DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR and FloRacing will continue their unprecedented investment and commitment to grassroots racing, adding $30,000 to the race purse for the Charlie Powell Memorial South Carolina 400 at Florence Motor Speedway on Nov. 18-19. The additional funding from FloRacing – along with added prize money from track and race sponsors – more than doubles the race purse from 2021.
The incremental purse will provide additional prize money to the winner, but the majority of the extra investment will go to the middle and back of the field. The last 20 finishers will receive more than double the purse from last year.
The South Carolina 400 was formerly known as the Myrtle Beach 400, a race that took place at Myrtle Beach Speedway. This year is the 30th anniversary of the event. Florence Motor Speedway owner Steve Zacharias formerly served as general manager at Myrtle Beach Speedway. Zacharias purchased Florence after Myrtle Beach closed in 2020 with the goal of making it a premier destination for racers across the country.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. will compete in the event, which also features many of the top drivers in grassroots racing. The South Carolina 400 will air live and exclusive on FloRacing.
“We are extremely grateful for the commitment from NASCAR and FloRacing to make the South Carolina 400 even bigger and better than ever,” Zacharias said. “Florence Motor Speedway is a premier destination for short track racing, and we can’t wait to showcase it to the world on FloRacing and to the fans in attendance on Nov. 18-19.”
Fifty-two cars entered the South Carolina 400 in 2021, and more are expected this year. Past winners at Florence Motor Speedway include Earnhardt Jr., Joe Nemechek, John Hunter Nemechek and Josh Berry.
“Grassroots racing is a huge passion of mine and I’m honored to support the South Carolina 400,” said Earnhardt Jr. “I grew up competing at Florence and have been looking forward to taking the wheel there again against some of the best short-track racers in the world.”
About five years ago, teenager Mady Stichal decided she wanted to try racing.
No one in her family had ever raced before; it was just something she saw that looked like fun, and she wanted to try it.
“My dad, when I first told him I wanted to race, he was like, ‘I don’t know,’” Stichal said. “But he saw how committed I was, and he’s every step of the way looked into it, done so much research for me, found so many set-ups and sat me down, read me books after books, articles after articles. Like, ‘Here, look at this, look at this.’ So he’s definitely someone who helped me throughout the way.”
Not only did Stichal want to try racing, she wanted to try everything in racing. After spending the first few years of her career competing on dirt tracks, this season she added an asphalt track to her resume, competing at Alaska Raceway Park.
Stichal ran in the track’s Late Model class full-time, and she competed in the Bandolero, Asphalt Sprint and Legends classes while also competing at three different dirt tracks on her off weekends.
“It was pretty crazy,” Stichal said of her busy season.
The recent high school graduate finished fifth in the GCI Late Model class at Alaska Raceway Park, a NASCAR-sanctioned 0.333-mile track in Palmer, Alaska. She was the highest finishing rookie in the field.
More than anything, 2022 was a learning season for Stichal.
“It was definitely a challenge. I learned a lot,” she said. “In the very beginning I was kind of skeptical of what to do, because I’ve always been on dirt, and I’ve mainly done sprints, so getting into a bigger car, I was like, ‘What could happen?’
“We figured out a lot with me, because my team was like, ‘We usually like setting up for a tighter car,’ and I was like, ‘OK, let’s try it.’ And it ended up not working for me, and we ended up battling setups until we figured out I’m more into loose cars. So it was pretty interesting to learn that each driver is different when it comes to setups.”
Prior to this season, Stichal, who dreams of one day racing in the World of Outlaws, said she had never considered racing on asphalt. That was until her car owner, Stu, reached out.
“He hit me up and was like, ‘Hey, I’ve been watching you race for some time. I really want to step back, and I really want to get a younger driver into the car. Would you be interested?’
“I thought about it and said, ‘This is going to grow my racing career, so why not?’ So I took it.”
In addition to learning how to drive a late model, it took some time for Stichal to adjust week-to-week when going from dirt to asphalt.
