PLYMOUTH, Wis. — The fact Sunday’s race at Road America marked Tyler Reddick’s first career win in the NASCAR Cup Series seemed unfathomable.

“He’s not got a win yet?” Chris Buescher said. “Really?”

Really.

“I honestly thought he did,” said Buescher, who finished sixth. “That’s actually surprising because they’ve been really good. That’s definitely nice to finally break through that one.”

RELATED: Official results | Reddick rolls to first win

Indeed, prior to the Kwik Trip 250, Reddick did not possess a checkered flag from NASCAR’s top level. It was his only goose egg in the national ranks. He owns three from the Camping World Truck Series and 10 from the Xfinity Series.

The 26-year-old California native is in the midst of his third full-time Cup Series season, and he has come close — so close. Reddick had five runner-up finishes, two alone this season, prior to this Victory Lane debut.

“Yup,” Reddick said, “I did.”

DATE TRACK WINNER MARGIN OF VICTORY
July 19, 2020 Texas Austin Dillon 0.149 seconds
Feb. 28, 2021 Miami William Byron 2.777 seconds
Oct. 10, 2021 Charlotte Roval Kyle Larson 0.782 seconds
April 17, 2022 Bristol Dirt Kyle Busch 0.330 seconds
May 8, 2022 Darlington Joey Logano 0.775 seconds

Those marks haven’t gone unnoticed in the garage.

“I know they’ve been searching for that first win for some time, and that’s a special thing to do,” 2020 champion Chase Elliott said. “I’m happy for him. He deserves it. He’s been really close.”

Reddick had to fend off Elliott of all people, too. Elliott won at Road America in 2021. He also holds the most road-course wins (seven) among active drivers.

Image From Ios (9) Copy
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

With 17 laps remaining, Reddick took three turns – from Turns 5-7 – to complete a pass on Elliott for the lead. Reddick’s No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet then beat Elliott’s No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevy by 3.304 seconds.

“At one point, I was on (Reddick’s) bumper behind the 5 (Kyle Larson) and then we were third and fourth,” fourth-place finisher Ross Chastain said. “And he had enough grip and speed to pass the 5, and then there was the last cycle of pit stops and he was able to go past the 9 (Elliott). I just kind of stayed back there behind them; I couldn’t quite do it.

“Just the confidence that he was able to do that. He’ll look back and see that he was able to leave me behind. But then knowing you won a Cup race, it’s indescribable, and for me, it was everything I’d ever dreamed of.”

Chastain captured his first career win earlier this season at another road course, Circuit of The Americas. His teammate, Daniel Suárez, won the other road event at Sonoma Raceway to earn his first, too. Three first-time winners on road courses are the most ever in a single NASCAR season.

In addition to those two and Reddick, Austin Cindric (Daytona International Speedway) and Chase Briscoe (Phoenix Raceway) inked their names in the Cup Series win book.

“I’m very happy for him,” said Suárez, who rounded out Sunday’s top five. “Obviously he deserved it. He’s been knocking on the door for a few months now, just like we were in the No. 99 team, so very happy for him. I think it’s gonna be more fun now to race him now that he’s a little more relieved.”

Image From Ios (9)
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Reddick’s relief also comes in the form of a provisional playoff ticket. He made the 16-driver field last year on points. This year – unless there are more than 16 different winners; there are 13 now – he won’t have to worry about that.

Speaking of last season’s playoffs, behind Reddick and Elliott was reigning champion Kyle Larson in third. Larson won three of the seven road events in 2021. There are four more on the 2022 schedule.

“(Reddick’s) always strong on the road courses,” Larson said. “He outruns his teammate by a lot every time we come to road courses. He’s just really aggressive, really aggressive on the braking, and obviously just executed a great race.

“So, yeah, I’m proud of him. And I know the rest of Northern California is, too.”

PLYMOUTH, Wis. — Whenever the NASCAR Cup Series visits a road course, Chase Elliott rockets to the top of betting lines as the race favorite. That was the same in Sunday’s Kwik Trip 250 at Road America.

Elliott didn’t disappoint in qualifying on Saturday, putting his No. 9 Chevrolet on the pole. On the pace laps Sunday, however, he reported an issue with his steering in the right-hand corners.

RELATED: Official results | Reddick ices first Cup win

That problem didn’t slow down the No. 9 car, as he dominated the opening stage, gapping the field by more than six seconds. But his crew chief Alan Gustafson saw 19 drivers enter pit road coming to three laps remaining in the stage, making a last-second call to change up Elliott’s strategy and not lose track position once the second stage began. That handed the playoff point to Chase Briscoe.

Same song, different verse in the second stage. Elliott cruised out front, though he pitted coming to two laps remaining in the stage, handing over the stage win to Ryan Blaney. With the guaranteed breaks out of the way, the No. 9 team wanted to be among the first cars to pit in the final stage in case a caution flew.

