LONG POND, Pa. — It came down to the final race of the regular season, but Matt Crafton is officially in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Playoffs.
Crafton was the last driver into the 10-driver postseason grid. On the other side of that cutline sits Derek Kraus, who misses the playoffs by 17 points.
Crafton, driver of the No. 88 Toyota for ThorSport Racing, was cool, calm and collected heading into Saturday’s CRC Brakleen 150 at Pocono Raceway. That veteran experience paid off in the form of a playoff berth after finishing 15th.
“Just go execute and do what we know we can do and do what we’ve always done,” Crafton, the three-time series champion, said of his pre-race mindset. “Just put ourselves in position, get stage points we got today. … We had a lot, a lot better truck than what we what we ended up with to be honest. I just couldn’t be as aggressive as I needed to be on the starts. And I just had to be super ultra cautious. And all the kids were throwing caution to the wind.”
“I couldn’t because I couldn’t take that chance. It would just take one deal where somebody got loose under me and took me out. And that knocks us out for the big picture. So had to be really, really patient and try to ride it there at the end.”
Of course, as a past champion, Crafton is far from satisfied by just making the playoffs.
“Hell no. We know what we need to,” Crafton said, who’s searching for his first win since Kansas Speedway in July 2020. “We figured out our problems the first 10, 12 races, whatever it was, and we were gonna see improvement on the 88 truck.”
This coincided with a crew-chief change after the 10th race of the year, with Jeff Hensley heading to GMS Racing’s Grant Enfinger and Bud Haefele, ThorSport’s shop foreman, stepping in atop the box.
“You got a good group of guys that will go back to what the 88 used to do and how the 88 used to run,” Crafton said. “And as you know, when it came playoff time, we were always there when it counted.”
While Crafton plans his next steps to chase a championship, Kraus is left to wonder what could have been.
Kraus came away with a top-10 finish, placing his No. 19 Chevrolet ninth at the checkered flag. But late mechanical issues — and different strategy plays — thwarted his chances to make this year’s playoffs.
“Just something that you’ve got to deal with,” Kraus said. “I mean I wish we were in the playoffs, but there’s a couple of races that we didn’t capitalize on what we needed to. And overall, today was a decent day. We ran out of power steering there at the end, but it’s part of it. There’s parts failures all the time, and we’ll move on and try to be the best that we can these next 10 races.”
Kraus didn’t spend much time lamenting his ousting from postseason contention. While the disappointment was palpable, the 20-year-old also knew there’s no way to change the outcome.
“There’s definitely races that you can look back on and circle and be like, if we had this one back, we could have been better,” he said. “But at the end of it, that’s all in the past, we can’t really do much about it. So we just focused on today and did the best we could today. And it just wasn’t enough.”
Kraus earned six stage points in the first stage and aimed for more stage points in the second stage. But Crafton’s on-track positioning forced a different call in stage two that negated Kraus’ initial plan.
“I thought we did really good with points but he (Crafton) got a couple too,” Kraus said. “So that definitely didn’t help because then just the second stage where we were on the race track, and wherever he was, we had to make the call to come in under green. So we did and then we had to race for the win really and that’s what we did.”
The field shifts to Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park on Friday, July 29 for the TSport 200 (9 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).