She reached her goals in each discipline, getting into the top five among sprint car racers in Alaska while also getting faster every week in a late model.
“It was pretty great for me to be able to jump to all those cars and learn and explore how each car is on this track,” she said. “I was blown away with myself, and I was really proud of my team for getting me back up there. It was awesome.”
Stichal said she’s learned a lot thanks to the help of her family. Even though none of the Stichals have a racing background, while she has learned how to drive, her family has learned with her to help her get better.
“With my whole family, they’re all super supportive,” she said. “They’re all there with me like, ‘Hey check this out, let’s try this set up,’ and I’m like, ‘Yea, let’s try it.’
“It helps me a lot to know that my family is right here by my side. If something goes wrong, if an accident happens or I end up failing or not doing my best, I know that they’re right there still supporting me saying, ‘Hey you have the next race.’”
And there will definitely be a next race. Stichal has talked with her car owner about possibly traveling outside of Alaska to race late models and sprints next season.
She plans to race as many different cars as possible for as long as she can.
“I feel it grounds me to say I can do different things,” she said. “It definitely made me more humble about which car I’m driving.
“I think it’s just the adrenaline rush, for sure, and the speed. Just wanting to be better and be faster every single lap I take for myself.”
Petty GMS Motorsports announced Tuesday that veteran crew chief Luke Lambert will lead the No. 42 Chevrolet team next season, continuing his partnership with driver Noah Gragson into 2023.
Lambert will return to the NASCAR Cup Series after a successful Xfinity Series campaign with Gragson this season on the No. 9 JR Motorsports team. Their pairing has yielded a series-best eight victories this season, including a four-in-a-row win streak that tied a record set by the legendary Sam Ard.
Gragson’s most recent win – last weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway – clinched a Championship 4 appearance for the Nov. 5 finale.
“I’m looking forward to continuing this journey with Noah,” Lambert said in a Petty GMS team release. “This year has been fun and rewarding, and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it. When I joined JRM, it was because I believed in the organization and knew I’d have the opportunity to compete for race wins and a chance at the championship, and that’s exactly where we are right now. I see the same opportunity with Petty GMS. They’ve shown great growth this season and were able to get the team’s first win. With Dave and Erik, along with what Noah and I bring to the table, I think we’ll continue to see that success and contend for race wins next season.”
The announcement finalizes the Petty GMS driver-crew chief lineup for next year. Gragson and Lambert will race alongside the No. 43 Chevy team, which will return driver Erik Jones and crew chief Dave Elenz in 2023.
“Hiring Luke was the right choice for us when it came to finding a crew chief for Noah,” said Joey Cohen, director of competition and engineering for Petty GMS. “The chemistry and success they have had this year in the Xfinity Series is one that can’t be replicated, and we know with the right resources and tools, that success can carry over to the Cup Series next year. Luke brings a great deal of knowledge from his previous years in the Cup Series and knowledge of Noah. With both Luke and Dave next year, Noah and Erik and the relationships they’ve already built, I know we’re giving them the best chance for success next season and the ability to continue to elevate Petty GMS.”
Tuesday’s move marks the latest in a series of changes for the No. 42 team, which was created when team owners Richard Petty and Maury Gallagher merged operations to launch Petty GMS last offseason. Gragson was tapped Aug. 10 as Ty Dillon’s replacement for 2023, and Chad Norris was named interim crew chief for the No. 42 group on Sept. 13, replacing first-year wrench Jerame Donley for the remainder of the season.
Lambert enters with a wealth of experience, dating back to his start as a race engineer for Richard Childress Racing to his ascent to the crew chief role in 2011. Since then, he’s made 332 Cup Series appearances atop the pit box – a stretch that includes one victory (2017) and a Championship 4 appearance (2014), both with Ryan Newman.
