EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix at Circuit of The Americas (COTA)
(⏰ 3:30 p.m. ET | 📺 FOX, FOX Sports App | 📻 PRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race in Texas, the first road-course race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | COTA 101

📍 Location: Austin, Texas
📐 Track length: 3.41 miles
🎟️ Buy tickets: Three races this weekend
💰 Cup Series race purse: $9,294,829
📏 Race distance: 68 laps | 231.88 miles
🔢 Stages: 15 | 30 | 68 — No stage cautions, points still awarded

🚪 Entry list: Stars are out in Texas
📋 Starting lineup: Where drivers will start on Sunday
🚗 Pit stall assignments:
Where drivers will pit on Sunday
📦 Rules package: New rules for short tracks, road courses
🏆 Most recent winner: Ross Chastain


Key things to watch 🔑

Top story line

Revamped road-course racing. Sunday’s race at Circuit of The Americas will be the debut of the new low-downforce package on road courses after Cup Series drivers got a first taste at Phoenix Raceway. Also for the first time, the choose rule will be in effect before each restart and while stage points will still be awarded, there will be zero stage cautions. Strategy will be important throughout the race for teams looking to make up ground on the track or maximize their points day — it will be a fine line and a big test when it comes down to racing for the win during the Final Stage.

Need more details? Watch Steve Letarte and Todd Gordon break it down

💰 Xfinity Series: Dash 4 Cash qualifier is Saturday

History tells us…

Ross Chastain will be in the mix. Chastain is one of just two drivers with a pair of top-five finishes since COTA debuted on the schedule in 2021. His 2022 victory at the track solidified him as the all-time leader in laps led (35) and average finish (2.5). While yes, it is a small sample size, the chaotic finish to last year’s Texas showdown showed that the No. 1 driver is willing to do anything to win — even going door-to-door on the final lap with Alex Bowman and AJ Allmendinger. Aside from Tyler Reddick’s RCR Chevrolet in 2022, Trackhouse Racing arguably had the best road-course resume, so don’t expect any less from them this weekend.

🎙️: Allmendinger has ‘no ill feelings’ after 2022 finish

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

Alex Bowman. Bowman doesn’t get the road-course credit that some of his Hendrick Motorsports teammates get and that’s fair given he’s never actually won a left-and-right-circuit race. But his performances at COTA specifically have been exceptional with a pair of top 10s and a dramatic runner-up result a year ago. He has also had a hot start to this season in general, reeling off top 10s in every race this season except for last week at Atlanta Motor Speedway. With all the other story lines, Bowman will be overlooked this weekend, but that doesn’t mean he can’t win.

👀 Honorable mention: Road-course ringer, Jordan Taylor

Practice and qualifying

Tyler Reddick is flying this weekend. The driver of the No. 45 Toyota for 23XI Racing paced the 50-minute practice session on Friday afternoon and backed that up Saturday in qualifying. Reddick laid down a lap at 94.210 mph in the opening round of time trials, setting a new track record. But in the final round, it was William Byron nabbing the pole at 93.882 mph. Byron became the first driver in NASCAR history to score poles at four different road courses. | Recap Friday’s practice | Full breakdown of qualifying

Familiar favorites ⭐️

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

• Paint Scheme Preview: New paint schemes for Texas tripleheader | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Is Christopher Bell set to break through at COTA? | Latest driver rankings
• Fantasy Fastlane: Expect an AJ Allmendinger rebound this weekend | Best plays, lineup advice | Update after practice/qualifying
• Betting odds: Which driver is the favorite to win Sunday? | Top bets, underdog picks (updated Sunday)
• Stacking Pennies:
Corey LaJoie riding high after career-best finish | Listen to the podcast
• At-track photos:
See all the best photos fresh from Circuit of The Americas | See the full photo gallery

💎 NASCAR 75: Check out exclusive NASCAR content throughout the anniversary season | Learn more, explore

Hot off the press 📰

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

• Eager for more: Daniel Suárez confident in COTA return after ‘mixed emotions’ last year | Read more
• Penalty appeal:
Appeal dates scheduled for Hendrick, Kaulig, Hamlin | Read more
• Chase Elliott:
Will join FOX Sports booth during Sunday’s race | Read more
• Flashback to 2022:
AJ Allmendinger reflects on wild finish last year at COTA | Read more
• Atlanta penalty report:
Josh Williams suspended one race, other penalties | Read more
• Jordan Taylor:
Shows off Jeff Gordon-inspired helmet for NASCAR debut | Read more
• Tyler Reddick:
23XI Racing driver finding his form before Sunday’s race | Read more
• Trackhouse Racing:
Project91 will feature multiple drivers in 2023 | Read more

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy and Fan Rewards.