After seeing nine drivers pit in a span of two laps, Gustafson brought Elliott to pit road on Lap 43. Tyler Reddick, who was just more than one second behind the No. 9 car, followed suit and gained ground on Elliott coming back on the track.

Sean Gardner | Getty Images
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Three laps later, Reddick passed Elliott into Turn 5 after the No. 9 car went wide into the corner.

“I just did a poor job,” Elliott told a group of reporters after the race.

Over the final 16 laps, Elliott got within a half-second of Reddick but could never regain the lead, as Reddick went on to win his first career Cup race.

“When [Reddick] passed me, that was pretty much it,” Elliott said. “I did a poor job on my part. Congrats to him. I know they’ve been searching for that first win for some time, and that’s a special thing, too. I’m happy for him, he deserves it. He’s been really close. Happy for those guys.”

“We need to be a little better, but we were good enough to win, so that always stings a little more.”

MORE: Cup Series standings | At-track photos

Reddick admitted that it meant a bit more to outrun Elliott, who had entered the race winning seven of the previous 15 races on road courses.

“It certainly does,” Reddick said of his final-stage surge. “He’s been the guy that’s won more road courses over the last couple of years than anybody. Behind him, Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain, guys that are really good on road courses. We’ve been right there with them a lot of the time over the last two years, but sometimes our agendas have been different.”

Elliott led a race-high 36 laps. He said he didn’t believe that the steering issue was a factor in the outcome of the race, as he dropped back to 3.3 seconds behind Reddick at the finish.

“It wasn’t as bad once we got going,” Elliott said, “just annoying more than anything.”

Finishing runner-up and earning 38 points on the day, Elliott stretched his regular season championship lead to 33 points over Blaney. He’s now winless in his last six road course races, dating back to Road America last year.

PLYMOUTH, Wis. – It was a dogfight between two drivers, pure and simple.

It was Tyler Reddick who outdueled pole winner Chase Elliott in the intense mano-a-mano battle in Sunday’s Kwik Trip 250 at Road America.

The victory was Reddick’s first in the NASCAR Cup Series, making him the fifth first-time winner this season. As the 13th different winner this year, Reddick shrank the Playoff bubble by one position.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos

With seven races left before the cutoff race at Daytona, there are currently three playoff positions available on points. Reddick’s victory bumped 10th-place finisher Kevin Harvick below the Playoff cut line.

Elliott dominated the first two stages but won neither, choosing to pit before the end of the runs to preserve track position. And on the final green-flag pit stop on Lap 44 of 62, Elliott narrowly beat Reddick off pit road to start the last green-flag run.

But Reddick kept Elliott in his sights.

“I definitely knew he was fast, but we could stay with him on the long run, which told me if we cycled through that last … that pit sequence, we’d be close or get around him (on pit road), (and) we’d have a great shot.

“Didn’t quite get around him. We were within reach. Thankfully, just waited for the right opportunity and was able to take advantage of it in Turn 6.”

Indeed. Reddick closed on Elliott on Lap 46 and outbraked the No. 9 Chevrolet into Turn 5, getting the nose of his No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet beside the left rear quarter-panel of Elliott’s car.

Reddick pulled even up the hill into left-hand Turn 6 and cleared Elliott off the corner. Elliott fought back through Turns 7 and 8, but Reddick pulled clear in the Carousel.

At the time, the pass was for third place, given that Denny Hamlin and Harrison Burton still had pit stops to make. On Lap 47 Reddick overtook Burton for the lead and gradually pulled away in the closing laps.

He crossed the finish line 3.304 seconds ahead of Elliott and 21.138 seconds ahead of third-place finisher Kyle Larson.

Logan Riely | Getty Images
Logan Riely | Getty Images

Reddick, who was 100 yards from victory on the Bristol Dirt Track in April when Chase Briscoe overdrove the final corner and knocked him sideways, couldn’t have picked a better venue to score his first win.

“What better place than Road America?” Reddick said. “I love the fans. I love this race track. Being here on 4th of July weekend is just so special, and just a huge shoutout to (sponsor) 3Chi and the special paint scheme we had this weekend.

“Love that they’re coming on board this year and taking a chance on a young guy like me, and we got it done. We won a race.”

Elliott took his second-place finish with grace, acknowledging mistakes he made in the final run.

“First off, congrats to him,” Elliott said. “I know he’s been super close to that first win, and I’ve been down that road, and it can be a rocky one. I’m happy for those guys. They deserve it.

“For us, just proud of our NAPA team. I didn’t do a very good job there. I just let him stay close enough to pressure me there while we had decent tires and never could get enough of a gap. Made a couple mistakes. I was gaining a gap there a couple times and made a couple mistakes and let him get back close enough to get me out of sync, and then after that just started struggling.

