A strategic move following Stage 2’s conclusion during the Food City Dirt Race on April 9 might have initially gone unnoticed. That was, perhaps, by design for Christopher Bell.

After Tyler Reddick’s Stage 2 victory at Bristol Motor Speedway Dirt, the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing driver decided to forgo a stop on pit road and instead opted to stay out with a handful of other drivers, including JGR teammate Denny Hamlin. Such a tactic proved to be the money maneuver for Bell as he led each of the final 100 laps en route to his first win of 2023 and his fifth overall in the NASCAR Cup Series.

“For me, it was (the winning call),” Bell said when talking about his strategic move. “We clearly were not the best car, but Adam (Stevens, crew chief) kept asking me what I needed, and I was like, ‘Man, I don’t know if you’re going to be able to help me enough on a pit stop adjustment to get me where I need to be.’ I just said, let’s stay out, and he believed in me and we were able to make it work.”

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

Such late-race dominance was not mutually exclusive to only the Easter Sunday contest. If anything, the victory only cemented how much of a force the No. 20 has shown to be so far in 2023.

Starting with the basics, statistics-wise, could help illustrate how strong Bell has been through the opening portion of the season. Including his Bristol Dirt Race win, Bell has amassed six top-10 finishes through the year’s first eight races, with his only two non-top-10 finishes resulting from crashes (Auto Club Speedway, Circuit of The Americas). And to make matters even better, five of those six top-10 finishes have also been top-five finishes.

The early-season success stands out even more when comparing his marks up against his JGR teammates. Not only does a victory set a precedent — no other JGR driver holds a win so far this season — but his top-five finishes do, too, as none of Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr. or Ty Gibbs hold even one top-five finish so far this season, combined. Bell’s 10.6 average finish and 154 laps led additionally lead the quartet, with Truex (13.0 average finish, 72 laps led), Hamlin (15.1, 112 laps led) and Gibbs (16.0 average finish, zero laps led) all trailing the 28-year-old Norman, Oklahoma native.

MORE: Watch Bell slide to victory in Bristol Dirt Race 

Bell has made an early-season statement among the Cup Series field, too, with his six top-10 finishes tying the No. 20 JGR with the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Alex Bowman for the most in the Cup Series. And just for good measure, Bell’s average finish and laps led totals currently rank second and fourth, respectively, in the entire full-time field, trailing the Hendrick Motorsports trio in Bowman (9.9 average finish), Kyle Larson (438 laps led) and William Byron (385 laps led), plus the reigning Cup Series champion in Joey Logano (181 laps led).

While the season is not even 25% complete, Bell’s 2023 success compared to his teammates and the rest of the field cannot be understated. And if last season’s postseason success — winning the Round of 12 and Round of 8 cutoff races at the Charlotte Roval and Martinsville Speedway, respectively, en route to a Championship 4 appearance — is any indicator, perhaps Bell’s clutch factor this year is making an early title case. After all, Bell fell just short of the crown last year — finishing the 2022 season in third — and perhaps there is fuel for even more motivation this season, too.

Whatever the case, a keen sense of strategy goes a long way, and for Bell, 2023 has been all by design to showcase it.

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Tyler Reddick was a dirt-racing runner-up for the second consecutive year at Bristol Motor Speedway after the yellow and checkered flags waved Sunday night.

This year, the 23XI Racing driver was hunting Christopher Bell’s back bumper in the closing laps rather than trying to defend the lead as he did in 2022. He didn’t spin in the final corner this time around, avoiding a replay from when Chase Briscoe sent the duo sliding sideways and ultimately costing Reddick the win a season ago. But the disappointment was evident Sunday as he stood on pit road, the dust quite literally settling while Bell celebrated his triumph.

“I’ve really wanted to win a NASCAR dirt race for a very long time,” Reddick said. “So second is not a bad day, but I hope we get another shot at this because I really want to win here or anywhere that we put NASCAR stock cars on dirt.”