• Fan Rewards: New in 2023, get rewarded for your participation | Learn more
• Fantasy Live: Still time to get on the leaderboard and win big this season | Tips for 2023
• 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

Coming back to COTA 🔙

Road courses have been an integral part of the sport’s history, and in just two races, COTA has lived up to the hype. 

• Winner, winner: All-time winners on road courses | See who has the most
• Road-course ringers:
Active drivers with road-course wins | View the full list
• On the rise:
Road-course racing in NASCAR continues to grow, flourish | Read more
• GIFs are great: Key moments from most recent COTA race in GIFs | See them here
• Final Laps:
Ross Chastain, Alex Bowman and AJ Allmendinger race to the finish | Highlights from 2022

Take some notes 📝

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

On Sunday, the choose cone will be used at COTA for the first time on a road course.
The last three drivers to score their first Cup win did it on a road course (Ross Chastain, Daniel Suárez, Tyler Reddick).
Chris Buescher finished in the top 10 in the last five road-course races, the longest active streak by any driver.
AJ Allmendinger is making his 400th Cup start at COTA this weekend; six drivers have won in their 400th start.
Chevrolet drivers won 11 of the last 12 races on road courses but Christopher Bell (Toyota) won the most recent.

🔮 Predicting the winner: Using data to set a projected finishing order (updated Sunday)

The guest list for Sunday’s Cup Series race at Circuit of the Americas (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) continues to be chock-full of surprises as Chase Elliott will join the FOX Sports broadcast for the event.

He will do so remotely as he continues to recover from a fractured tibia suffered earlier this month. Hendrick Motorsports announced that Elliott underwent successful surgery and in a team release on March 7, said that he would miss approximately six weeks.

RELATED: Full COTA schedule | Active road-course winners

Elliott won the inaugural race at COTA in 2021 in a rain-shortened event and is the leader among active drivers to win at road courses on the Cup level with seven.

Josh Berry has filled in for the 2020 Cup champion since his injury but this weekend, IMSA driver Jordan Taylor will pilot the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet around the 20-turn, 3.41-mile Texas road course in his Cup Series debut.

MORE: Taylor gets the call for Cup debut

On-track action at COTA begins with Cup practice Friday at 2:05 p.m. ET (tape delay 8 p.m. ET on FS1).

The start of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season hasn’t quite gone exactly the way AJ Allmendinger was hoping. Neither did the end of last year’s race at Circuit of The Americas, when eventual race winner Ross Chastain dumped him into Alex Bowman’s No. 48 Chevrolet on the final lap to take command of the lead and ride to the checkered.

The No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet driver is determined to turn the tide on both, even if he isn’t dwelling on either.

All eyes will be on NASCAR’s resident road-course expert this weekend as he makes his 400th career Cup Series start Sunday at COTA, site of the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, Sirius XM NASCAR). Though he did go back and watch the finish “just once,” Allmendinger himself has his sights set on the road ahead, not necessarily lamenting over a missed opportunity to collect his first series win since 2021 last spring.

“Of course, it’d have been great to win the race, but it wouldn’t have changed anything if we did or we didn’t,” Allmendinger told reporters via video conference Wednesday afternoon. “You know, it’s a cool memory to have to go win the race and have that in the memory bank. But at the end of the day, it doesn’t change how I feel about this year. It would just be that I’d have three Cup wins instead of two, right? … It’s kind of in the memory bank of OK, what can we do different if we’re in that same position, but honestly, I don’t even think about last year.”

MORE: Full COTA weekend schedule | Projected Cup race results | Odds to win

While he may not have last year on the mind, we sure do. The 2022 COTA finish was one of the more drama-filled laps in recent NASCAR memory, with a palpable sense of tension building and building and building until finally — BAM! — Allmendinger drills the driver’s side of Bowman’s car after getting shoved by Chastain, sending the Nos. 16 and 48 careening off track.

Chastain rode to his first career Cup victory from there, issuing an unspoken statement from that point forward that he was willing to do whatever it took to take home a trophy, respected former teammate in his way or not.

The topic of Chastain and his aggressive driving style only grew over the course of the season that followed — a dialogue we’re still wading through to this day — but it left no room for Allmendinger to be upset with his past Kaulig compadre in the Xfinity Series.

