Alex Bowman will remain out of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for the second consecutive week with vertigo, the team announced Wednesday.

Bowman was sidelined from last weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Phoenix Raceway after being diagnosed with vertigo midweek. Justin Allgaier, the 2024 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champion, will drive the No. 48 Chevrolet at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, FOX One, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Las Vegas schedule | Cup Series standings

Bowman first experienced symptoms of vertigo during the March 1 race at Circuit of The Americas, where he exited his vehicle after 71 of 95 laps before Myatt Snider replaced him in Snider’s inaugural Cup Series laps.

“Alex continues to work closely with doctors toward being medically cleared, but he’s still experiencing some lingering symptoms,” Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager Jeff Andrews said in a team statement. “He’s put a lot into the recovery process, and we will continue to support him every step of the way. Our priority remains making sure Alex is fully ready before returning to the race car.”

Anthony Alfredo, a simulation driver for Hendrick Motorsports, filled in for Bowman last weekend at Phoenix. He was running seventh when he was collected in a crash at Lap 217 that ended his day, resulting in a 33rd-place finish. Phoenix marked Alfredo’s first Cup Series appearance on a non-drafting-style track since April 2023 at Martinsville Speedway.

Allgaier is a 29-time winner in O’Reilly Auto Parts Series competition, earning his most recent victory last Saturday at Phoenix Raceway. The 39-year-old veteran has made 84 starts in the NASCAR Cup Series, most recently in the 2026 Daytona 500 with JR Motorsports. Allgaier has substituted for Hendrick Motorsports drivers in the past, including for Jimmie Johnson in the 2020 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis and for Kyle Larson in the 2024 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, where he finished 13th.

In his ninth season with the Rick Hendrick-owned team, Bowman sits 36th in the Cup Series standings after involvement in incidents at both Daytona and EchoPark Speedway to start the season.

New horsepower plus the same tire equaled a solid combination at Phoenix Raceway from NASCAR’s perspective.

During the latest episode of the “Hauler Talk” podcast, vice president of racing communications Mike Forde said NASCAR viewed the 2026 debut of the 750-horsepower package at the 1-mile oval as a “game-changer” because of the increased tire falloff.

“The overall speed for the full lap is not that different, but the high speeds are higher,” Forde said. “And what that means is that it’ll just eat up the tire much more, which leads to varying strategies and comers and goers and passing. And that’s exactly what we were hoping to happen. And that’s what a lot of the drivers were predicting to happen.”

MORE: Recap: Blaney wins at Phoenix | Cup standings

Forde noted several teams were using sealed engines at Phoenix that carried over from last season.

The only difference was the addition of a tapered spacer with holes an eighth of an inch wider in diameter, increasing horsepower by allowing more airflow to the engine.

“A pretty minimal update to those engines created a maximum difference in the Phoenix race,” Forde said. “You saw lots of passing, where sometimes passing was very challenging in previous iterations of the Phoenix Raceway Cup race. So we’re very happy. Thumbs up from the NASCAR side.”

Goodyear supplied the same tire as the race weekend last November at Phoenix when several teams had issues. After a caution-free first stage Sunday, there were multiple incidents involving tires in the second stage at Phoenix, but Forde said NASCAR diagnosed this “as a debris problem, not a tire problem” after brake rotor parts were scattered on the track.

“Beyond that, it seemed like everyone minded their P’s and Q’s, and it didn’t become the story that it was during last Phoenix weekend,” Forde said. “Which is great because the higher horsepower was going to be a challenge on the tires.”

Other topics covered by Forde and senior director of racing communications Amanda Ellis during the 45th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:

— The status of a Chase waiver for Alex Bowman.

— Revisiting the scenario in which a driver has a lug nut secured by another team’s pit crew.

— A statistical assessment of Ryan Blaney’s winning charge.

– Takeaways from the IndyCar-NASCAR doubleheader weekend.

Click on the embed below to listen or search for “Hauler Talk” wherever you download podcasts to hear it on your phone, tablet or mobile device.

Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He also has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.

Goodyear officials indicated that a familiar tire setup will be in the hands of NASCAR Cup Series teams this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

The same tire that Cup Series teams used in last October’s postseason race will again be in stock for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 (4 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The tire configuration debuted last September at Kansas Speedway and was also implemented for the similar 1.5-mile Las Vegas track two weeks later.