Lambert has been a crew chief for just two full seasons in the Xfinity Series, but those stints have been marked by rampant success. He more than doubled his victory total this year, adding Gragson’s eight triumphs to the four wins he shared with driver Elliott Sadler at RCR in 2012.
The hiring of Lambert means that Petty GMS will have two former crew chiefs for the JRM No. 9 team atop their pit boxes next year. Elenz worked with Gragson from 2019-21, collecting five Xfinity Series victories together and making the Championship 4 field in their final year with the No. 9 group.
Jones and Elenz have clicked this year, winning the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway last month and totaling 13 top-10 finishes so far in 2022.
A season of hard work for drivers at 45 NASCAR-sanctioned shorts tracks across the United States and Canada has culminated in celebrations for numerous track champions.
From Alaska Raceway Park in Palmer, Alaska, to New Smyrna Speedway in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, drivers from all across the continent worked tirelessly toward the goal of becoming NASCAR track champions this season. For a select few, that dream was realized.
They include 2022 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national champion Layne Riggs, who captured his first track title at Virginia’s South Boston Speedway this year. Also among the track champions are drivers like Tim Brown, who captured his record-breaking 12th championship at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Dylan Zampa won 11 races in 13 starts at All American Speedway in Roseville, California, and Craig Von Dohren captured his 13th track championship at Grandview Speedway in Bechtelsville, Pennsylvania.
Below is a list of NASCAR-sanctioned division champions from all of the tracks that are part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.
2022 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track champions
The battle for the 2022 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship will come to a close Thursday when the Tour makes its 37th visit to the popular, 0.526-mile paved oval known as Martinsville Speedway.
Four drivers — Jon McKennedy, Ron Silk, Justin Bonsignore and Eric Goodale — enter the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 in contention for the championship. Any one could end the day as the title winner, but the champion will need to overcome the strongest field of the season.
Martinsville first hosted the modern version of the Tour in 1985, when Charlie Jarzombek won the first two Tour events at the track. Through the years, countless legendary names in NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour history have visited Victory Lane at Martinsville, including Reggie Ruggiero, Mike McLaughlin, Tom Baldwin, Tony Hirschman, Mike Stefanik, Ted Christopher, Jimmy Blewett and Donny Lia, among others.
The Tour returned to Martinsville last season for the first time since 2010, and it was Goodale, who enters Thursday’s finale 13 points out of the championship lead, who emerged as the race winner. A victory likely will be what it takes for Goodale to claim his first Tour title, and based on history, that very well could happen.
Below is everything you need to know about Thursday’s Virginia is For Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway.
Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway
What to watch for:
Entering the final race of the 2022 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season, the top four drivers in the series standings are separated by only 13 points.
Jon McKennedy enters the race as the championship leader, six points ahead of 2011 champion Ron Silk. Three-time and defending Tour champion Justin Bonsignore is third and 11 points back from the lead, while defending Martinsville winner Eric Goodale is fourth, only 13 points back.
Any of those drivers could end Thursday as the champion, but the battle for the victory, the coveted Martinsville grandfather clock and $111,113 in posted awards is going to be as intense as ever. A whopping 37 cars are entered in Thursday’s race, a season-high for the Tour.
Headlining the list of entrants in addition to the championship contenders are a quartet of drivers with experience in the NASCAR Cup Series. They include 2000 NASCAR Cup Series champion Bobby Labonte, who will make his NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debut for team owner Phil Stefanelli.
Cars line up during qualifying for the Virginia Is For Racing Lovers 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Martinsville Speedway on April 8, 2021. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
Ryan Newman, the 2008 Daytona 500 winner and four-time Tour winner, returns to make his second start this year in a car co-owned by Hermie Sadler and Virginia State Senator William Stanley. Current Cup Series competitor Corey LaJoie, who made his return to the Tour earlier this year at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, is also entered in the No. 53 for car owner Mike Curb.
Ryan Preece, the 2013 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion, is back for his fifth race of the season and his third start of the year in the legendary Ole Blue No. 3. Preece scored his first Tour triumph back in 2008 at Martinsville in the Ole Blue No. 3.