“I mean, we all know how hard he can race but at the same time, we all race that hard at times, you know?” the 41-year-old explained. “I think he’s always to the extreme end of it, but I’m sure if you polled the drivers about trying to pass me it’s just a pain in the ass, right? Like, it’s part of it. So I don’t have a problem with Ross. I think it’s one of those things. … we know what he’ll do to go win the race and if the roles were reversed and that happens, then you should be OK with it. Which, honestly, I always feel like he is. So, for me, there’s no ill feelings or anything like that to Ross or anybody out there. We’re all hard racers and things like that happen and we know where we stand.

RELATED: Active Cup Series road-course winners | All-time road-course winners

kaulig racing drivers celebrate
Ross Chastain, AJ Allmendinger and Justin Haley celebrate a 2020 win at Talladega. | Getty Images

“Ross, you know, he went all for it and it was OK. … We talked about it. I said OK, if the roles were reversed and that happens, then you have no room to say anything. He said ‘I completely agree.’ … I was over it after we left the race track.”

Even if Allmendinger isn’t able to make right and win Sunday’s race this time around — he finished 33rd after all of last year’s fracas — he and his Kaulig crew would settle for a solid race from flag to flag.

After landing a top-six run in the season-opening Daytona 500 in February, Allmendinger and Co. have no top 10s with a 22.5 average finish in the last four races.

A big part of why the road-course specialist elected to return to Cup full-time in 2023 was due to having so many of them — six — on the schedule.
Sunday is his time to strike and quiet any doubters.

“I mean, of course, the start of the year I wish it would be a little bit better,” said Allmendinger, currently 17th in points. ” … what I love about our race team and working with Squid (crew chief Matt Swiderski) and everybody in our organization, on the 31 (of teammate Justin Haley) and the 16, we know that we’re not where we want to be, speed-wise. But we’re all kind of head down working together to move forward and try to get better. So it’d be no different if it were Xfinity and it’s not going the way you want. It’s the way I am. I want to win races for our race team. They deserve it.”

Regardless of what happens on the results sheet Sunday, Allmendinger has echoed the sentiment emanating throughout the Kaulig franchise — they’re just here to have fun and win trophies. The former sometimes outweighs the latter, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. Life’s short.

“It’s just, to me, all this … what I’m trying to do, for me in racing, you’re just trying to make great memories out of it,” Allmendinger said. “This sport is so hard sometimes and you get so down and you just hope that you have some really good memories to go with all the heartaches and defeats that go with that. So it’s just part of it.

“And that’s the way it goes.”

Rodney Sandstorm is ready for his moment.

Sports-car ace Jordan Taylor is set to make his NASCAR national series debut when he takes command of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for an injured Chase Elliott in Sunday’s Cup Series race at Circuit of The Americas (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, Sirius XM NASCAR) — and he’s taking his Jeff Gordon-inspired alter ego along for the ride.

MORE: Taylor gets the call for ‘dream come true’ in No. 9 | Berry, Taylor to sub for Elliott 

The 24-time IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship race winner and three-time champion Taylor’s helmet will feature the unmistakable theme of Gordon’s “Rainbow Warriors” heyday, with Sandstorm’s logo adorned on the back of it. Taylor and Gordon were teammates in the 2017 Rolex 24 at Daytona, where they teamed with Taylor’s brother Ricky and Max Angelelli to lead 358 combined laps en route to victory.

MORE: Jeff Gordon’s top career moments | See all of his Cup Series wins

With his helmet squared away and preparations all buttoned up before heading out to the Austin, Texas track there was just one thing left to check off the pre-COTA list — changing his voicemail message.

Of course, while this will be Taylor‘s first NASCAR start, Sandstorm is no stranger to taking in the full NASCAR experience.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 23, 2023)NASCAR and Powerball announced today they are shifting their partnership into high gear with Powerball’s launch of a new national promotion. The NASCAR Powerball Playoff promotion will culminate with four lottery players winning a VIP trip for two to NASCAR Championship Weekend in Phoenix, Nov. 3-5, and the chance to win $1 million during a special drawing televised live from the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race on Sunday, Nov. 5.

RELATED: Powerball becomes official partner of NASCAR | COTA weekend schedule

“This promotion captures the thrill of racing and winning that could only come from a NASCAR-Powerball partnership,” said Drew Svitko, Powerball Product Group Chair and Pennsylvania Lottery Executive Director. “We’re excited to engage with players as the ‘Official Lottery Game of NASCAR’ and amplify Powerball’s mission of supporting state programs and services everywhere tickets are sold.”

