacting with the team and stuff, we go about stuff professionally and different in a lot of ways.”

Each suffered issues in Monday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte on Monday — ironically, both involving the No. 8 of Kyle Busch. Suárez suffered nose damage when Busch spun in front of him, leaving the No. 99 nowhere to go but Busch’s driver-side door. Chastain, on the other hand, suffered his race-altering contact on pit road.

“On pit road, I ran into the 8 and 19 (Martin Truex Jr.),” Chastain said. “We all merged as I was coming out of my box around the 15 car. We were four-wide — really five-wide with the 15 to my left — and bent the right-rear upper control arm. We hit wheel to wheel. The 8 was fine. Like, it’s kind of crazy how just the luck happens. It was a hard hit, though. Like we all hit together — like three cars at once hit and bent the rear toe. So the toe link was fine. But the upper control arm was bent.

“I expected it as soon as I hit it. I could tell the wheel was off a little bit, but it was hard to tell. And it wasn’t something we could fix. We would’ve had to go laps down changing the upper, so we just rode it out.”

There’s been a lot of luck like that lately for the quickly rising organization, and logic says it’ll have to start going the other way at some point. Like Chastain noted, as long as the team keeps bringing “rocket ships” to the track and preparation remains paramount, it’ll all come together in due course.

And it could all come together Sunday at St. Louis.

Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing driver and co-owner Brad Keselowski reached a significant career milestone Sunday at World Wide Technology Raceway. The drop of the green flag officially gave the veteran and 2012 NASCAR Cup Series champion his 500th start at the sport’s highest level.

It’s reason to celebrate for Keselowski, who is coming off likely the toughest full-time season of his career. In his first year driving the team’s flagship No. 6 Ford in 2022, Keselowski failed to produce a win for the first time since 2010 — his first full-time year at NASCAR’s top level.

MORE: Cup standings

The Michigan native, though, was in the throes of rebuilding the RFK team in his likeness. The results are starting to show that through 14 regular-season races alongside Chris Buescher, who pilots the team’s No. 17 Ford.

Take a look below at RFK’s results through the first 14 races of the year this year, compared to last year.

Season20222023
Starts2828
Top fives05
Top 10s412
Laps led88165
Average start18.514.6
Average finish19.214.7

Keselowski is the 46th driver in NASCAR history to reach 500 career Cup Series starts. He joins the following active drivers on the list: Kevin Harvick (805 starts; tied with Jeff Gordon for ninth all-time), Kyle Busch (657), Martin Truex Jr. (636), Denny Hamlin (629) and Joey Logano (522).

Taking advantage of a melee in Turn 1 after an overtime restart, Cole Custer held off charging Justin Allgaier to win Saturday’s Pacific Office Automation 147 NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Portland International Raceway.

After a Lap 73 caution for debris on the track, Allgaier held the lead for the overtime restart on Lap 76. Restarting behind Allgaier, Parker Kligerman steered to the inside and charged the first corner, carrying Allgaier wide and knocking second-place Sheldon Creed, the pole winner, off the track.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

From the inside lane, Custer shot into the lead through Turn 1.

Allgaier negotiated the barriers in the Turn 1 chicane and retained second place, and though he got to Custer’s bumper on the final lap, he couldn’t make a clean pass for the win. Custer won the drag race to the finish line by .142 seconds to score his first victory of the season in the No. 00 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford.

“I was just trying not to make mistakes,” Custer said of the final restart. “I did the exact same thing (that Kligerman did). I saw him drive in so deep, and I did the same thing two restarts ago.

“Man, I’m just so happy. I’ve never won a road course race before. I’ve been so close so many times, and it’s just so awesome to win this… I’m pumped for the rest of the year. We’ve got fast cars.”

MORE: ‘Excited for the year’: Custer nabs first road-course win | Creed discusses Portland contact with Nemechek

Custer, who won the second stage in a drag race against John Hunter Nemechek, led five laps to claim his 11th career victory. Allgaier led 23 and held a comfortable four-second advantage when Riley Herbst pulled off the track in Turn 9 with flames shooting from his front wheel wells.

That incident caused the fourth caution on Lap 68, but a strong restart kept Allgaier in the lead until the final debris caution and subsequent overtime.

Allgaier was philosophical about Kligerman’s change into the first corner.

“I saw a guy that decided he wanted to win his first race and just missed the braking zone,” said Allgaier, who picked up his first victory of the season in Monday’s rain-delayed Alsco Uniforms 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “I understand it. I don’t blame him for being aggressive. I just hate it for everybody on this team.