“Obviously, it was super difficult to get to somebody to pass them. It was impressive he was able to get up there and capitalize on my mistakes. … I felt like we probably needed a little bit, but I think we were good enough to win, so those always hurt.”

MORE: Elliott leads most laps, takes second

Trackhouse Racing teammates Ross Chastain and Daniel Suárez finished fourth and fifth, respectively, as Chevrolets swept the top five positions.

Chris Buescher, Austin Cindric, Michael McDowell, AJ Allmendinger and Harvick completed the top 10. Martin Truex Jr. drove the top-finishing Toyota to a 13th-place result.

Briscoe, who started second, won Stage 1, and Ryan Blaney took the Stage 2 victory — bringing him to five stage wins this season. Blaney finished 11th with Briscoe 14th.

The NASCAR Cup Series’ next race is scheduled next Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Notes: All three road courses so far this season have produced first-time winners: Chastain at Circuit of the Americas and Suárez at Sonoma Raceway in addition to Reddick. … Harvick trails Christopher Bell by 20 points for the final playoff-eligible position. Elliott leads the series standings by 33 points over Blaney. … Elliott led a race-high 36 laps. Reddick led the final 16. … Reddick’s victory also was the first his crew chief, Randall Burnett.

Post-race inspection was completed in the NASCAR Cup Series garage at Road America without any major issues, confirming Reddick as the race winner.

Contributing: Staff reports

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

Note: All times are ET.

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

Monday, July 4
NASCAR Race Hub, FS1,
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
11:31 p.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network

Tuesday, July 5
NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Atlanta Motor Speedway, FS1
NASCAR Cup Series: 2005 Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1

Wednesday, July 6
NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
7 p.m., The Day: Richard Petty’s last race, FS1

Thursday, July 7
2 a.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network
2:30 a.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network
NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, Peacock

NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Atlanta Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
9:31 p.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane, USA Network
12:32 p.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network

Friday, July 8
12:32 a.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network
Noon, IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge: Canadian Tire Motorsport Park 120 (re-air), USA Network
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Qualifying at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition — Mid Ohio, FS1
ARCA Menards Series: Dawn 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, FS1
7 p.m., The Day: Richard Petty’s Last Race, FS1
11 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Qualifying at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS2

On MRN:
5 p.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dawn 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

Saturday, July 9
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Qualifying at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS1
5 a.m., The Relentless, FS2
5:30 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: DAWN 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS2
8 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Atlanta Motor Speedway (re-air), FS1
9 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dawn 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS1
Noon, NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying at Atlanta Motor Speedway, USA Network (Coverage starts at 11:30 a.m. ET on NBC Sports App.)
1 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: CWTS at Mid-Ohio, FS1
1 p.m., Austin Dillon’s Life in the Fast Lane (re-air), USA Network
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: O’Reilly Auto Parts 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, FS1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Countdown to Green, USA Network
5 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, USA Network
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Post-Race Show, USA Network

On MRN:
1 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: O’Reilly Auto Parts 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

On PRN:
4:30, NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway

Sunday, July 10
10 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: O’Reilly Auto Parts 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS1
Noon, IMSA: Michelin Pilot Challenge, USA Network
Noon, NASCAR RaceDay: Cup Series at Atlanta Motor Speedway, FS1
1 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West: Napa Auto Parts 150 (re-air), USA Network
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Countdown to Green, USA Network
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Quaker State 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, USA Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Post-Race Show, USA Network

On PRN:
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Quaker State 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway

PLYMOUTH, Wis. — Tommy Joe Martins wasn’t even competing in Saturday’s Henry 180 NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Road America, but he was fired up post-race, specifically with Noah Gragson.

Shortly after the start of the final stage, Gragson and Sage Karam swapped paint multiple times. The result was a 13-car pileup after the No. 9 car turned the No. 45 Chevrolet down the straightaway between Turns 3 and 5, triggering multiple hard hits. Brandon Brown gingerly climbed from his battered machine before leaning against the wall.

RELATED: Gragson-Karam battle leads to wreck at Road America

“I would be embarrassed to be associated with (Gragson),” Martins said after the event. “How many times is he going to publicly apologize? Now he’s trying to act like he’s a bad dude, tough guy. Like are you kidding me, that’s the softest thing I’ve ever seen. I’ll tell you what’s tough, trying to come out here and racing with a budget that’s less than a quarter of what they’re doing.”

Before the pileup, Gragson and Karam restarted sixth and seventh, respectively. Initially, Karam recalled getting a good run out of Turn 3 on the initial lap of green, making a clean move past Gragson. Entering Turn 1 of the next lap, Gragson moved to pass Karam, in what the No. 45 driver said was a “dive bomb.”