“As we said when we announced our partnership with Powerball in February, this relationship is going to allow us to bring winning opportunities to our loyal fans,” said Daryl Wolfe, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer. “This promotion is a perfect example of that and as the excitement builds towards Championship Weekend at Phoenix Raceway, so will the excitement to award $1 million to one lucky lottery player.”

First teased during the partnership announcement during DAYTONA 500 festivities, the NASCAR Powerball Playoff promotion will begin at the state level with participating lotteries selecting entrants, by a method of their choosing, to form a national pool of semifinalists. Sixteen semi-finalists will be drawn from the national pool, with no more than one semi-finalist per lottery advancing. The 16 semi-finalists will be announced during the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on August 26. The semi-finalists will then go head-to-head in a series of drawings that coincide with the elimination rounds of the NASCAR Playoffs.

Drawing

Date

Race

Playoffs

1.

Aug. 12

Aug. 26 at Coke Zero Sugar 400,

Daytona International Speedway

16 semifinalists advance

2.

Sept. 9

Sept. 16 at Bass Pro Shops Night Race,

Bristol Motor Speedway

12 semifinalists advance

4 eliminated win $2,500

3.

Oct. 1

Oct. 8 at Bank of America ROVAL™ 400,

Charlotte Motor Speedway

8 semifinalists advance

4 eliminated win $5,000

4.

Oct. 11

Oct. 29 at Xfinity 500,

Martinsville Speedway

4 finalists advance & win VIP trip

4 eliminated win $7,500

5.

Nov. 5

NASCAR Cup Series Championship,

Phoenix Raceway

(1) $1 million winner

(3) $10,000 winners

The four semi-finalists still in the playoffs after the fourth drawing will win a VIP trip for two to NASCAR Championship Weekend in Phoenix, Nov. 3-5, and advance as finalists to the $1 million drawing. Cash prizes will be awarded to all 16 national semi-finalists based on their elimination position.

The VIP trip experience will include roundtrip airfare for two to Phoenix, three nights hotel accommodations – double occupancy, two Ally Curve Hospitality Club passes for both the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship Race on Nov. 4 and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race on Nov. 5, two passes for VIP experiences at Phoenix Raceway during the NASCAR Championship Weekend including NASCAR Cup Series™ VIP access, NASCAR team hauler tour, MRN radio booth tour, pace car rides, and Victory Lane access, welcome dinner and all meals, and ground transportation to scheduled events and activities.

Participating lotteries will kick off in-state contests and second-chance drawings throughout the 2023 NASCAR season. Participating lottery jurisdictions include Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, and West Virginia.

Powerball tickets are $2 per play. Tickets are sold in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. More than half of all proceeds from the sale of a Powerball ticket remain in the jurisdiction where the ticket was sold. Drawings are broadcast live every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at 10:59 p.m. ET from the Florida Lottery draw studio in Tallahassee. Drawings are also live streamed on Powerball.com

The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season continues this Sunday, March 26 with live action from the first road course of the year, Circuit of the Americas, at 3:30 p.m. ET. The race will air live on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Five races down in the 2023 Cup Series season and the first trek to a road course awaits this weekend. There are story lines aplenty to keep an eye on with exciting entrants and rule changes that will shake up strategies on Sunday at Circuit of The Americas.

To get ready for the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (Sun. 3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), let’s look at some trends to watch, rule changes for Sunday, notable moments and the on-track schedule for the weekend in Austin, Texas.

🇫🇮 INTERNATIONAL FLAIR 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

Joining Mexico’s Daniel Suárez in Sunday’s event will be English driver Jenson Button and Finnish driver Kimi Räikkönen.

Button will pilot the No. 15 Rick Ware Racing Ford with support from Stewart-Haas Racing and Mobil 1. The 43-year-old is a 15-time winner in Formula 1 and claimed the 2009 championship. Räikkönen returns to Trackhouse Racing’s Project 91 initiative after making his Cup Series debut last year at Watkins Glen where he crashed out in the final stage after running inside the top 20 for the majority of the race.

RELATED: See entry list for Sunday

RULE CHANGES/GOODYEAR TIRE NOTES

For all Cup races on road courses this season, there will be no cautions at the end of stages. Instead, the race will remain under green while stage points are still rewarded to the top 10 at the conclusion of Stage 1 (Lap 15) and Stage 2 (Lap 30). It will be the first time the Cup Series has gone without stage cautions in a points-paying race since the onset of stages at the beginning of the 2017 season.

The GEICO Restart Zone will return to its 2022 dimensions after it was extended for the first five races of this season.

The choose rule will also be in effect for the first time at a road course this season.