“I felt like we did everything we needed to do today. These guys put an absolutely incredible Camaro underneath me. We were able to get up there and mind our business and not make anybody mad and have good, solid laps. And then there at the end, to have it taken away like that and finish second is really tough.

“Hats off to Cole. He did what he needed to do—he made Turn 1.”

WATCH: Creed slips, Custer wins Stage 2 by a nose | Creed turns Nemechek at Portland

Allgaier’s JR Motorsports teammates, Sam Mayer and Josh Berry, finished third and fourth, respectively. Austin Hill was fifth, followed by Myatt Snider, Creed, Connor Mosack, Chandler Smith and Nemechek.

The Xfinity Series will travel south to race in the DoorDash 250 at Sonoma Raceway on June 10 (8 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage is complete with no issues, confirming Custer as the race winner.

MADISON, Ill.—Taking advantage of Ty Majeski’s and Zane Smith’s wreck at the front of the field, Grant Enfinger grabbed his second NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory of the season in Saturday’s Toyota 200 at World Wide Technology Raceway.

During a two-lap overtime that took the race two laps past its scheduled distance of 160 laps, Enfinger held off Christian Eckes to claim his first win at WWT Raceway and the ninth of his career.

Enfinger crossed the finish line 0.256 seconds ahead of Eckes and collected a $50,000 bonus for winning the second event in the Triple Truck Challenge.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

“I forgot about that, to be honest with you right now,” Enfinger said of the Triple Truck Challenge bonus. “It’s just so hard to win these races. And if it was about money, we’d have quit a long time ago… It’s been a rocky year. But these last five races, I feel like we’ve come to our own.

“(Crew chief) Jeff Hensley made great calls and overall just a just a great day, and the stars aligned.”

Enfinger likely would have settled for third place, had Majeski and Smith not wiped out in front of him on Lap 155. Smith held the lead at that point, even though he had made his last pit stop on Lap 90.

On older tires, Smith held an advantage of nearly 1.5 seconds when Lawless Alan’s spin on Lap 150 necessitated the 10th caution of the race.

After the subsequent restart on Lap 155, Majeski, the pole winner, charged into second place and ran side by side with Smith until Majeski spun sideways in Turn 2, destroyed his own truck and knocked Smith into the wall in the process.

The wreck sent the race to the overtime, with Enfinger in the lead and Eckes beside him for a restart on Lap 161. Enfinger cleared Eckes on the first overtime lap and pulled away to win by a truck length.

WATCH: Enfinger reacts after big win

“I don’t know if we were just kind of living right there the end or whatever, but Ty kind of did what I did last year… and Ty just got loose underneath him. It’s hard to make those moves here. But I’m just so proud of these guys…

“It’s as good as time as they need to announce that we’re expecting another baby, so I’ll be home tonight to see (my wife), so life is good.”

Stewart Friesen ran third, followed by Carson Hocevar and Chase Purdy. Matt DiBenedetto, Ben Rhodes, Nick Sanchez, Jesse Love and Jake Garcia completed the top 10.

Love was making his first start in the series, substituting for Corey Heim, who was sidelined by illness.

The Truck Series will return to action on June 23 with the running of the Rackley Roofing 200 at Nashville Superspeedway (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection is clear in the Truck Series garage, confirming the No. 23 of Grant Enfinger as the race winner. The No. 19 of Christian Eckes had one lug nut not safe and secure, resulting in a monetary fine to be announced in the weekly penalty report.

Hate to say that I told you so, but I noted in Fastlane this week to keep an eye on Kyle Busch and Ryan Blaney. Heck, their names were in the headline itself! Both drivers and teams had about as good of a start to the weekend as one can have on Saturday, taking the front row for the Enjoy Illinois 300 presented by TicketSmarter. For Busch, it’s his first pole award with Richard Childress Racing – and his first pole since the penultimate race of the 2019 season.

RELATED: Starting lineup for Sunday | Set your Fantasy Live roster

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Ryan Blaney
Starter 2: Kyle Busch
Starter 3: Martin Truex Jr.
Starter 4: Denny Hamlin
Starter 5: Joey Logano
Garage pick: Kevin Harvick

NEXT IN LINE: Ross Chastain, William Byron, Christopher Bell, Tyler Reddick

RISING: In the nine races since winning at Atlanta, Logano has plummeted from being the regular-season championship leader to 14th in the championship standings. Consider Gateway a refresh, as that’s what the No. 22 team did last season en route to winning its second race of the 2022 season. We all know how last year ended — Logano celebrating as a two-time Cup champion. With Team Penske putting all three of its cars in the top 10 in qualifying, this would be a nice start for Logano in your lineup.