MORE: Full Bristol results | Best photos from Bristol Dirt Race

Reddick was left to wonder what could have been had he and his No. 45 team opted for a different play. He and teammate Bubba Wallace stayed out during the Stage 1 break, placing the two at the front of the field along with Spire Motorsports’ Ty Dillon.

That meant Reddick had to pit during the Stage 2 break at Lap 151 after winning the segment. While most competitors followed suit, nine others – including Bell – stayed out.

“I just wish we would’ve stayed more on strategy with the cars that were like … Bell and those guys,” Reddick said. “We kind of put ourselves in a little bit of a box. I really thought the track was gonna age, so I made the decision to stay out and then take the tires later.

“I think it could’ve worked, but I didn’t do a good job on the restart to start Stage 3, lost some spots, got behind some of the other cars that were on those newer tires.”

The ultimate result was Reddick’s fourth top-five finish in the past five NASCAR Cup Series races, a stretch that includes a victory at Circuit of The Americas. A late spin resulted in a 16th-place result at Richmond, but the team has found momentum since finishes of 39th (Daytona) and 34th (Fontana) to open the season.

“We’re learning a lot,” Reddick said. “Richmond was a bump in the road. We just missed it a little bit and continue fighting some little things detail-wise on the car, but that’s part of it. That’s part of the process.

“As long as we continue to learn from these things, I’d rather be fighting them now than in the playoffs.”

Still, the sting of coming so close on the dirt yet again lingers. Count him among those in favor of returning to the soil in 2024 as part of the yet-to-be-announced schedule.

“Until I win it, yeah,” Reddick laughed. “I really want to win it.”

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Before Sunday night’s Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway, Christopher Bell lamented that a “dirt guy” hadn’t won the NASCAR Cup Series’ only race on the red clay in Thunder Valley.

Bell fixed the problem—in a race that also saw hard feelings between pole winner Kyle Larson and Ryan Preece boil over.

Holding off charging Tyler Reddick in the final stage of the 250-lap race, Bell held a slim lead over Reddick when NASCAR called the 14th  caution with 200 yards left in the final circuit.

A dirt-track aficionado who won three straight Chili Bowl Midget Nationals from 2017-2019, Bell collected his first victory of the season and the fifth of his career.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Bristol

“Man, let me tell you, these are some of the longest laps of my entire life,” Bell said of the late stages of the race. “This place is so much fun, whether it’s dirt or concrete. Whenever the cushion got up there on the top, it was very tough, because you couldn’t drive it super hard. Otherwise, you’d get sucked in.

“If you got your right front into it, you’d push a little bit. If you got your right rear into it, you’d slide. It was a lot of fun.”

Bell used his experience on dirt to negotiate the two ends of the half-mile track, which featured markedly different racing characteristics.

“(Turns) 3 and 4, that was the scary corner for me, because if you got into it too far, you lost all your momentum,” the driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota explained. (Turns) 1 and 2, I think I kept hitting the wall a couple times.

“Seems like there was a little bit more moisture up there—it would hold me better. I’m like, ‘OK, I can really attack 1 and 2.’ But 3 and 4, I had to be careful… Definitely the track tonight favored experience.”

Staying out on old tires after the end of Stage 2, Bell led the last 100 laps. Reddick, on the other hand, forewent a pit stop after Stage 1 and won Stage 2, but paid the price with a pit stop at the second break and restarted 12th on Lap 151.

It wasn’t until Lap 223 that Reddick passed eventual fifth-place finisher Chase Briscoe for the second position, as Briscoe scraped the outside wall in Turn 4. Reddick began his pursuit of Bell, but the final caution foiled any opportunity he might have had.

“Yeah, towards the end there definitely feel like I had a little bit more,” Reddick said. “I thought I had the edge, but I wasn’t quite there in the last couple laps. Definitely found it.

“Just hate it for everybody on this (No. 45 23XI Racing) Toyota. Just needed to be a little bit closer than I was. I think with two (laps) to go, it would have been really bold to try to make that move work. Obviously, on the white flag coming into (Turns) 3 and 4, I was going to see. We’ll never know if it (would have) worked.”