Other notable entrants include six-time Tour champion Doug Coby, who will be in his own No. 10 for Thursday’s finale, Matt Hirschman, Max McLaughlin, Joey Coulter, Bobby Santos III, Anthony Nocella, Craig Lutz, Jimmy Blewett and Chuck Hossfeld.
The complete entry for the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 can be viewed here.
Schedule: Thursday, Oct. 27… Final practice from 3 – 4 p.m. ET … Qualifying at 5 p.m. … Race at 8 p.m. ET
Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 is limited to 32 starters including Provisional Positions.
Tire allotment:The maximum tire allotment available for this event is 12 tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. The tire change rule is four (4) tires, any position.
Kyle Larson was eliminated from repeating as the NASCAR Cup Series drivers’ champion in the Round of 12, but his triumph Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway opened the door for a potential team owners title for his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports group next month.
The possibility of a split championship exists for the first time in the Cup Series’ modern era when the sun sets on the 2022 season Nov. 6 at Phoenix Raceway.
Joey Logano and his Team Penske No. 22 Ford team clinched a unified berth in the Championship 4 fields with a victory in the Round of 8 opener a week ago at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Three title shots remain open in the driver playoffs, but just two exist on the team owners’ side after Larson locked the No. 5 team in.
The divide opened near the end of the regular season when Kurt Busch withdrew his name from playoff contention as his recovery from a concussion stretched into the postseason. His No. 45 23XI Racing team retained its eligibility for the team owners’ title, thanks to Busch’s win in May at Kansas Speedway. The team, which shifted Bubba Wallace into the No. 45’s seat for the playoffs, was knocked from contention after the Round of 12.
Ryan Blaney clinched the 16th and final spot in the drivers’ playoffs in the regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway, but his No. 12 Team Penske Ford team was one spot shy of reaching the owners’ playoffs. Blaney would qualify for the driver’s crown if he advances to the Championship 4 round after Sunday’s Xfinity 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM) at Martinsville Speedway.
Two Hendrick Motorsports drivers — Chase Elliott and William Byron — remain alive in the drivers’ championship. They also carry the hopes of the No. 9 (Elliott) and No. 24 (Byron) teams with them, which would secure the 15th championship on the team owners’ side for NASCAR Hall of Famer Rick Hendrick.
“I certainly think they’re both important,” said Jeff Andrews, president and general manager of Hendrick Motorsports. “Obviously one has a different financial impact than the other one does, as we know the points fund is based largely on the owner points, but certainly for the driver as well as the team that that driver is associated with. That’s equally important to us, to be able to go there and compete for that and try to get that accomplished.”
There have been two instances of split driver/team championships in Cup:
In 1963, Joe Weatherly won the driver title (drove for nine teams), and Wood Brothers Racing won the team title.
In 1954, Lee Petty won the driver title (with two teams). Herb Thomas won the owner title.
Larson captured his first Cup Series championship last year at Phoenix, but says he still has aspirations for a repeat of sorts for his No. 5 bunch.
“I view myself as … if I say we were to win Phoenix, like my name isn’t going to be on the championship, but having our team be the champion I think is honestly better than … like I would hate to be in Ryan Blaney’s position,” Larson said. “I think he’s the one that’s only in on driver, not owner. I would hate to be in his position, and say he wins the championship and he is credited with a championship but not his team. If I was to have it one way or the other, I would rather be out on my end and be able to celebrate the team championship.
“I’m happy that we get to go compete for that again, and honestly that’s the paycheck, too. We’re going to go for that, and we’re fired up about it.”
HOMESTEAD, Fla. — There weren’t many happy drivers to be found on pit road following Sunday’s Dixie Vodka 400 NASCAR Playoffs Round of 8 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway — and we’re not even in Martinsville yet.