From there, the two leaned on one another and drove through Turn 3 side-by-side. And when Karam got the spot, Gragson used a right hook to turn the No. 45 car into traffic, which created a dust cloud. Chaos ensued.

“I think he got upset that a little team and the No. 45 and Alpha Prime Racing got around him,” Karam said. “I think his ego got hurt.”

After taking the checkered flag in eighth position, Gragson was unapologetic for his actions with Karam. Gragson did take blame for the other teams that got caught up in the mess.

“It’s one thing if you’re faster than someone,” Gragson said, “but to throw it off in there and run you off the race track in the corner, door you, run you off the track. Finally, after the third time, I’m over it. It’s not the ideal situation for him and his team, but two or three times, I’m done with it.”

RELATED: Gragson post-race interview | Karam post-race interview

Josh Berry of JR Motorsports was running directly behind Gragson and Karam and had to make an evasive move to miss the incident. Berry thought Karam was leaning on Gragson.

“These guys come in and run one race and just don’t race a lot of the regulars with respect, in my opinion,” Berry said. “You see half the time all of their cars are torn all to hell every race.

“That’s between them and Noah, not me.”

Road America was just Karam’s seventh career start in the series. In his previous six tries, he had a pair of 16th-place finishes at Bristol Motor Speedway and Circuit of The Americas.

“I’m here to win races,” Karam said. “I’m more comfortable on road courses than I am on ovals, so am I going to run better on road courses? Probably. Am I going to run more aggressively on road courses? Probably, because I’m going to be more into the game. When we’re running for a top five, that’s a win for Alpha Prime if we can get a top five.

“I knew I was faster than Noah, and he didn’t like that a little team was doing that to him. He can go out there and drive however he wants and it’s not a worry for him. It affects us a lot more than it affects him.”

Gragson didn’t believe Saturday’s incident will hurt him down the road, specifically with the weekly competitors that were a byproduct of the Nos. 9 and 45 getting together. Karam wasn’t planning to retaliate, but won’t be doing Gragson any favors anytime soon, either.

“I’m not going to intentionally drive into somebody or take somebody out,” Karam said. “That’s just not the type of driver I am. Twenty-something years of racing, that’s never happened to me until today. I would say that’s racing, but to me that wasn’t racing.”

Brown was in good spirits at the infield care center after piling into Tyler Reddick and losing his breath. His 34th-place finish did, however, end a streak of four consecutive top-20 finishes.

“Just an area where there’s no spotters and very high speed, trying to carry as much as you can,” Brown said. “Caught the dust cloud.”

Karam will return to Alpha Prime next weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway, where he wrecked out and finished 32nd in March. In that same race, Gragson led 38 laps and finished 26th.

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

The NASCAR Cup Series is in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, for the Kwik Trip 250 presented by Jockey Made in America at Road America (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

This is the third road-course race of the year and the second time in recent years the Cup Series has visited the 4.048-mile high-speed track.

Add in practice and qualifying, and there’s plenty of data to work with to handicap Sunday’s race.

Let’s dive into the best bets for the Kwik Trip 250 at Road America.

RELATED: Updated odds for Road America | Practice/qualifying results

NASCAR at Road America Picks

*Odds as of Sunday morning

Ross Chastain +1000 to win

Chastain has been the second-fastest car in average green-flag speed ranking at road courses this year, behind only teammate Daniel Suárez.

Chastain’s maiden Cup Series win came at the first road-course race this year at Circuit of The Americas (COTA).

He also posted the third-fastest single-lap average in practice. While he didn’t make a five-lap run, he’s not known for making long runs in practice.

Instead, he had the fastest overall average speed in practice.

He lengthened from +850 to +1000 odds after qualifying simply because of his 12th-place starting position. However, he should have faster race speed and makes for a nice value play off the favorites.

My model has Chastain winning 12.1% of the time, compared to 9.1% implied odds.

The Bet: Ross Chastain to Win +1000 (FanDuel) | Bet to: +900


Austin Cindric +210 to win Group 2

FanDuel has three group bets available for betting. Of those, Austin Cindric in Group 2 presents nice value.

Here’s the group he is a part of:

  • Martin Truex Jr. +230
  • Ryan Blaney +250
  • Denny Hamlin +270
  • Austin Cindric +210

For starters, the same group is available at DraftKings, where Cindric is a +130 favorite.

Further, the road-course races this year, plus Road America last year, all bode well for Cindric’s performance.

Cindric was very fast at COTA earlier this year, clocking the fourth-best average green-flag speed. He backed that up with the ninth-fastest car at Sonoma Raceway.

Last year at Road America, Cindric ran near the front and even took the lead before breaking an axle on Lap 35.