Larson won 75-lap Stage 1 wire-to-wire, but he angered Preece with a move that forced the Stewart-Haas Racing driver into the outside wall. On Lap 175, 20 circuits after Larson spun and fell to the rear of the field, Preece returned the favor in Turn 4. Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet then shot to the inside into the door of Preece’s No. 41 Ford before spinning into the outside wall.

“Yeah, I’m guessing he was paying me back for whatever I did earlier,” said Larson, who exited the race with suspension damage to his car. “He ran me straight into the fence, and my car was broke and we crashed.

“It sucks, but I should just be mad at myself for spinning out earlier and putting myself back there. Just sucks.”

MORE: Preece, Larson tangle in Final Stage | See more key moments in the race

Austin Dillon ran third, followed by 2023 Daytona 500 winner Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Briscoe and Justin Haley, as drivers with dirt-track backgrounds claimed the top six finishing positions. Martin Truex Jr., Todd Gilliland, Kevin Harvick and Ty Gibbs completed the top 10.

“I just have to thank (Speedway Motorsports Inc.) for all of the hard work they’ve done with this dirt racing,” Dillon said. “I don’t care what anybody says, that was an amazing show throughout the field. I felt like it was some great racing.”

The Cup Series will next trek to Martinsville Speedway on April 16 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection is complete in the Cup Series garage with no issues, confirming Bell as the winner. No cars will be taken back to the NASCAR R&D Center for further inspection. 

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Contact between Kyle Larson and Ryan Preece during Sunday’s Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway left Larson ousted and Preece insistent his final hip check was accidental.

Larson’s night came to an end after a side-swipe by Preece entering Turn 3 sent Larson spinning driver-side into the wall, ultimately ending his day. That incident followed an earlier collision on the frontstretch, when Larson slid Preece into the outside wall with both running inside the top five.

RELATED: Full race results | At-track photos

Preece didn’t take kindly to the contact, relaying on his radio he was sick of “excuses.” Larson, on the other hand, didn’t see an issue.

“I mean I haven’t seen the contact from earlier in the race. It was a tight, tight clear off of four,” Larson said. “Obviously I’m looking at my mirror and it didn’t seem that he was to my outside yet, and I don’t know if he got into the wall but he had a pretty short temper obviously. He was trying to crash me I think after that then was swerving at me under yellow.”

By the Lap 176 spin that sent Larson home early, both Preece and Larson had gone for respectively separate solo spins. The final contact came as both were working their way through the field.

“I think something happened to him off at two earlier and he ran in the back of somebody and spun out,” Larson said. “Like I said, it’d been probably an hour and a half, I would have to guess, since then. So I figured we could just be grownups and get the (expletive) over it, but I guess not.”

After the race, Preece denied any intent to wreck Larson as the two banged doors entering Turn 3.

“I was just trying to run the top. It was real slick,” Preece said. “Just got loose and we both ended up in the fence.

“I don’t know. I don’t race dirt. I tried running the top. I’m a guy that runs the bottom, and I know he was making speed up top. I tried to move up there and we were just too loose.”

The frustration was evident through his radio communications though, noting it was “game over” for other competitors as grievances grew following additional incidents at Circuit of The Americas on March 26.

“I think you just get mad getting run in the fence, right?” Preece said. “There was no meaning. It’s just from inside that race car, you’re like, well, I’m not gonna lift when it comes to being run into the fence.

“Every time you lift, if guys see you lifting when you’re at their right-rear corner, they’re just going to keep running you up into the fence. So I think when I (said) ‘game over,’ I meant I’m just not gonna keep lifting and giving that respect of, ‘hey, I’ll give you this room.’ It just comes down to that.”

MORE: Full weekend results from Bristol

Larson said he doesn’t believe he and Preece have had prior issues, noting he hasn’t raced much around him.

“I’m not gonna carry it forward, but really, I’m just mad at a lot of stuff,” Larson said. “I’m mostly mad at myself. You know, I shouldn’t have been back there. I spun out, so I shouldn’t be in (the infield care center) right now, but just racing.”

And Larson, at least initially, explained that he doesn’t plan to seek further discussion on the matter.