You’ll get that in a sport where there are 30-plus losers and only one driver spraying champagne in Victory Lane, but, still, the playoff pressure is mounting. And evident.
Sunday’s 400-miler was yet another entry in this 10-race Cup Series playoff run won by a driver outside the postseason field, seeing one more opportunity dry up for the seven remaining championship-eligible drivers to clinch their spot in Phoenix Raceway’s Championship 4 race via a win alongside Joey Logano, the only driver currently locked in. In a race littered with late mistakes, drivers were beating themselves up in their post-race debriefs with media, focusing on what needs to be cleaned up before they try to all survive next weekend’s looming chaos at the paperclip-shaped Virginia short track.
“(We’re not snake-bitten), just a lot of self-induced (mistakes),” said Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney after a promising run with yet another fast race car was derailed by error. “Two weeks bonehead-driver induced. So that part definitely stinks. Just the driver making mistakes. Team does a great job getting our car better again, had a fast car and I wrecked last week by myself and I downshift this week coming off pit road so just disappointed in myself.”
On Lap 211, Blaney saw his No. 12 Ford spin leaving the access road coming out of the pits, the result of an accidental downshift from high to low gear. It came not long after Blaney was running in the P2 position, a potential result that would’ve put him in a reasonably comfortable position heading into next Sunday’s Round of 8 finale at Martinsville Speedway, a track at which he owns the best average finish (10.2) among active drivers.
Instead of what was shaping up to be exactly the kind of rebound race the No. 12 team needed to escape the hole of minus-11 points to the bubble heading into Homestead, he leaves the 305 with an even deeper deficit at minus-18.
“Being as many points as we are out, you know you hope you can … it’s kind of like a must-win,” Blaney said. “I don’t see us making up that many points, so just go try to put yourself in a position to win the race. I don’t think we can point our way in, honestly. I think we’re too far out. So just gonna go do the best you can, you never know what’s gonna happen. Just try to run up front, put yourself in a spot to win the race. That’s all you can do.”
While far from a banner day for the No. 24 Chevrolet team, fellow playoff contender William Byron also had a bit of an up-and-down day, showing strength in both of the opening stages (2nd, 3rd, respectively) before a major hiccup by his team on pit road nearly washed it all away. A loose wheel during a Lap 207 pit stop necessitated a reversal by the No. 24 driver to get it tightened, which subsequently was followed by his Chevy stalling briefly as he attempted to drive off again. He recovered to finish a respectable 12th, but if it weren’t for those stage points and a fast car to race back through the field he could’ve been looking at perhaps a must-win situation in Virginia.
“We just kind of had a couple of runs that were worse than the others and just had that one run that I felt like we were struggling real bad,” Byron said. “And then we kind of got better at the end and had something again at the end so I don’t know, just kind of really struggled the one time and the rest of the race was pretty good.”
After heading into Sunday six points down below the elimination line, Byron now leaves Miami five points to the good to position both remaining Hendrick Motorsports cars (the other being 2020 champ Chase Elliott) provisionally in the title race.
There’s still one race remaining before that Championship 4 is finalized, however, but as the untouchable winner in Martinsville’s spring race, the chances to make it through are favorable.
“(We plan to attack Martinsville) just the same,” Byron said. “I mean, I honestly feel like it’s a good place for us. So we just got to try to approach it the same as we always do.
“I don’t think (we need to win) but we just need a really good day. I feel decent about it. I think we just have to … like, we had a test there and I felt like our car was decent. We just got to work on a couple of little things and just get a little bit better. Because everyone’s gonna get better from the spring. So I think if we do that we’ll be in good shape.”
Those that will have a shot to fight for the 2022 title will be decided next Sunday at Martinsville Speedway (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — and we should only expect four drivers to be smiling after that one, too.