Cindric was also fourth in practice and third in five-lap average. He will start fifth.

Meanwhile, the two Toyotas in this group, Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr., have not cracked the top 10 in average green-flag speed, average running position or any practice metrics.

Hamlin and Truex will start 14th and 15th, respectively.

That leaves us with Ryan Blaney, who was seventh in five-lap average, but qualified a lowly 19th.

My model has Cindric winning this group 33.5% of the time compared to 27.0% implied odds.

The Bet: Austin Cindric to Win Group 2 +210 | Bet to: +210


Chris Buescher top-three finish +725

The Kambi books feature this generous +725 number on Buescher to finish inside the top three.

Once again, if we compare this line to other books, we see clear value.

FanDuel has this listed at +600, which is still value per my numbers. Meanwhile, DraftKings (+550), Caesars (+550) and BetMGM (+525) come in even stingier.

Buescher is coming off of a runner-up finish at the most recent road-course race at Sonoma. With only a week off, then a race at Nashville Superspeedway between Sonoma and Sunday’s race, teams won’t have much time to upgrade their road-course packages.

That reflects on-track already this weekend, where Buescher was sixth in practice and seventh in qualifying.

Reportedly, Buescher and RFK Racing found something at the Watkins Glen International test, which showed at Sonoma, where both drivers finished inside the top 10.

With both cars once again showing speed, I feel confident in my model’s 15.8% implied odds aren’t an overestimate. That beats the 12.1% implied odds at +725.

The Bet: Chris Buescher Top-3 Finish +725 | Bet to: +600

 

With two road-course races in the books this season, the main players — and teams — are set with who runs well turning left and right. Similar to Sonoma Raceway three weeks ago, the likes of Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson, Michael McDowell and Chris Buescher will start inside the top 10. Meanwhile, the two Trackhouse Racing entries that have won both road courses this season will start 12th and 17th, respectively.

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:

Starter 1: Chase Elliott
Starter 2: Austin Cindric
Starter 3: Chris Buescher
Starter 4: Michael McDowell
Starter 5: Tyler Reddick
Garage pick: Daniel Suárez

NEXT IN LINE: Ross Chastain, Kyle Larson, AJ Allmendinger, Chase Briscoe

RELATED: Starting lineup | Set your Fantasy Live drivers | Full Sonoma schedule

RISING: Last year, Briscoe earned his three top-10 finishes solely on road courses. Road America equaled his best result of the year in sixth. This weekend, the No. 14 car has been sporty, turning the quickest lap in practice and will start on the front row. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Briscoe battling for his second win of the season. One concern: Multiple drivers said Briscoe’s car fell off on the lone long run of practice.

For just the second time in team history, Rick Ware Racing will have an entry starting inside the top 10. Joey Hand, making his fourth career start, delivered the team its best career starting position in ninth. Hand is an experienced road racer and has coached many of the Ford drivers on how to get around the track. The former Rolex 24 at Daytona and 24 Hours of Le Mans winner might help your team out.

FALLING: While Suárez is starting in my garage, the No. 99 team didn’t show the lights-out speed it had at both Circuit of The Americas and Sonoma. But sticking with conventional wisdom, plot at least one Trackhouse entry into your lineup — or garage — some way.

After turning the 34th quickest lap in qualifying, Justin Haley said neither he nor his Kaulig Racing teammate AJ Allmendinger had much speed. The bigger concern here is Allmendinger, who will be a popular pick for fantasy players. The No. 16 car will take the green flag from 19th and was just 20th on the scoring chart in practice.

FEATURED MATCHUPS

 Chase Elliott vs. Martin Truex Jr.: Last year, these two drivers were considered two of the best road-course racers on the circuit. But in the two road courses in 2022, Elliott has been superior to the No. 19 car. With the No. 9 car starting from the pole, it could make for a long day at the office for the competition.

Alex Bowman vs. Corey LaJoie: The bad blood boils over from Nashville Superspeedway after these two had a run-in early in the race. Bowman is the layup pick this weekend, as he’s steadily shown an improvement when racing on road courses since joining Hendrick Motorsports.

Chase Briscoe vs. Ty Dillon: Theoretically, this is another easy choice in Briscoe. The No. 14 car will start from the front row, and he believed he had the best car on the short run. Briscoe had the quickest car in practice as well, so the speed is there this weekend. Meanwhile, Dillon had a disappointing 30th-place qualifying run, after posting the ninth-best time in practice.

Christopher Bell vs. Kyle Busch: Take your pick. Toyota has struggled on road courses this season, particularly at Sonoma. Based on recent success on said tracks, Bell should get the nod. More bad news for the No. 18 team: Busch will have to start at the rear due to an engine change.

Not a single driver departed the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 at South Boston Speedway on Saturday without some type of damage to their car.