“I mean, what’s there to talk about?” he said. “Like, he’s mad at me. I guess I’m mad at him. What’s there to talk about?”

Preece finished 24th while Larson was relegated to a 35th-place result.

Both drivers are in for more door-to-door racing when the Cup Series heads to Martinsville Speedway on April 16 for the NOCO 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), race three of a difficult short-track stretch.

Which channels have NASCAR Martinsville TV programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR Martinsville TV schedule.

Note: All NASCAR Martinsville TV times are ET.

MORE: How to find USA Network | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock | FloRacing | How to watch NASCAR International

Monday, April 10
1:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: Bristol (re-air), FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Weather Guard Truck Race on Dirt (re-air), FS1
4 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
Noon, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Weather Guard Truck Race on Dirt (re-air), FS2
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
10 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS1

Tuesday, April 11
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive: Martinsville (re-air), FS1
3 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
Noon, NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Special: 75 Years of Racing (re-air), FS2
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, Peacock
7 p.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS1

Wednesday, April 12
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive: Martinsville (re-air), FS2
3 a.m., Greatest Races: NASCAR Cup Series 2010 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive: Martinsville (re-air), FS2
2 p.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS2
3 p.m., Greatest Races: NASCAR Cup Series 2007 Goody’s Cool Orange 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, Peacock

Thursday, April 13
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, Peacock
11 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: 75 Years of Racing (re-air), FS2

Friday, April 14
Midnight, NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS2
1 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Paula Murphy: Undaunted (re-air), FS2
10 a.m., Greatest Races: NASCAR Cup Series 2010 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
Noon, NASCAR Pace Lap, MavTV
3 p.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
3 p.m., NASCAR Pace Lap (re-air), MavTV
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition: Martinsville, FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Craftsman Truck Series at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
8:15 p.m., IMSA Weathertech Sports Car Championship: Long Beach qualifying, Peacock

On MRN:
7 p.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway

Saturday, April 15
2 a.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
6:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
11 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive: Martinsville (re-air), FS2
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS2
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
2 p.m., NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Long John Silver’s 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS2
5 p.m., IMSA Weathertech Sports Car Championship: Long Beach Race, USA
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Xfinity Series at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
7:20 p.m., IMSA Porsche Carrera Cup: Long Beach Race 1, Peacock
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call811.com Before You Dig. 250 at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
8 p.m., IMSA Porsche Carrera Cup: Long Beach Race 2, Peacock
11 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1

On MRN:
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway
7 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call811.com Before You Dig. 250 at Martinsville Speedway

Sunday, April 16
6 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call811.com Before You Dig. 250 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
8 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice, qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
10 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call811.com Before You Dig. 250 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
2 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Cup Series at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: NOCO 400 at Martinsville Speedway, FS1

On MRN:
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: NOCO 400 at Martinsville Speedway

NASCAR Hall of Fame driver/owner Tony Stewart is one of the 25 new additions to NASCAR’s Greatest Drivers list in celebration of the sport’s 75th anniversary, the sanctioning body announced on Sunday evening.

Stewart, the three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, was surprised with the news during the pre-race broadcast for Sunday’s Food City Dirt Race at Bristol Motor Speedway (7 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, Sirius XM NASCAR).

RELATED: How the 75 Greatest Drivers works | More NASCAR 75 coverage

“It’s a huge honor,” Stewart said after receiving the news from Bristol native and NASCAR Vice Chairman Mike Helton. “I mean, can you think of all the drivers in 75 years that have competed in the NASCAR Cup Series? It’s truly an honor just to be a part of that category in that group of people. There’s a lot of drivers in there that I’ve looked up to for a long time and still look up to.”

Naming the 75 Greatest Drivers is a continuation of the popular program established in 1998 recognizing the 50 Greatest Drivers for NASCAR’s golden anniversary. The 50 Greatest Drivers form the foundation of the 75 Greatest Drivers — there will be 25 new names added to the list first established 25 years ago.