RELATED: Weekend schedule: Vegas | Power Rankings

When the tire was introduced, the setup included a new construction of the right-side rubber, paired with left-side tires that appeared in six races last season.

“Teams will be able to lean on their data from October’s races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to refine their strategies for this weekend,” said Justin Fantozzi, Goodyear Director of Racing for the Americas. “The track surface at Las Vegas does not usually encourage much tire wear, so the setups we’ve brought this weekend are designed to shed rubber. That allows heat to dissipate through the tread, keeping the tires cooler and promoting fall-off over the course of a run.”

Each Cup Series team will have an allotment of 10 sets of tires for the race weekend — eight new sets for the race, one for practice, plus one set for qualifying that carries over to Sunday’s 400-miler.

Goodyear’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series tire setup for Saturday’s The LiUNA! (5:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will also be a carryover from last season. O’Reilly Series teams will be supplied with six sets — five new sets for the race, plus one from practice.

PHOENIX, Ariz. — One of the most appealing things about the NASCAR Cup Series is that the season takes the green flag in an ambitious schedule, featuring a wide variety of tracks that provide different challenges and reward different talent sets. And the championship standings reflect as much.

From the superspeedway in Daytona to the Atlanta 1.5-miler that races like a superspeedway, to Austin’s famed road course to Sunday’s fast and furious Phoenix one-miler before hitting the Las Vegas 1.5 miler this week — a track that represents so much of the overall schedule — all the early variation typically provides a good test before sorting out which driver and which team will be making that championship run deep into the season.

RELATED: Cup Series standings | Schedule

Phoenix contributed another vivid chapter after the big ovals and a road course to open the season. Ryan Blaney’s inspired win over a hard-charging Christopher Bell on Sunday was a great sample of some big moves in the championship points standings as the series heads to Las Vegas for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube (4 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, FOX One, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The good news for the season’s established front-runner Tyler Reddick is that the 23XI Racing driver still proved himself a contender even when he’s not hoisting a trophy. After a history-making 3-for-3 streak to open the year with wins in the Daytona 500, at Atlanta’s EchoPark Speedway and then Austin’s Circuit of The Americas road course, Reddick earned a top-10 at Phoenix even as his win streak halted. And it’s given him a substantial 60-point edge over the field as the series continues its Western roll.

Only now, the points standings beyond him look a little different. Blaney’s victory and stage win at Phoenix vaulted him into second place in the standings, 12 points up on Reddick’s 23XI Racing teammate Bubba Wallace. It comes after a three-race run when Reddick and Wallace had widely separated themselves from the rest of the field.

It was especially rewarding for Blaney, who had to overcome two pit road issues and still managed to rally for the win — exactly the kind of determination and effort that helped him to the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series championship and has again served as a reminder that he is a perennial title contender.

“Perseverance,” Blaney said. “Definitely a long day, but really proud of everybody for keeping their heads down. It’s easy to beat yourself up over that stuff and kind of take yourself out of the game. But those guys just don’t do that. Those guys’ mentality is unbelievable, and on this 12-group is where it needs to be. Mainly proud of the effort for all those guys for fighting back like they did.”

Not only did Blaney establish himself in the elite part of the standings, but Bell’s runner-up showing Sunday delivered a dramatic jump in the standings for him as well. He skyrocketed 18 positions from 24th to sixth.

Similarly, Bell’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin finished fifth at Phoenix — his first top five of the year — and moved up 11 positions in the standings to 12th place. Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson, the reigning series champion, jumped up five positions in the standings to 10th. Sunday’s third-place showing was his best finish and first top- five of the season.

“We definitely have a lot of work to do here,” Larson said, “but excited to get to Vegas next week, see what we have on a mile-and-a-half. Go to work.

“But happy to put together two solid finishes in a row here. Just continue to build on it.”

And perhaps one of the most telling signs of year-over-year improvement comes from Trackhouse Racing’s Shane Van Gisbergen. Although he won a rookie record five races last season, all the trophies came on road courses where the former Australian Supercars Champion is so masterful.

This year he’s purposely and successfully raised his oval game, scoring a career best sixth-place at Atlanta and answering with arguably an even more impressive 11th-place at Phoenix — considering he had to overcome a tire issue and was collected in a multicar accident. Van Gisbergen has led laps in three of the first four races and is now ranked fifth in the championship standings — a career high for him.