Cup cars will run the same tire codes that were used on road courses all last season. One code is used on the left front and right rear and the other on the right front and left rear.

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.

After the race at Phoenix, competition officials issued a safety violation for the loss or separation of an improperly installed tire/wheel from the vehicle (Sections 8.8.10.4 A&C) to the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford driven by Aric Almirola. Crew members Ryan Mulder (front tire changer) and Sean Cotten (jack) were suspended for two races.

RELATED: See rules changes for 2023

TRENDS TO WATCH

— Chevrolet has won 11 of the last 12 road-course Cup races.

— Christopher Bell is the only Joe Gibbs Racing driver with a top-five finish this season (three times).

— Ross Chastain is the only driver on Sunday that owns top fives in the first two races at COTA.

— Three drivers scored their first career Cup win on a road course in 2022.

— The race winner led five laps or less in the last two road course races.

MORE: See betting favorites for Sunday’s race | Projected COTA results

NOTABLE MOMENTS

2021: Larson wins rain-soaked debut at COTA | WATCH

2022: Chastain, Bowman, Allmendinger battle for win on final lap | WATCH

ON-TRACK SCHEDULE

Friday, March 24

— 2:05 p.m. ET: Cup practice (Will air on tape delay on Fox Sports 1 at 8 p.m. ET)

Saturday, March 25

— 11:30 a.m. ET: Cup qualifying (FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Sunday, March 26

— 3:30 p.m. ET: EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

RELATED: Full COTA weekend schedule

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

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, 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.

Sunday’s race at Circuit of The Americas provides NASCAR Cup Series drivers with their first road-course test of the 2023 season. For prognosticators and prediction models, it also means a whole new ballgame. Drivers who are considered lead-pipe locks for intermediate courses might not be as reliable when turning left and right on a road course.

AJ Allmendinger and Tyler Reddick have been two of the hottest drivers over the last four road-course races, with Allmendinger registering four top-10 finishes and Reddick winning two of those four contests — plus, Allmendinger won Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race and Reddick has moved to the top of the betting odds board for Sunday.

But look out for William Byron, who starts on the pole on Sunday and finished second in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race. Byron, a two-time winner this season, could just as easily end up in Victory Lane.

FANTASY LIVE: Set your roster

To help us decipher what could happen on Sunday in the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), Racing Insights used its advanced statistical formula to predict both the winner and full race results. Racing Insights uses data on the current track, current track type, recent performance, team performance and pit crew performance to make its projections.

ONES TO WATCH

Ross Chastain: He won this race last year after a dramatic final-lap battle with Allmendinger that literally went down to the last turn.

Alex Bowman: Bowman is one of four drivers who has had a top-10 finish in both COTA races (2021 and 2022). Chastain, Reddick and Chase Elliott are the others.

Kyle Busch: With Elliott sidelined because of an injury, Busch is tied with Kyle Larson and Martin Truex Jr. for the most road-course wins among active drivers (four).

Tyler Reddick: The 23XI Racing driver has the best average finish on road courses among active drivers at 12.93 in 15 starts.

Kyle Larson: He has the most road-course wins in a season by a driver with three in 2021.

Projections as of Sunday, March 26.

RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE ECHOPARK AUTOMOTIVE GRAND PRIX

Finish Car No. Driver
1 5 Kyle Larson
2 24 William Byron
3 1 Ross Chastain
4 45 Tyler Reddick
5 8 Kyle Busch
6 22 Joey Logano
7 48 Alex Bowman
8 11 Denny Hamlin
9 2 Austin Cindric
10 12 Ryan Blaney
11 16 AJ Allmendinger
12 99 Daniel Suárez
13 20 Christopher Bell
14 14 Chase Briscoe
15 4 Kevin Harvick
16 43 Erik Jones
17 34 Michael McDowell
18 19 Martin Truex Jr.
19 17 Chris Buescher
20 6 Brad Keselowski
21 3 Austin Dillon
22 54 Ty Gibbs
23 23 Bubba Wallace
24 31 Justin Haley
25 21 Harrison Burton
26 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
27 7 Corey LaJoie
28 42 Noah Gragson
29 41 Ryan Preece
30 38 Todd Gilliland
31 10 Aric Almirola
32 77 Ty Dillon
33 9 Jordan Taylor
34 51 Cody Ware
35 78 Josh Bilicki
36 91 Kimi Räikkönen
37 15 Jenson Button
38 84 Jimmie Johnson
39 50 Conor Daly

 

Saturday, Parker Kligerman returns to Circuit of The Americas, the race track where his NASCAR Xfinity Series career was revitalized.