The 2020 Hall of Fame inductee was a fan favorite during his time driving the No. 20 for Joe Gibbs Racing and later when he branched out as a driver/owner for his co-owned operation with Gene Haas in the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing entry.

From his three-win, Rookie of the Year campaign in 1999 all the way to his final season in 2016, Stewart was a winner. The Indiana native amassed 49 Cup Series victories, including winning the prestigious Brickyard 400 at his home track of Indianapolis Motor Speedway twice.

MORE: Tony Stewart NASCAR Hall of Fame profile | Stewart through the years

Stewart won his first Cup championship in 2002 driving for JGR, quickly following that up with another one in 2005. He tacked on a third one for good measure in 2011 driving for SHR, winning five of the 10 playoff races to claim the title via tiebreaker over Carl Edwards in one of the most memorable championship pursuits in history.

As an owner, Stewart-Haas Racing has 69 wins to date, including the 2017 Daytona 500, and Kevin Harvick added the team’s second championship in 2014.

MORE: Stewart’s paint schemes through the years | All of his Cup wins

With only two Bristol Dirt races in the books for the NASCAR Cup Series, there isn’t much data to dissect for making a prediction. Nonetheless, our fearless prognosticators at Racing Insights march forward.

FANTASY LIVE: Set your roster | See weekend schedule

Showing up at the top of this week’s projections is last week’s winner, Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports. Larson checks off a few boxes for Sunday’s Food City Dirt Race (7 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Bristol Motor Speedway.

First, Larson has a dirt background and is famous for squeezing in grassroots events between his Cup Series races, so his experience level on dirt is more than your average Cup driver. Larson is also on a hot streak, winning last week at Richmond and finishing in the top five three times in the past five races.

With Friday’s practice rained out and only Saturday’s qualifying to examine, Larson remained the top call. He will roll off first in Sunday’s race.

OTHERS TO WATCH

TYLER REDDICK: He led 99 laps last year before being wrecked while leading on the final lap. Reddick has finished in the top 10 in both Bristol Dirt races and comes from a dirt background. His 16th-place finish last week at Richmond snapped a streak of three straight top-five finishes this season. Starting lineup position: Sixth.

JOEY LOGANO: Logano won the inaugural Bristol Dirt Race in 2021 and finished third last season. He led 61 laps en route to his victory in 2021. Logano finished seventh at Richmond and won recently at Atlanta. Starting lineup position: 12th.

MARTIN TRUEX JR.: He does not come from a dirt background, but his 126 laps led on the Bristol dirt are the most among all drivers. Truex Jr. is coming off an 11th-place finish at Richmond, where he was running third before having to put on scuff tires during the race’s last pit stop. Starting lineup position: 27th.

KYLE BUSCH: The defending race winner has nine career Cup victories at Bristol. He was running third on the final lap last year when Briscoe spun Reddick and opened the door for Busch to steal the win. Busch had three straight top-10 finishes this season before finishing 14th last week at Richmond. Starting lineup position: Fifth.

CHASE BRISCOE: He led 59 laps in last year’s Bristol Dirt Race, but the aforementioned spin on the final lap relegated him to a 22nd-place finish. He comes to Bristol looking to break a cold spell with six finishes of 12th or worse to start the season. Starting lineup position: 14th.

Projections as of Sunday, April 9.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE FOOD CITY DIRT RACE

Finish Car No. Driver
1 5 Kyle Larson
2 22 Joey Logano
3 8 Kyle Busch
4 24 William Byron
5 12 Ryan Blaney
6 4 Kevin Harvick
7 11 Denny Hamlin
8 48 Alex Bowman
9 99 Daniel Suárez
10 19 Martin Truex Jr.
11 14 Chase Briscoe
12 6 Brad Keselowski
13 20 Christopher Bell
14 1 Ross Chastain
15 45 Tyler Reddick
16 17 Chris Buescher
17 7 Corey LaJoie
18 43 Erik Jones
19 34 Michael McDowell
20 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
21 2 Austin Cindric
22 9 Josh Berry
23 54 Ty Gibbs
24 38 Todd Gilliland
25 3 Austin Dillon
26 31 Justin Haley
27 41 Ryan Preece
28 23 Bubba Wallace
29 10 Aric Almirola
30 21 Harrison Burton
31 77 Ty Dillon
32 42 Noah Gragson
33 16 A.J. Allmendinger
34 15 J.J. Yeley
35 51 Cody Ware
36 13 Jonathan Davenport
37 78 BJ McLeod

 

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Martin Truex Jr. left no doubts Saturday — there are no issues between him and crew chief James Small after their heated post-race radio communications one week ago at Richmond Raceway.