A calm and orderly race that feature the largest starting grid in event history with 42 cars devolved into chaos during the final ten laps, which started when contact between Mike Looney and Jonathan Shafer triggered a 20-car pileup.

FLORACING: Follow the on-track action at South Boston Speedway all year long

By the time the white flag displayed, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series competitor Corey Heim and South Boston regular Jacob Borst were left to determine which of them would survive the carnage and open the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown with a victory at South Boston.

Heim ended up taking home the victory but not without one last accident to end a turbulent evening, as he and Borst crashed after the checkered flag with both drivers sustaining significant damage to their cars.

Below are the takeaways from a wild Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 at South Boston Speedway.

Corey Heim continues Lee Pulliam’s dominance at South Boston

Lee Pulliam is a name synonymous with success at South Boston Speedway.

A former track champion and six-time winner of the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200, Pulliam’s efficiency at South Boston continued Saturday with Corey Heim behind the wheel, who proved to have the strongest car in the stout 42-car field.

Heim was unable to avoid the carnage that enveloped Saturday’s race after he and Jacob Borst tangled coming to the start-finish line, but he was still more than thrilled to bring home another win for Pulliam at South Boston.

“We parked it in Victory Lane, so you can’t go wrong with that,” Heim said. “We had a lot of pressure from [Borst] throughout the race and I think he might have had the better car on the long runs. The contact was unnecessary and I felt like he turned right to junk me and win, but we got the car in Victory Lane, so that’s all that matters.”

Holding on to the lead through all 200 laps proved to be an arduous task for Heim, who believed that Borst was much stronger on the long run.

Despite this, Heim felt confident in his ability to roll the top and make Borst fight for every inch on the bottom until the penultimate restart, when contact between him and Peyton Sellers damaged his left-rear quarter-panel, affecting the aerodynamics on his car.

Borst took advantage of the opportunity and raced aggressively with Heim during the final nine laps. Every attempt to overtake Heim proved to be futile for Borst, which culminated in the last lap crash.

Borst did not regret being aggressive at the end of the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200, adding that he wanted to come away from South Boston without leaving any option on the table.

“We were riding Corey’s bumper for about 150 laps, so I knew we only had one chance at it,” Borst said. “I wanted to give him a shot, but he drove it in too deep and I got underneath him. We’re racing for $10,000 in one of the biggest races of the year. I talked to him and we’re both happy because we both gave it our all.”

With Saturday’s outcome, Borst closed the gap on Layne Riggs in the South Boston track standings while Heim continued an impressive 2022 season that includes two victories in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

For Heim, he was simply happy to park a Late Model Stock in Victory Lane despite the circumstances and is thrilled that he can continue to display the efficiency that Pulliam’s cars have always been known for.

“My Late Model career in the past couple of years has been up and down,” Heim said. “There have been good days and bad days, so to park this car in Victory Lane gives me a lot of confidence that I can still win some Late Model races. It’s been about a year since I won the last one, so this feels great.”

Mike Looney, Jonathan Shafer reflect on big accident

The key turning point in Saturday’s Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 occurred with 12 laps remaining while Jonathan Shafer and Mike Looney battled for a spot inside the Top 5.

Contact between the two on the frontstretch caused Shafer to lose control of his car in front of the entire pack. The ensuing melee eliminated a plethora of contenders that included defending race-winner Bobby McCarty and current NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series points leader Layne Riggs.

“That was a bad deal,” Looney said of the accident. “[Jonathan and I] were both racing really hard. I got a run under Jonathan on the apron and we were both loose coming off the corner. He banged my right front, so I had to check up and catch it, but then the car snapped back and caught Jonathan.”

Both Looney and Shafer had successfully worked their way through the pack prior to the crash. While Looney started 13th, a poor qualifying run relegated Shafer to 27th on the 42-car grid before he finally broke into the Top 10 during the closing stages.

Shafer was frustrated over the sequence of events that led to the massive pileup, but he intends to quickly move on from South Boston and put together a full race during the next Virginia Late Model Triple Crown event in the Hampton Heat at Langley Speedway.

“I had a really good car,” Shafer said. “We were running on the outside of Looney, he hit my left rear and proceeded to drive through me on the frontstretch. It just sucks that things had to end like that but we’re more determined than ever going into the next race.”

Looney’s night ended not long after Shafer’s, as he would get swept up in an accident between Peyton Sellers and Carter Langley that damaged the radiator on his car.

A disappointed Looney expressed regret over Saturday’s big crash, but the 2016 ValleyStar Credit Union 300 winner remains optimistic that the speed his car showed at South Boston will translate into a victory before 2022 concludes.

“I tore up every race car here so that sucks,” Looney said. “I don’t really know what I could have done different other than stay home. We came down here and worked really hard, so I can’t say enough about my team. This was a really good hot road and we just needed some long runs. At the end, we were torn up like everyone else.”