Normally a reporter for NBC Sports, Kligerman got a call from Joey Gase and Patrick Emerling last March, presenting him with a chance to race at COTA behind the wheel of the No. 35 Toyota Supra for Emerling-Gase Motorsports. It was a chance he wouldn’t pass up.

“Very humbled they thought of me for this,” Kligerman tweeted. “I hope we can get them a great result.”

Little did he know his opportunity was just the beginning of a fresh start to his racing career. After years of part-time positions, his persistence was paying off.

Before that breakthrough call, it had been five years since Kligerman had another chance to compete at the Xfinity Series level after starting 53 races — including his lone full-time season in 2013 — between 2009 and 2017. The longtime driver bounced around organizations, making starts in the Cup Series, Craftsman Truck Series and the ARCA Menards Series just searching for track time.

Now, almost 12 months later to the day, he is already competing for wins and a championship as a full-time Xfinity Series competitor.

Five races into the 2023 season, Kligerman and Big Machine Racing are rapidly improving — and should be even more encouraged after their fourth-place effort in Saturday’s last-lap shootout at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

ATLANTA: Race results | Watch the intense finish

“Just so cool how fast our car was,” Kligerman said after the race. “Put four tires on there when we had to get fuel. Great call by (crew chief) Patrick Donahue and my engineer Cody McKenzie to do that because our car was so fast it drove through the field. We got to go to the bottom and no one would go with us and then we came to that last restart, I obviously lined up behind the 21, I thought that gave us the best shot of putting ourselves exactly in the position in which we were.”

Kligerman raced at the front of the field for the first time since the season-opening contest at Daytona International Speedway, battling toe-to-toe with superspeedway ace, Austin Hill.

“On the final lap, I felt like (Hill) was controlling the pack, but I had the lanes behind me to control, as well,” Kligerman explained. “So, if I picked the right one, I could get the shot.”

Kligerman did get the shot. But the push from behind by Daniel Hemric sent his No. 48 spinning down the frontstretch and backward across the finish line.

It was a dramatic ending to remember.

Miraculously, Kligerman still finished fourth and was unhurt in the collision — in fact, he was ecstatic.

“I’m so pumped,” Kilgerman said. “Because that is the first Xfinity Series superspeedway race where I felt like my natural skill was working. That’s what I’ve done my whole career.”

For Kligerman, it is a rejuvenated career that will come full circle when he straps into his seat for Saturday’s race at COTA (5 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) after a significant journey to get to this point.

He is also slated to start the Truck Series race earlier that day (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), his first series action at a road course since dominating last year’s event at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course with Henderson Motorsports — an emotional and validating victory.

However, Kligerman is still searching for his first win in the Xfinity Series, one that he is inching closer and closer to every week. And while the 32-year-old’s inspirational story in NASCAR is still being written, the pages are starting to come together a lot differently than they were just one year ago.

MORE: Buy tickets to COTA, other NASCAR races

CHICAGO – Today, NASCAR introduced McDonald’s as the first founding partner of the first-ever Chicago Street Race Weekend. McDonald’s will have official presenting, marketing and promotional rights for the Chicago Street Race Weekend, including the NASCAR Cup Series’ Grant Park 220 and NASCAR Xfinity Series’ The Loop 121 races in downtown Chicago over Fourth of July Weekend, July 1-2.

“NASCAR plays such an important role in sports culture, so we’re thrilled to be the first founding partner of this race in our hometown of Chicago,” said Elizabeth Campbell, senior director of cultural engagement, McDonald’s USA. “We look forward to showing up for our racing fans and putting on a successful event in a city rich with sports history.”

CHICAGO STREET RACE: Buy tickets, get more info

McDonald’s will have a visible presence throughout the Chicago Street Race Weekend, including on-course branding in a dedicated founding partner section as well as the historic start-finish line near Buckingham Fountain. The McDonald’s brand will also be featured at fan entrances, concert stages, wayfinding, and additional locations throughout the event’s footprint.

“McDonald’s is an iconic global brand with roots in Chicago, so it is the perfect founding partner for one of the most anticipated sporting events in NASCAR’s 75-year history, the Chicago Street Race,” said Julie Giese, Chicago Street Race president. “We are grateful to our partners at McDonald’s for embracing this historic event as we reimagine a two-day sports and entertainment weekend experience in the heart of downtown Chicago.”