The animated discussion sparked after the checkered flag when Small apologized for running Truex out of fresh tires before the final pit stop of the race. When everyone darted to pit road for the day’s last stops, the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing team only had worn, scuffed tires to put on the car instead of fresh Goodyears. Truex plummeted from third to 11th on the final run — unaware of the tire deficit since Small didn’t tell him previously.

MORE: Gordon, Letarte examine the call | Cup Series standings

A pit stop at Lap 72 ultimately doomed the team’s strategy — but that visit down pit road was the result of a mistake all along.

“The decision to pit in the first stage was radio issues,” Truex said Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway. “And that comes back to haunt us at the end of the race. He made the right decision. It just never got to me or my spotter because of a radio issue.”

Small confirmed his message was simply never heard on Sunday afternoon ahead of the Food City Dirt Race (7 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“We had kind of talked about maybe we were going to come or whatnot,” Small told NASCAR.com of the Lap 72 decision. “And then when it was evident that no one was coming at all, I told him to stay out, and he never heard it. You know, the guys even got off the wall.

“And then all of a sudden (spotter) Drew (Herring) is calling 10 (stalls) away and the car’s coming, and we’re like, ‘oh, (expletive).’ So yeah, unfortunate timing. Not sure why. It’s on all our recordings all of that, but yeah. (Expletive) happens.”

As for any animosity between the 2017 series champion and his crew chief? None. Any frustration was put to bed minutes after the race.

“I mean, you have to move past it,” Truex said. “Obviously, James and I have worked together for a while and we have a great relationship. And he gets fired up. I get fired up sometimes, not very often, you know, and those things happen. Like I said, heat of the moment. We were all just mad and you know, 30 minutes later, we were talking on the phone like everything was fine. So it’s just part of what you do here. It’s intense, intense competition.”

Three-plus seasons into a crew chief-driver dynamic, their relationship is “good as gold,” Small said.

“We’re disappointed and you know, we both got emotional at the time. And we just want to do our best and win. And you’d hate it if he wasn’t mad, you know? I was more mad than him probably. So, you know, we’re good and we’re ready to go.”

Truex and Small have worked together as crew chief and driver since 2020, but their familiarity dates back to 2017, when Small joined Furniture Row Racing as an engineer. In Small’s time as crew chief, the duo has won five points-paying races — highlighted by a four-win campaign in 2021 — in addition to a victory in February’s exhibition Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

But after leading 56 laps at Richmond, their winless streak in points races extended to 51 races, a drought that features Truex’s 2022 absence from the playoffs, his first miss since 2014.

The anger that burst through the radio after last week’s race was the culmination of those losses.

“I mean, we’re working hard, doing all we know how to do, and it’s just like, you know, what’s gonna happen next?” Truex said.  “It’s a shame. … It just builds up. Frustration builds up and things like that happen and it ends up costing you at the end of the day when it was a decision, you know, three hours ago.”

Despite the zero that sits in the win column dating back to September 2021, the No. 19 team has had numerous near misses, including Las Vegas and Nashville a season ago ahead of their Richmond errors.

“It’s frustrating for sure,” Small said. “We’ve been close so many times, like you said, but you’ve got to draw the positives from it. The guys on pit road, they had an awesome day (at Richmond), you know, tremendous. We had a small issue you’re on the last stop with a wheel nut, but it just gives everybody faith in our process.

“You’ve seen it time and time again with the 19 team. Like if we stick to our process, do all the things right, we can contend for wins and have days where we’re dominant, and it’s just eventually it’s gonna go our way. You know, you can’t keep being that fast and continually having everything turn to (crap).”