Peyton Sellers closes gap on Layne Riggs in national standings

Layne Riggs’ misfortune late in the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 proved to be Peyton Sellers’ gain.

After Riggs was eliminated in the massive 20-car pileup with 12 laps remaining, Sellers overcame a late spin to salvage a third-place finish, which tightened the gap between the two in the Weekly Series point standings.

“It was a very encouraging night for me,” Sellers said. “I was able to save some tires early on and be patient with the car. We worked our butt off to find speed in this car and we had the speed to win this race. The circumstances just weren’t right for us.”

Sellers felt that his car could create speed at any part of the track just like Heim and was patiently waiting for the right opportunity to make a run at him for the win.

The penultimate restart saw Sellers lined up to Heim’s inside on the front row, but contact between him and Carter Langley knocked Sellers out of line and into Heim. Sellers managed to save the car before he got swept up with Langley and Mike Looney in the final accident of the evening.

While Sellers wanted to add a third victory in the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 to his prestigious short track resume, he was satisfied to settle for third after observing everything that happened to his competition during the evening.

Sellers feels confident that his performance at South Boston will put him in a great position to win his fourth Virginia Triple Crown and his second NASCAR Weekly Series title, but he stressed that the summer needs to be flawless for him to accomplish those goals.

“We’ve got a great car to go to Langley with,” Sellers said. “We’re taking a new car there for that one, but first we have to go to Dominion Raceway and then back to South Boston. A busy month is ahead of us, but it feels pretty good to start off the Triple Crown with a third-place finish.

NOTES:

  • Bobby McCarty, who won both the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 and Virginia Triple Crown last year, was never a factor after starting in the 32nd position. He was swept up in the big crash on the frontstretch but managed to make repairs to his car and finish in the ninth position, one lap behind Corey Heim.
  • In his Late Model Stock debut, two-time West Series champion Derek Thorn started 19th but found himself stuck in the middle of the pack as he tried to work his way through the field. Thorn’s night ended after the first stage break due to a mechanical failure on his car.
  • Quin Houff, who competed in two, full-time NASCAR Cup Series seasons with StarCom Racing, returned to Late Model Stock competition on Saturday evening driving for his father-in-law and former competitor Ronald Hill. Houff was unable to do much in the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 and finished 37th after an accident on Lap 31.

PLYMOUTH, Wis. — “Nice try, Kyle!”

Whether the fan meant it honestly or mockingly, shouting out as soon as Kyle Larson exited his No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, the exclamation at least stands as a true statement.

Larson finished P2 in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Road America, coming up 0.858 seconds short behind winner Ty Gibbs in overtime. Larson still won both stages and led a race-high 31 of 48 laps, including the second-to-last go-around. But when the white flag waved, Gibbs pushed his No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota into the shadows of Larson’s car.

“(Gibbs) did a good job of getting me to have to kind of change my angles up there those first couple of corners,” Larson said. “Then, I overshot (Turn) 3 just a little bit and wasn’t able to get the wheel turned like I needed, and yeah, he got by.”

RELATED: Watch the final Ty Gibbs-Kyle Larson battle

Without any unfair contact.

“The most important thing was to win,” Gibbs said. “But luckily, he just got wide enough for me to get around him.”

ELKHART LAKE, WISCONSIN - JULY 02: Ty Gibbs, driver of the #54 Monster Energy Toyota, and Kyle Larson, driver of the #17 Hendrickcars.com Chevrolet, race during the NASCAR Xfinity Series Henry 180 at Road America on July 02, 2022 in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin. (Photo by Logan Riely/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Logan Riely | Getty Images

Gibbs held off the defending Cup Series champion in the following nine turns. The victory marked No. 4 this season and No. 8 overall for the 19-year-old, who’s a decade younger than his runner-up. Gibbs is the Xfinity Series championship favorite, sitting second in the point standings but holding the most wins in the garage.

Larson, meanwhile, was making his first start in the Xfinity Series since 2018, when he won four of his six part-time races that year. He owns 12 career wins at the second-tier level, paired with 109 starts now.

“I wasn’t thinking at all about his championship while I was racing,” Larson said. “You know, he passed me clean, so I didn’t feel like it would have been right for me to go and move him out of the way. When he protected in (Turn) 12, I could have easily just shoved him through there and won the race. But I didn’t think that’d be the fair way to win.”

RELATED: Xfinity Series results from Road America

Gibbs was out front for just five laps throughout the HENRY 180. After beginning in second, he held the position through Stage 1 on Lap 10 and then fell back to 22nd in Stage 2 come Lap 20. The race went three laps past regulation. Gibbs fired off alongside Larson on the final restart.