As a partner with 23XI Racing, McDonald’s is the primary sponsor for multiple races for Bubba Wallace in the No. 23 and Tyler Reddick in the No. 45 Toyota Camrys in the 2023 Cup Series season. 23XI Racing, now in its third season, is co-owned by NBA legend Michael Jordan and Cup Series star Denny Hamlin.

RELATED: Star-studded lineup announced for Chicago Street Race entertainment

“The Chicago Street Race is going to be such a great weekend for our sport. As we continue to look for ways to showcase NASCAR to new and more diverse audiences, the backdrop of downtown Chicago and the lake are sure to provide a really unique setting for a race,” said NASCAR Driver Bubba Wallace.

“McDonald’s has been a great supporter of me and my team at 23XI Racing, so there will be a little added incentive for us as we race with the Golden Arches on our car in the city the brand has called home for more than a half-century.”

McDonald’s will be featured prominently on the NBC broadcasts of the Chicago Street Race Weekend, Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM Radio national radio broadcasts, and have an expansive presence on NASCAR’s digital platforms.

“We are proud to expand the partnership of one of the most recognizable and global brands within NASCAR as part of the Chicago Street Race Weekend,” said Jeff Wohlschlaeger, SVP, chief sales officer, NASCAR. “McDonald’s brand strength is unrivaled, and we are proud they are supporting NASCAR’s first-ever Cup Series street race in their hometown of Chicago.”

Look for future announcements about the partnership between McDonald’s and the Chicago Street Race that will further support NASCAR’s overarching commitment to the Chicago community and programs that will have a positive and lasting impact on local youth and teens.

MORE: NASCAR fan’s guide to enjoying Chicago

Chicago Street Race

As part of NASCAR’s 75th anniversary season, the first-ever Chicago Street Race Weekend will feature the NASCAR Cup Series’ Grant Park 220 and NASCAR Xfinity Series’ The Loop 121 competing on a 12-turn, 2.2-mile street course, along with full-length concerts by The Chainsmokers and Miranda Lambert with the support of The Black Crowes and Charley Crockett over Fourth of July Weekend on July 1-2.

General admission and reserved tickets are on sale for the Chicago Street Race. Two-day general admission ticket start at $269 and reserved tickets that offer an array of opportunities including reserved seating and a wide variety of premium experiences start at $465. To purchase tickets, fans can log onto NASCARChicago.com or call 1-888-629-7223.

The Grant Park 220 will be nationally broadcast on NBC on Sunday, July 2 at 5:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. CT and The Loop 121 will be broadcast nationally on USA Network at 5:00 p.m. ET/4:00 p.m. CT. To stay up to date with the Chicago Street Race, fans can subscribe to receive exclusive Chicago Street Race emails, follow @NASCARChicago on Twitter and Facebook and download the NASCAR Tracks App for the latest real-time updates on all aspects of the event.

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — For the first time in more than a decade, NASCAR Cup Series cars roared to life Tuesday at the historic North Wilkesboro Speedway.

Tyler Reddick, Austin Dillon and Chris Buescher wheeled their Next Gen vehicles around the legendary 0.625-mile oval, a venue steeped in a history palpable upon arrival. North Wilkesboro was a staple upon Cup Series schedules from the sport’s inauguration through 1996, its last race won by then-one-time champion Jeff Gordon for the 19th victory of what would become a 93-win, four-time title-winning career.

The next generation of drivers finally got their turn in a Goodyear tire test on Tuesday ahead of the May 21 NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Reddick was nine months old the last time multiple Cup cars hit the track in northwestern North Carolina. Dillon was 6 years old and Buescher wasn’t yet 4.

RELATED: Photos from North Wilkesboro testing | Buy tickets

A test session at a site so unique and rich with stories made Tuesday unlike any other test.

“I’ve never had that level of nostalgia coming to a test ever really,” Reddick said.

Twenty-seven years since Wilkesboro’s last NASCAR national series event and even longer since its freshest coat of asphalt, Reddick wasted no time Tuesday. He was first to hit the track in his No. 45 Toyota and immediately set out for a decent outing.

“I’m imagining they did a lot of work to it. I mean, you can tell for sure. But for it to have sat, what, 27 years, is that right? I mean, it does not seem like it’s at 27 years,” Reddick said after the session. “I guess that’s the thing I’m not thinking about. I went out there and just went right to ripping laps, 20-lap run in the Next Gen car and yeah, it didn’t it doesn’t seem like a track that sat that long.”

The grandson of car owner Richard Childress, Dillon knows North Wilkesboro holds a special place in his family’s lineage. Childress, of course, owned the No. 3 Chevrolet that Dale Earnhardt wheeled to five wins there and now owns Dillon’s. But Dillon has ties from his father’s side of the family too: dad, Mike Dillon, earned a 1995 victory late model win at North Wilkesboro and took the ride up the famed elevator to the track’s one-of-a-kind Victory Lane.