Ultimately, Small chose not to relay information of the tire deficit to Truex, noting on the radio their chances to win were doomed anyway. But Truex admitted having more context about his circumstances may have helped in the final run to the checkered flag.

“I wouldn’t have been so just surprised and frustrated,” Truex said. “You know, I just didn’t know. So it was like a surprise to me. I would have been more prepared I guess. … We didn’t really talk about why he didn’t tell me. I guess he was hoping I would do something magical. But it was really out of my hands at that point.

“So I was just confused at first obviously because I didn’t know, and then just (ticked) off because, you know, feel like we had the race won and then all that happens. It’s been like that for a while. Just ready for things to turn and hopefully go our way one of these days.”

After winning the Clash back in February, Small said Truex was “a different person right now” and cited a heightened motivation. That rings true two months later, Small said, with their relationship “better than ever” and talking more often than any season prior.

“I think he’s just more determined than ever,” Small said. “You know, we came off a year last year where we obviously didn’t win a race, for whatever reason and we all have a point to prove.

“We feel like if everything goes right, we can win a championship again. You know, we’ve been close before. We were super close in ’21. And that’s the game. And we just keep battling all year and get there at the end.”

Given Friday was a wash at Bristol Motor Speedway, Cup Series teams didn’t know what they had until the 15-lap qualifying heat on Saturday. Even that can be a moving target, given it was just four, 15-lap qualifying heats. However, there were some pleasant surprises, such as USAC Triple Crown winner J.J. Yeley, who gave Rick Ware Racing a qualifying position of third. It’s his best starting position since winning the pole in 2007 at Michigan International Speedway for Joe Gibbs Racing.

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Kyle Larson
Starter 2: Christopher Bell
Starter 3: Tyler Reddick
Starter 4: Kyle Busch
Starter 5: Chase Briscoe
Garage pick: Austin Dillon

NEXT IN LINE: Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, William Byron, Bubba Wallace.

RELATED: Updated race-day odds | Set your lineup

RISING: Earlier this week, I highlighted how poorly Austin Dillon had run in the two previous editions of the Bristol Dirt Race (average finish of 26th). But the No. 3 car made quick work from his fifth starting position to get to the lead in the first qualifying heat en route to leading 13 of the 15 laps. Dillon has plenty of dirt racing experience and could be a factor Sunday evening (7 ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Ryan Blaney has deep ties to the dirt racing community. His father Dave Blaney has competed across the country in the World of Outlaws and big block modifieds. His uncle Dale Blaney is a multi-time All Star Circuit of Champions champion. On Saturday, Blaney led wire-to-wire in the second qualifying heat and has top-10 finishes in each of the previous two Bristol dirt races. Maybe he’s got a future racing on dirt, eh?

FALLING: In a stacked opening qualifying heat that had six drivers with a multitude of dirt racing experience, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. drew the pole. The No. 47 Chevrolet dropped quickly and ended up finishing fifth. While his dirt experience could come in handy on Sunday, his car didn’t seem to have the sheer speed that other cars did just in his qualifying heat alone.

Expectations for Justin Haley were high going into the weekend — he’s a proven winner in the dirt world. But the No. 31 Chevrolet lacked speed, falling two spots in his qualifying heat. Unfortunately, it could be a tough weekend for Haley this weekend, as he starts deep in the field: 25th.

FEATURED MATCHUPS

Kyle Busch vs. Joey Logano: Both drivers drew deep positions in the final qualifying heat, but Busch powered his way from sixth to battling for the win with Bubba Wallace. Logano gained three positions to fifth. This is tricky, but given Busch will start from fifth, it’s hard to bet against the No. 8 team. Then again, the No. 22 crew won from 10th starting position two years ago. He will start the race in 12th on Sunday.

Tyler Reddick vs. Daniel Suárez: Suárez had a strong showing in the first Bristol dirt race, but Saturday was probably his worst day at the track thus far in 2023. The No. 99 Chevrolet was running last in the final qualifying heat and looped around before his car wouldn’t restart. Meanwhile, Reddick had a fun battle with Dillon for the heat win in the opening heat. Reddick is the easy choice.