“I just want to learn and be the best driver I can be,” Gibbs said, “and I want to be the best driver ever.”

In order to be the best, of course, he has to beat the best. Continuously.

Larson has two more Xfinity Series starts on tap this season with JR Motorsports – Watkins Glen International (Aug. 20) and Darlington Raceway (Sept. 3). And he’s already looking forward to a rematch with Gibbs.

“He’s obviously really good,” Larson said. “Watching, I feel like you can tell a good race-car driver by from the road courses and he’s always ran really well on the road courses since he started, so I knew he was gonna be really good. I hope to get to race him on an oval.”

PLYMOUTH, Wis. – With a masterful pass of pole winner Kyle Larson on the final lap of overtime, Ty Gibbs won Saturday’s Henry 180 at Road America.

Larson took the white flag in the lead, but Gibbs had a better run down the frontstretch and dogged Larson’s No. 17 Chevrolet through Turns 1 and 2. Gibbs took advantage of an opening to the inside in Turn 3 and powered his No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota past Larson for the lead and the win.

The final caution was the result of a brake issue for Cole Custer in the No. 07, sending him slamming into the wall hard and ending his solid day. He was running third.

RELATED: Official results | Photos from Road America

The victory was Gibbs’ first at Road America, his fourth of the season and his eighth in 34 career starts in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

“This is just awesome,” Gibbs said, who had just beaten the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion head-to-head. “I can’t believe it. This is just wonderful.”

“I think we were a little bit faster in the first half of the track… Hopefully, a lot of people were watching. It’s cool to be here, a cool race against some Cup Series guys. Hopefully, that says something.”

Larson felt he lost momentum in the final corner (Turn 14) of the next-to-last lap at the 4.048-mile road course.

“It really started with my final corner coming to the white—I didn’t get through there very good and got a little bit tight and missed my apex, was late back to the throttle, and he got a run on me down the frontstretch,” Larson said.

“Obviously, you have to protect the inside (in Turn 1), and he just got my angles messed up in those two corners. He just did a really good job executing, and I didn’t. Bummer, but it was a really fun race all race long.”

Larson led 31 of the 48 laps to Gibbs’ five and picked up victories in the first two stages, but he gave Gibbs full marks for a clean pass for the win.

“He was able to pass me without laying a bumper on me at all,” Larson said. “When he passed me clean, I felt like I should not use him up, like we’ve seen others do when they get passed for the lead late. He ran me clean, and I was going to run him clean. It just didn’t work out for me.”

If the decisive pass was clean, mid-pack action earlier in the race provided sharp contrast.

Contact between the Chevrolets of Noah Gragson and Sage Karam ignited a brutal 13-car crash on Lap 25, and the resulting caution, the third of the race, put the contending cars on the same tire and fuel strategies.

MORE: Karam reacts to incident | Hear Gragson’s side of the story

Brandon Brown, one of the victims of the accident, climbed from his mangled car and sat against the retaining wall in Turn 4, clearly in pain from the hit he had taken in the melee. When he exited the infield care center after an evaluation, however, Brown was in much better spirits.

“I caught the dust pile,” Brown said while watching a replay of the incident. “It looks like the 45 (Karam) went around. A lot of cars went around. I couldn’t really see anything until I saw the 48 (Tyler Reddick) and plowed him.

“It was a real gut-check, a little kick to the area that you don’t want to injure.”

Karam wasn’t charitable where Gragson was concerned.

“That was ridiculous,” Karam said. “I’ve never been turned into on a straight line like that… You can’t get that heated when you’re driving a race car. Unfortunately, he let his emotions get the best of him today.”

Not surprisingly, Gragson had a different point of view.

“I guess he forgot the three times before that he’d throw it into the corner, door us and run us off the race track,” Gragson said. “After a while, you get sick and tired of it. I hate that people’s stuff got tore up. I take responsibility. I hate it for his guys, but I’m fighting to race for a championship here, and I’m really over getting run over…He started it. I finished it. We’re good.”

Another victim of that wreck, Josh Berry, rebounded to finish third, followed by Austin Hill and Brandon Jones. AJ Allmendinger ran sixth after starting from the rear and drawing a pit road speeding penalty under caution on Lap 26, forcing him to come from the back a second time.

Riley Herbst, Gragson, Jeremy Clements and Ryan Sieg completed the top 10.

Gibbs is the 13th different winner in 13 Xfinity Series races at Road America.

The Xfinity Series returns to action Saturday, July 9 for the Alsco Uniforms 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway at 5 p.m. ET (USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NOTE: Post-race inspection concluded with no issues, confirming Gibbs as the race winner. The No. 16 Chevrolet of AJ Allmendinger had one lug nut missing, which will result in a monetary fine.

Contributing: Staff reports