It might have gotten overlooked last year at Gateway because Michael McDowell dropped to 18th in the finishing order, but he led a career-high 34 laps in the inaugural race at the 1.25-mile track last year. In practice on Saturday, the No. 34 Ford was fourth in single-lap speed and ranked behind only Hamlin on 10-lap averages. If you want to pick someone that enjoys flying under the radar, here’s your chance.

FALLING: During the opening minutes of practice, Brad Keselowski shredded a left-rear tire. He was astonished by the cut tire, believing the No. 6 team was conservative on its air pressure to begin the session. And while the 2012 Cup champion is superb on tracks with layouts like Gateway, it’s a cause for concern that he didn’t make a 10-lap run and starts 19th.

Gateway could be a dream weekend for Corey LaJoie, as he’s getting to drive in place of a suspended Chase Elliott. But Saturday was anything but perfect for LaJoie, as the No. 9 Chevrolet was 30th in practice and slapped the wall during his qualifying run. It’s not fair to consider one weekend the end all, be all for a driver with the opportunity that LaJoie has this weekend, but there’s only one way to go from Saturday for the No. 9 team.

RELATED: Fantasy Fastlane — Sleepers, drivers to avoid | Weekend schedule

FEATURED MATCHUPS 

Ryan Blaney vs. Tyler Reddick: Thinking both drivers will be in the running for a competitive finish on Sunday, but Blaney has a terrific shot at winning consecutive races for the first time in his career. Team Penske has proven to be the team to beat at Gateway, which could continue Sunday.

Aric Almirola vs. Bubba Wallace: Given Almirola ranked ahead of Wallace in both single-lap and 10-lap averages, it’s not farfetched to think he could have a better finish than the No. 23 car. Almirola also rounded out the top five in the first Gateway race and is stupendous at tracks like it. But the race craft and speed Wallace has built over the last month have been impressive, so I’ll stick with the No. 23 team.

Ty Gibbs vs. Austin Cindric: Flat out, Gibbs has had more bright spots than Cindric in 2023. Some of that is because rookie drivers don’t typically have as much pace as Gibbs has displayed this season. However, Cindric led 26 laps at Gateway last season and finished 11th. This could be a breakout race for the No. 2 team, before going to a string of road courses over the next two months.

Brad Keselowski vs. Chris Buescher: Though Keselowski dropped off my lineup, he still has the upper hand on Buescher, who turned his first laps in a Cup car at Gateway on Saturday. The No. 17 car ranked 12th in practice and qualified 27th. Both of RFK Racing’s cars seem to make steady gains on their respective cars during each race, but Keselowski is the choice.

David, meet Goliath.

To say that Corey LaJoie’s first visit to the Hendrick Motorsports campus was an eye-opener is a colossal understatement of the case.

LaJoie got the word on Tuesday that he was team owner Rick Hendrick’s choice to replace Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Chevrolet at World Wide Technology Raceway after Elliott drew a one-race suspension for wrecking Denny Hamlin in Monday’s rain-delayed Coca-Cola 600.

MORE: LaJoie to fill in for Elliott; Hocevar for LaJoie | Elliott suspended

What LaJoie found at Hendrick was a singular focus and an organization-wide dedication to the pursuit of perfection—and to winning races and championships.

LaJoie drives full-time for Spire Motorsports, which allowed LaJoie to advantage of the opportunity to drive for Hendrick on Sunday. After visiting the Hendrick shops, LaJoie sent a text to Spire co-owner Jeff Dickerson.

“’I can’t believe Spire and Hendrick race in the same series,’” LaJoie wrote.

“We are closer to a good truck team, I think … If that’s what a Cup team is, then holy cow, we’ve got a long way to go. But it’s fun sometimes to carry that chip on your shoulder and try to be the ones that are beating the Goliaths.

“But it’s definitely a cool opportunity and a cool week this week to be one of the Goliaths, sitting in one (of their cars), so we’ll see how it goes.”

LaJoie also believes his one-week stint in a Hendrick car will have lasting value.

“Man, I’ve been here for three days, and my philosophy of how I approach a weekend and how I prepare and how I’m going to engage with my team at Spire going forward is going to change,” he said.

“I think I’m going to be able to come in there and just share and apply some of the things I’ve learned over the course of the week.”