“Excellent result for the crazy day we had,” the New Zealander said. “My Safety Culture Chevy had a lot of speed, but just had those two spins that reset our progress each time. Passed a lot of cars and had a good points day. Headed to Vegas next weekend with a lot of momentum.”

A one-hour practice for the Pennzoil 400 is Saturday at 2:30 p.m. ET, followed by Busch Light Pole Qualifying at 3:40 p.m. ET (Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Wood Brothers Racing’s Josh Berry is the defending race winner.

SOPHIA, N.C. — Caraway Speedway held its traditional Sunday afternoon season opener on March 8. The event was the first for the track since the facility rejoined the NASCAR Local Racing Series Powered by O’Reilly Auto Parts in the offseason.

Dylan Ward outran a strong field of cars to take the win in the feature NASCAR Limited Late Model division. Ward qualified on the pole for the 75 lapper and kept Michael Fose, Clint King, Cam Thomas one the rest of the field in his rear view mirror.

Lanie Buice was second quick in qualifying but had to move to the back of the field due to a tire change just prior to the start. Buice came from the back of the pack to finish second ahead of Austin Harris, King and Fose. Brian Rose, Stacy Puryear, Thomas, Joshua Horniman and Hunter Deshautelle rounded out the top-10. Nicholas Bulkeley, Bryson Brinkley, David Thomas and Donnie Apple completed the rundown.

Issac Harris took the measure of the field in a wild 35-lap race for the Charger division that saw a brief rain delay and a rash of crashes before Harris prevailed ahead of Dakota Walls, Matthew Smith, Joseph Ciszek and Hason Poole.  Tyler Bush was sixth ahead of Issac Johnson, Brian Melville Jr., Jeffrey Beck, Corey Wilson, Jackson Sparks, Tony Housman, Greg Story and Ben Banker.

Ryan Flores bested the 602 Modified field to take the win ahead of David Creed, Dustin Coonfield, Corey Luetjen and Cole Mizo.

A.J. Sanders came from the back of the pack to win the Mini Stock feature and earn pivotal passing points towards the NASCAR Local Racing Series Powered by O’Reilly Auto Parts national championship. Brandon Crotts finished runner-up to Sanders and Jason Gallimore was third overall and winner in the Front Wheel Drive division.  Jason Garwood finished fourth ahead of Matt Alley, Jamison Whittington, Mason Troxler, Steven Hedrick and Grayson Lee.

The crowd favorite UCAR division got off to a rousing start with a field of 22 on hand. Tony Price held off a determined Ron Mock to take the win. Josh Phillips, Justin Smith and Mason Vance completed the top five.  Skyler Hughes, Jamie Vance, David Edwards, Brayden Cline and Robbie Welch followed to round out the top 10.

Brandon Mock bested Christian Morris to win the Crown Vic feature. They were followed by T.J. Gibson, Corey Wyatt and Adrien Thompson.

Hunter Jordan claimed the win in the INEX Legends feature ahead of Anthony Freedel.  Jhett Johnson took third spot followed by Gary Smith, Mike Wolfe, Jason Meadows, Collin Vanasse, Ethan Jaques and Charlie Parker.

Mason Williams took the top spot in the INEX Bandolero feature, with Ava Boyd finishing second and Jordyn Whitford third.

March 14 marks the first Big 4 Modified Challenge of 2026 at Caraway Speedway. Some of the best Modified drivers in the region are expected to chase the $5,000 winner’s check as well as the $10,000 in bonus money posted for the four Modified events at the track this season. Joining the Tour Type Modifieds will be the Carolina Crate Modifieds and Pro Late Models along with the regular Caraway divisions for a 4 p.m. ET start.

Ryan Blaney surged to victory for the second straight time at Phoenix Raceway on Sunday, becoming the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series’ first winner not named Tyler Reddick. Behind him, though, the running order saw its fair share of fluctuations in an eventful — and sometimes chaotic — 312 laps around the Arizona desert.