Christopher Bell vs. Kyle Larson: Both drivers had a fun opening lap in their respective qualifying heats. Bell pulled a four-wide move to drive from eighth to fifth — and eventually finished third. Larson went from sixth to first (!) in the first lap of his qualifying heat. These two heavyweights will likely be in contention for the win. And though Larson is likely going to get the glory for starting on the pole, I’m leaning toward the No. 20 team with the maneuverability in his car and how stout his qualifying heat was. Bell will take the green flag from fourth.

Alex Bowman vs. Chase Briscoe: Despite having a broken middle finger on his left hand that will require surgery next week, Briscoe had a strong outing to finish second in Heat No. 2. Bowman dropped two spots to fourth in the opening heat. The story of Bowman’s season has been consistency, and he will likely continue that on Sunday. But for whatever reason, drivers tend to perform better injured, and Sunday could be Briscoe’s strongest showing this year.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Ty Majeski has flown under the radar early in 2023, but his success can’t be ignored much longer.

The Wisconsin native short-tracker stormed to a runner-up finish in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race Saturday night on the dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway, his fifth top-six result in the first six events this season.

MORE: Full race recap | At-track photos

Majeski was a mainstay at the front of the field — often behind one-off teammate Joey Logano’s rear bumper — throughout a full-contact night on the half-mile bullring. Majeski said Logano’s No. 66 Ford was “probably just overall, just a little bit better” than his No. 98 truck, but Majeski made the defending Cup Series champion earn the win on the final restart with nine laps to go.

The end result was an impressive showing for ThorSport Racing, which landed three of its five trucks inside the top five with Matt Crafton’s fourth-place run.

“Just glad we got ThorSport in Victory Lane,” Majeski said. “Really cool to have all our trucks really run well all day today. I don’t know. I thought maybe, at times, I can maybe match him on the long run, it was starting to flip a little bit. And every time that was happening, we’d get a yellow. So I don’t know if we could have done anything with him, but I don’t know, maybe it just made him nervous. That probably would have been about it.”

Logano noticed that speed in his rear-view mirror — along with some help from first-time spotter Ryan Blaney.

“(Majeski) was fast in the heat race, started in the back, finished the second to us,” Logano said. “He looked to be a little bit better than us in the heat race. He was able to find some speed into (turn) three. That’s what I was saying earlier, how Blaney kind of relayed that information to me.”

Ty Majeski and Zane Smith race on Bristol dirt
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

In a race loaded with cautions — 11 yellow flags for 64 laps — Majeski often found himself restarting alongside Logano on the front row. Logano’s launches off the top lane propelled him to a significant advantage Majeski simply couldn’t overcome.

“I was just trying to keep heat in my tires. I just could not fire,” Majeski said. “It would take five laps. Like William Byron would get around me, and then I’d pass him back. I just could not get going on the restarts to fire. I don’t know if it was an air pressure thing or what, but I don’t know. We were just a little bit off tonight.”

Being a little off still resulted in Majeski’s best finish of the year to date. The defending Bristol winner — albeit a victory on concrete in September — has yet to finish worse than 11th through six Truck Series races this season and continues to build on the foundation built in 2022. Triumphs at Bristol and Homestead-Miami Speedway during last year’s playoffs launched Majeski and crew chief Joe Shear Jr. to the Championship 4, all in Majeski’s first full-time Truck Series season.

“We have fun doing this together, and I think that’s (where) a lot of it gets lost in the NASCAR world,” Majeski said. “Everyone takes it so seriously, and it’s a job. We legitimately have fun going to the race track together. We have a great, tightly-knit team, and we work well together. And when you’re going to the race track, and you’re excited to go, and you’re having fun, all those guys in the shop are gonna that extra little bit for you to make these trucks as good as they can. So we’re just clicking right now.

“Joe and I get along well. We talk every day, whether I’m at the shop or not. We’re putting good race trucks out there.”