Austin Dillon drives into Turn 1 at North Wilkesboro during testing
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

“I actually drove up here (Tuesday) with one of his old crew guys, and who kind of helps me around my house,” Dillon said. “And he was like, I want to check out the elevator because I got to take an elevator ride. I guess I did too when I was here when I was a kid. I just don’t remember it. So hopefully, we get to try and take an elevator ride for a million dollars.”

Turning laps around the short track was a far cry from what Dillon typically thinks of when driving through Wilkes County on Highway 421.

“Just driving by it as a kid, going into the mountains and seeing like this ghost of a track that you hear about from your family and all the good times that were had here,” Dillon said. “And now we’re getting to experience it and it’s coming to life fast and it’s cool to be a part of it.”

Buescher is quite the fan of just how worn the existing pavement remains, happy the fresh asphalt has been reserved only for pit road and infield parking. He was chasing grip all day in his No. 17 RFK Racing Ford — just what he wanted.

“It’s probably not as bumpy as I thought,” said Buescher, who hadn’t been back to North Wilkesboro since helping Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Speedway Motorsports President Marcus Smith clean the facility in December 2019. “I mean it’s rough. But man, I can’t tell you how many other race tracks we go to where we get hits through the suspension that hit you a lot harder than anything out here. So it’s probably a lot by design, just trying to make sure we get as much grip in these things as possible. It’s hard to chase aero when the track’s not very flat underneath you.

“All the right reasons to make it a good race. So excited to have the All-Star (Race) here. It’s amazing just seeing the progress, seeing a lot of history is still being preserved.”

Tyler Reddick and Austin Dillon drive through Turn 4 at North Wilkesboro Speedway during testing
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

The goal of the day, through all the glory of just getting onto the race track, was to help Goodyear determine what tire to bring in May for the exhibition event. The problem, per se, is that each driver has his own preferences behind the wheel.

Ahead of a true debrief with his team and Goodyear, Buescher said their fall-off in lap time was “several seconds throughout runs depending which tire you were on.”

Dillon noted he thought the fall-off was “pretty significant,” but Reddick, his former teammate at Richard Childress Racing, believes there could be even more.

“You’re kind of on ice taking off for sure. This place has got a lot of age and character to it,” said Reddick, now five races into his tenure at 23XI Racing. “You know, you’re having to pedal it pretty good. The first lap, you have to kind of be careful squeezing the gas down and as you run, you know, it’s hard to get back to wide-open throttle. But you know, really, I think we were seeing a second-and-a-half fall off or so over even 50 laps, and that was kind of surprising. I figured we’d have more fall off.

“But I mean one little miscue misstep into Turn 1 or Turn 3, you’d lose a second sliding up out of the groove and losing control of your car, so that’s with no traffic, no mistakes. So maybe with more traffic and everything the fall off will be more, but certainly, we’re out of control from I’d say Lap 10 on.

“You have to really take care of your car. So I guess that’s all I was really saying was hoping to make the throttle time even less, but I mean it’s really hard 30, 40 laps in around it to even get wide open.”

Chris Buescher exits Turn 4 at North Wilkesboro during testing
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

North Wilkesboro is set to become the fourth host of the NASCAR All-Star Race in the past five seasons. Texas Motor Speedway hosted each of the last two while Bristol Motor Speedway held the 2020 event. Through 2019, Charlotte Motor Speedway hosted the festivities annually since the event’s 1985 inauguration, with a lone exception for Atlanta in 1986.

MORE: Trucks test at Wilkesboro

A facility and location previously stuck in time, North Wilkesboro is getting all dolled up for a romantic reunion with stock-car racing’s biggest names, a weekend full of racing goods. Late models hit the track Tuesday and Wednesday as preludes to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Tyson 250 on May 20 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) and the Sunday night All-Star Race.

“Dating back to 2020, I was somewhat familiar with this place,” Reddick said. “But I had a lot of downtime as all of us did during the pandemic and I got to watch a lot of races — not necessarily here, but just old-school races, and a number of them were here. And the place just was super entertaining back then.

“I thought to myself watching those races, man, it would’ve been really cool to be a part of it and to have been there — see a race there. I’ve thought that as I’ve driven by it heading to Bristol Motor Speedway through the years. So really glad we got to have that opportunity. I’m excited to see this place full of life and be a part of the event and experience.”