Here, we take a look at three drivers who left the year’s first traditional oval race with high spirits and three who already have their eyes forward to test their luck at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Phoenix

THREE UP ⬆️

1. Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota

Started: 28th

Finished: 6th

What happened: An early pit-road speeding penalty and a near-disaster on the race track didn’t detract from Wallace’s best Phoenix performance yet. Wallace carved through the field multiple times Sunday — first from a poor starting position and later while recovering from a Lap 97 speeding penalty. Wallace has finished inside the top 10 in three of the year’s opening four races, now boasting the series’ second-best average finish (8.8), trailing only his teammate, Tyler Reddick (2.8).

What’s next: Wallace has just one top five and two top 10s at Las Vegas in 16 starts, with no top 10s in his last five Vegas appearances. But Wallace did drive the No. 23 Toyota into the lead for 28 laps there last spring before getting collected in an on-track incident.

Bubba Wallace drives at Phoenix.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

2. Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota

Started: 32nd

Finished: 10th

What happened: Erik Jones notched a much-needed top 10 at Phoenix Sunday, marking his first of the season and the opportunity to break out the smiles again on social media. After battling an illness at Circuit of The Americas en route to a 34th-place finish and two finishes outside the top 20 to start the season, Jones and his No. 43 team executed a penalty-free and incident-free Sunday after an inauspicious qualifying effort. By surviving the carnage that put 10 cars out of the race, Jones capitalized on his first top 10 since the 2025 Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway in September.

What’s next: Jones’ track record at Las Vegas has been rocky, with four top 10s in 17 starts and all four occurring between 2018 and 2022. But Jones qualified fifth for the spring race there one year ago and notched a respectable 15th-place finish at Las Vegas in the fall.

Erik Jones drives at Phoenix.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

3. Shane van Gisbergen, No. 97 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Started: 18th

Finished: 11th

What happened: Two spins and a multitude of issues weren’t enough to thwart an impressive day for van Gisbergen, who rebounded from bounds of adversity to nab an 11th-place finish at Phoenix. While still looking for his first win of the season, the first four races of 2026 might as well be considered a victory for the New Zealand native. Through two drafting-style races, one road course (which he surprisingly did not win) and a 1-mile oval, van Gisbergen sits fifth in the Cup Series standings, currently bettering veterans like Christopher Bell, Joey Logano, Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin, among many others.

What’s next: A real test of van Gisbergen’s oval strengths lies ahead at Las Vegas, where he crashed out of both races in 2025 and finished 29th in the 2024 fall race. SVG has proven his oval prowess can improve and is improving, so perhaps the next step will come next weekend in Nevada.

Shane van Gisbergen drives at Phoenix.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

THREE DOWN ⬇️

1. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford

Started: 1st

Finished: 31st

What happened: While his teammate Blaney went on to celebrate a victory, Logano was left wondering what could have been. The polesitter ultimately made two uncharacteristic mistakes Sunday that led to crashes, the second of which put him out of the race. The first came at Lap 217 when contact from Logano to Ross Chastain sent Chastain’s No. 1 Chevrolet crashing into Anthony Alfredo and Austin Cindric on a restart. His second misstep came at Lap 254, when he merged from the dogleg apron into the side of AJ Allmendinger’s car, spinning Logano into traffic and destroying his No. 22 Ford, along with others. Those incidents derailed what was set to be a strong day for the three-time Cup Series champion, who led 73 laps and earned third-place finishes in both of Sunday’s opening stages with an average running position of 8.29.

What’s next: Logano could be set for a strong rebound as he bounces back to Las Vegas. Logano is a four-time winner at the 1.5-mile oval with one win and three top 10s in his last four Vegas starts. He earned victories in the spring of 2019 and 2020 as well as during the postseason in 2022 and 2024, with both of his latter triumphs propelling him to eventual championships.

Joey Logano's wrecked car sits in the Phoenix garage.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

2. Daniel Suárez, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Started: 4th

Finished: 30th

What happened: A weekend that started wonderfully ended miserably for Suárez in Arizona. The newest Spire driver turned a fourth-place qualifying effort into four points in Stage 1 with a seventh-place showing, but Suárez was collected when Logano slid directly in front of Suárez’s nose, destroying the front of the No. 7 Chevrolet and ending his day early.

What’s next: Vegas has been a strong site for Suárez in recent years, producing two top fives and three top 10s in his last six starts there — including a runner-up finish last spring. His tenure at Spire has started well, with three qualifying efforts inside the top 15 and two such results (13th at Daytona, seventh at EchoPark).

Daniel Suárez drives his car to the Phoenix garage after a crash.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

3. Austin Cindric, No. 2 Team Penske Ford

Started: 3rd

Finished: 34th

What happened: Another victim of the on-track carnage was Cindric, who had an excellent showing in progress before crashing at Lap 217. Cindric was an innocent bystander atop the high line of the track exiting the dogleg — until Chastain collided with Alfredo, who launched into Cindric, who then pounded the SAFER barrier. He finished sixth in both stages Sunday to earn some points to cushion a 34th-place finish, but Sunday marked his third finish outside the top 30 in the opening four races with a best finish so far of 26th (EchoPark).

What’s next: A bright spot for Cindric is that despite his dismal results, his No. 2 Ford has been in the mix often. His 17.04 average running position ranks 15th-best in the NASCAR Cup Series, showing he has been running well before getting collected in on-track incidents. His Las Vegas results have been a mixed bag, but they were good in 2025: Cindric finished sixth in the spring and 11th in the fall last year, leading 47 laps last March.

Anthony Alfredo and Austin Cindric crash at Phoenix.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series continues its westward trek with a race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Saturday (5:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The 1.5-mile intermediate venue will conclude a two-race stretch out West, with the circuit returning eastward following the conclusion of Saturday’s bout. Justin Allgaier won at Phoenix Raceway over the weekend.

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Allgaier enters Las Vegas as the defending race winner, and he will once again pilot the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet. There will be stout competition looking to overcome the longtime O’Reilly veteran, including four NASCAR Cup Series full-timers racing this weekend in the series: Cole Custer (No. 0 SS GreenLight Racing Chevrolet), Connor Zilisch (No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet), Chase Briscoe (No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota) and Kyle Larson (No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet).

Forty-one cars are entered into this week’s event.

MORE: Weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on The CW

View the full entry list:

Following an exciting contest at Phoenix Raceway, the NASCAR Cup Series continues its westward swing with a date at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The 1.5-mile Nevada facility will act as the second of seven consecutive venues that will make up a portion of the 10-race Chase format later during the 2026 season.

ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Josh Berry, driving the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford, enters as the defending spring winner. The triumph was Berry’s first victory in NASCAR’s premier series and also marked the 101st in Wood Brothers Racing’s storied history.

Thirty-six cars are entered into this week’s event.

MORE: Weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on FOX Sports

View the full entry list for the race:

This wasn’t a Penske Perfect day by any means.

Austin Cindric finished 34th after being punted into a heavy collision with the wall. Joey Logano committed two uncharacteristic errors and finished 31st, squandering a fast car that started first and led 73 laps.

Even Ryan Blaney had his issues during and following his first win of the season.

After driving from the back of the field twice because of loose wheels on pit stops, Blaney had to delay his winner’s interview after briefly leaving his No. 12 Ford in neutral (and rolling down the frontstretch banking). He later realized he forgot to FaceTime his wife and newborn son while celebrating.

RELATED: Race results | Cup Series standings

For the clean-cut organization that prides itself on attention to detail, a sloppy Sunday at Phoenix Raceway fell far short of being a Penske Perfect day.

But it was a Penske Perfect weekend.

Ultimately, that was all that mattered for a NASCAR trio feeling the heat after Team Penske went 3-for-3 in the first three big moments of the “desert doubleheader” weekend organized by the boss.

“You don’t want to mess it up,” Blaney said. “We had three out of the four boxes checked: IndyCar pole, Cup pole, IndyCar win. You got to finish it out, right? There’s a little more internal pressure because you don’t want to be the guys that don’t finish out the whole weekend for RP.

“You always want to win for Roger. It’s always special when you do, especially when he’s here.”

Roger Penske turned 89 last month, and there isn’t much left (aside from a 24 Hours of Le Mans win) that’s unprecedented for the auto racing icon.

But the Phoenix accomplishments were a first for the man who owns IndyCar and Indianapolis Motor Speedway — a cherry on top of an illustrious resume that encompasses five Cup championships (among nearly 50 series titles), three Daytona 500 wins and 20 Indianapolis 500 victories.

“Roger Penske does this to win races; that’s what he loves to do,” said Michael Nelson, who oversees the team’s NASCAR side as Penske Racing South president. “To give him something he hasn’t achieved before — race wins twice in one weekend with two different series — means the world to all of us.”

Over 312 laps Sunday at Phoenix, it might have meant too much at times, notably in the mistakes by Logano. The three-time Cup Series champion triggered a pileup by driving through Ross Chastain on a Lap 217 restart and then ended his day on another restart by trying to wedge into a gap that was a few inches too narrow for his No. 22 Ford.

The miscues by Blaney’s pit crew seemed further evidence of a Cup team pressing to “match” its IndyCar counterparts’ Saturday success — a victory for Josef Newgarden on the heels of a Friday pole position by David Malukas.

No less than three times in 24 hours, Newgarden reminded the world that the NASCAR team would come up short for “The Captain” without a win Sunday.

The first came when longtime racing journalist Bruce Martin asked how important it would be for the NASCAR team to complete the Penske Perfect weekend.

“I think it’s incredibly important,” Newgarden said, pausing to add with a devilish grin. “It will be so disappointing if the Cup guys do not deliver tomorrow.”

“Horribly disappointing,” cracked Jonathan Diuguid, the Penske Racing president who oversees the IndyCar and IMSA operations.

“It’s a great point, Bruce,” Newgarden said. “Put the pressure on them.”

The two-time IndyCar champion and Indy 500 winner still was tossing barbs the next day on national TV when interviewed during the Cup race (while wearing a gray Team Penske T-shirt embossed with Blaney’s name and number).

“I don’t know that (Penske’s NASCAR drivers) need a lot of advice from me, but I’ll motivate them,” Newgarden said. “At a function last night with Team Penske and our partners. I said it’s going to be a real shame if we don’t double up this weekend. I know we did our job. You guys better deliver.”

Newgarden was kidding … but he also kind of wasn’t.

MORE: At-track photos: Phoenix

The “Team of Rivals” concept is fostered by Penske, whose IndyCar, NASCAR and sports cars teams are in their 20th season headquartered under the same roof.

The team’s drivers across all three series have built camaraderie and friendly rivalries from often seeing each other in passing at the workout facilities or pit stop area inside the sprawling shop in Mooresville, North Carolina.

Roger Penske enjoys competition in every possible form, even when it’s pitting his drivers against each other. Several years ago, his team created “The Penske Games,” a goofy intrasquad Olympics-style event in which drivers competed in dodgeball, table tennis and cramming as many marshmallows into their mouths as possible.

There is plenty of collegiality. The drivers regularly exchange supportive texts. Malukas and Scott McLaughlin visited Victory Lane to congratulate Blaney, who had done the same Saturday for Newgarden after Penske’s first IndyCar win this season.

But there is also a subtle competitive spirit.

“(Newgarden) put the pressure on us,” Nelson said. “He definitely pushed hard on us to try to keep up our end of the bargain. We would have done the same.”

The pressure was also on because the Phoenix market has special meaning to Roger Penske, whose immaculate Penske Racing Museum is based in Scottsdale (nestled inside an auto mall that houses various Penske Automotive dealerships).

When Team Penske announced a Mobil 1 sponsorship during a Phoenix race weekend in 2007, money was spent to helicopter a few dozen media members from the track to the glitzy event at the museum (which was located on the other side of the Salt River Valley).

To celebrate its 60th season of competition last weekend at Phoenix Raceway, Team Penske rolled out the red carpet for nonstop hospitality and media events — despite an uncharacteristic slow start in NASCAR. Through the first three races, Penske drivers had managed only three top 10s, and Cindric finished outside the top 25 at Phoenix for the fourth consecutive race.

After watching Newgarden’s win with an enthusiastic Penske in a trackside suite Saturday, Blaney was almost giddy thinking about how excited the team owner would have been in the same suite Sunday — while watching with his IndyCar drivers.

“It was cool that those guys stuck around,” Blaney said of Newgarden, Malukas and McLaughlin. “It was fun to see them in Victory Lane, too.”

It certainly was better than seeing them at the shop — and having to face lighthearted jabs about the pursuit of perfection.

“It’s cool that we could add another milestone to Roger, especially the 60-year anniversary,” Blaney said. “It’s a special year for everybody. Nice we could get something new that we haven’t done before.”