Another playoff race without a championship-eligible driver in Victory Lane means the intensity will reach its peak next Sunday when the Championship 4 is set at Martinsville Speedway. With three title bids still up for grabs, let’s take a look at the Cup Series playoff field following the Round of 8 midpoint at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
WINNER
Kyle Larson put on a dominant performance Sunday, leading 199 of the 267 laps at the South Florida 1.5-mile oval to take his third win of the season. While he’s not eligible for the big trophy at Phoenix Raceway, he’s clinched a title berth for the No. 5 team as they chase the owners’ championship.
Ross Chastain. Two runner-up finishes in a row for the Florida native have him in a good position above the elimination line heading into the penultimate race of the 2022 season. Homestead marked his fifth top-10 finish in the playoffs and the third top-five run in the last four races. Martinsville could solidify Chastain’s bid for a title shot at Phoenix as he finished fifth there in the spring.
WHO’S NOT?
Chase Briscoe. After overcoming early woes at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Briscoe’s chances of reaching the Championship 4 will come down to being victorious at Martinsville after hitting the wall near the end of Stage 2, parachuting the No. 14 Ford to a 36th-place finish at Homestead.
BUBBLE WATCH
Rank
Driver
Cutoff
1.
Joey Logano
WIN
2.
Ross Chastain
+19
3.
Chase Elliott
+11
4.
William Byron
+5
——–
ELIMINATION LINE
———-
5.
Denny Hamlin
-5
6.
Ryan Blaney
-18
7.
Christopher Bell
-33
8.
Chase Briscoe
-44
NEXT RACE
The Championship 4 will be set next Sunday with the Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
WHO IT FAVORS
William Byron. In the spring and under the lights, the driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet led 212 of 403 laps to take the checkered flag at Martinsville for his second win of the year. The victory was no fluke for Byron as he scored back-to-back top-five finishes on the 0.526-mile short track before. With just a five-point advantage after Homestead, Byron will need to run just as well at Martinsville in order to clinch his first Championship 4 berth.
WHO IT HURTS
Christopher Bell. Bell is in a must-win situation at Martinsville if he wants to keep his Championship 4 hopes alive after a hard-fought 11th-place run at Homestead. He grabbed a clutch victory at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course in a similar scenario. Still, the driver of the No. 20 Toyota has yet to produce quality results at the Virginia short track outside of a single top-10 finish early in 2021.
HOMESTEAD, Fla. – Kyle Larson has led a lot of laps and come awfully close to hoisting a trophy at Homestead-Miami Speedway. On Sunday, he finally did both, winning the Dixie Vodka 400 NASCAR Cup Series Playoff race in dominant form.
Larson swept both stage wins and led 199 of the race’s 267 laps in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to pull away to a 1.261-second victory over Florida native Ross Chastain in the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevy.
Kaulig Racing’s AJ Allmendinger was third, with Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon and RFK Racing’s Brad Keselowski rounding out the top five. It is the 2012 series champion Keselowski’s first top-five finish since becoming co-owner of the organization this season.
The win was 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion Larson’s third of the year and 19th of his career – but the first at the 1.5-mile Homestead oval after a pair of previous near-misses. He led a race-best 132 laps in 2016 but finished runner-up. He led 145 laps in 2017 and finished third.
“No matter what team I’ve been with, things haven’t worked out on my end to get a win, so glad to get one today,’’ Larson said.
“Definitely the best run we’ve had all year long,’’ he added. “We’ve been capable of it, I feel like many weekends, we just hadn’t quite put it all together. [Crew chief] Cliff [Daniels] gave a great speech this morning and got us all ready to go and focused.
“Amazing race car,’’ he noted with a smile.
The 30-year-old Californian was eliminated from the playoffs in the last round, so Chastain was the top-finishing championship contender with only one race – next week at Martinsville, Va. – to set the four-driver championship field for the Nov. 6 season finale at Phoenix.
Only two playoff drivers finished in the top 10 Sunday at Homestead: Chastain and Denny Hamlin, who was seventh in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.
Playoff drivers Christopher Bell (finished 11th), Sunday’s pole-sitter William Byron (12th), Chase Elliott (14th), Ryan Blaney (17th) and Joey Logano (18th) were still running on the lead lap at the checkered flag. The eighth playoff-eligible driver, Chase Briscoe, finished last (36th) after making contact with the wall on Lap 160.
Hamlin (four laps), Bell (four laps) and Byron (32 laps) all spent time leading the field before various setbacks.
Team Penske’s Logano is the only playoff driver who has already earned his position in the championship race, thanks to a victory at Las Vegas a week ago. Chastain, Elliott and Byron now complete the top-four driver ranking.
Hamlin sits in fifth place, five points below Byron. Blaney is 18 points below the provisional cut line, Bell 33 back and Briscoe is now essentially in a must-win situation, trailing by 44 points.
With his victory, Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Chevrolet team is eligible for the owner’s title.
While Larson dominated the laps-led category and even paced the field by more than nine seconds at one point late in the race, he had to earn this trophy after a late-race caution flag.
Martin Truex Jr. had taken the lead after a caution period with 46 laps remaining and pulled away to a nearly two-second lead when the final yellow flag flew again with 23 laps remaining.
As the field pitted, Larson’s Chevy was right behind Truex’s Toyota, and it appeared Truex was going to miss his pit box when Larson’s car bumped Truex’s car from behind. The contact spun Truex, whose team was still able to service the car. He fell outside the top 10 initially before racing back up to a sixth-place finish.
“I was just going behind him, and he had a hard left and was hard on the brakes at the same time and I got into the back of him,” Larson explained of the incident. “My team said he was late getting into his stall. I don’t know. If it was my fault, I’m sorry, but I don’t think it was. It’s hard to see on this pit road. .. hate that happened. He was definitely the one I was going to have to beat.”
Truex, who is still racing for his first victory of 2022, was obviously disappointed in the outcome but could only shake his head at the circumstances.
“It’s really hard to see through these windshields with the sun like that and all the stuff covering it,’’ Truex said. “I did see my box late for sure, so I slowed down before I turned out of the way of the 5 (Larson) there.
“Partly on me, I didn’t expect to get turned around, and glad nobody got hurt there. Overall, just tough, just disappointing to have a good day going like that and have a shot at winning and couldn’t close the deal. I hate it for my team.
“It’s been one of those years.”
The final race to set the Championship 4 is next Sunday at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, the Xfinity 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman is last year’s race winner but won’t be competing while recovering from concussion-like symptoms. His teammate Byron won at Martinsville earlier this season.
Note: Post-race technical inspection was completed in the Cup Series garage without issue, confirming Larson as the winner. Three cars — the Nos. 7 and 77 from Spire Motorsports, and the No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports entry — will go to the NASCAR Research & Development Center for engine evaluations.
Thursday. Oct. 27 1 a.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 2010 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
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, FS1
8 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour: Virginia is for Racing Lovers 250 at Martinsville Speedway, FloRacing 10 p.m., Race for the Championship, USA Network
On MRN: 8 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour: Virginia is for Racing Lovers 250 at Martinsville Speedway
Friday, Oct. 28
12:57 a.m., Race for the Championship (re-air), USA Network
6 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: Martinsville (re-air), FS2
6:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 2010 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
4 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series practice/qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, USA Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
Saturday, Oct. 29 1 a.m., Race for the Championship (re-air), USA Network
12 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice, NBC Sports App
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series practice/qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, USA Network (joined in progress)
2 p.m., Dale Jr. Download (re-air), USA Network
3 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Dead On Tools 250 at Martinsville Speedway, NBC, Peacock
11 p.m., NASCAR Race Classic: 2010 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
On MRN: 12 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series qualifying at Martinsville Speedway 2:30 p.m. NASCAR Xfinity Series Dead On Tools 250 at Martinsville Speedway
Sunday, Oct. 30 11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Martinsville, FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Countdown to Green: Cup Series, NBC
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway, NBC
On MRN: 1 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway