RICHMOND, Va. — With his home state triumph Sunday at Richmond Raceway, Denny Hamlin is the first driver over 30 years old to win a NASCAR Cup Series points-paying race in 2022.

While younger drivers like Ryan Blaney and William Byron made their statuses known at the .75-mile Virginia short track by combining to lead more than half of the race’s 400 laps, the ending belonged to Hamlin. The 41-year-old Cup Series mainstay passed Byron with five laps remaining after a savvy pit call by crew chief Chris Gabehart to put on fresh tires with 46 to go, while Byron’s team took the risk of trying to maintain the lead while nursing 76-lap older tires to the bitter end.

Blaney and crew chief Jonathan Hassler also elected to keep older tires in lieu of track position. Byron finished third, while Blaney came home seventh — short of Victory Lane but positive steps for the young drivers, with a pair of career-best finishes at a track where both have admittedly struggled.

RELATED: The cost of aggression: NASCAR’s veterans have mixed feelings on evolving tactics

Alternative pit strategy and tire conservation was key. While Hamlin’s three prior victories and 12,011 laps of Cup Series experience around Richmond played a major role in Sunday’s victory, he stopped short of saying veterans had the full advantage.

“It’s tough to really draw a parallel to that,” Hamlin said. “When you have so many laps at a track like this that is so technical, even though it doesn’t look technical it is, usually with track knowledge, it does matter at this track.”

Hamlin’s late run through the field was also accompanied by a similar tire strategy for Kevin Harvick, who followed the No. 11 Toyota to a second-place finish. Hamlin’s teammate, Martin Truex Jr., rolled the dice on the same game plan as Byron, holding onto fourth place.

“At the end there, I think we just tried to gamble on beating the 24 (Byron) and then he ended up doing our strategy and we both screwed up,” Truex said. “Heads up the other way, I think we had the best car, but it doesn’t matter.”

Hamlin, Harvick and Truex — all over 40 years old — have a combined 10 victories and 41,600 laps completed at Richmond. That experience certainly paid off, especially considering Toyota’s noted struggles to find speed in its Next Gen car in the first six races of the season.

“When our car is not performing how we need it to perform, we can do things to manipulate it, to maximize lap times to at least put us in the game,” Hamlin said. “I think being a veteran in the sport probably helps in those instances.”

That vital knowledge not only put Hamlin in the game, but on top of his game, placing him in the provisional playoff field once again come September — a field already stacked with six drivers 29 years old and under.

RELATED: Hamlin passes Byron to win at Richmond | First look at new JGR pit stop

MOORESVILLE, NC — Reaume Brothers Racing is proud to announce that NASCAR Drive for Diversity alumni and local short track star Blake Lothian will make his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut with Reaume Brothers Racing at Martinsville Speedway on Thursday night (8 p.m., FS1). This comes after Lothian, who started his racing career in go karts at age 5, had a successful 2021 season, obtaining his first win at Hickory Motor Speedway in just his fourth start in a late model. After making eight total starts in 2021, Lothian secured eight top-10 finishes, five top fives and one win.

RELATED: Truck Series schedule | Truck Series standings

The Wellesley, Massachusetts, native is looking forward to continuing his success from 2021.

“I’m so grateful to Josh Reaume and everyone at Reaume Brothers Racing for this opportunity,” Lothian said. “Looking forward to learning and growing with this team. I remember first watching Todd Bodine race trucks when I was little and ever since then, racing a truck has been a dream of mine. Now I am going to get that opportunity thanks to Reaume Brothers Racing. Coming off of a successful 2021 season, I’m beyond thankful for the opportunity to race at such a historic venue as Martinsville in a NASCAR Camping World Truck.”

Lothian will have Colette Phillips Communications, Inc., on board in Martinsville, and President and CEO Colette Phillips sees the passion in Lothian just as she has had throughout her life.

“As a black entrepreneur, and someone who broke down barriers … I know firsthand just how important Blake’s journey to the top is for black and brown kids,” Phillips said. “Blake’s commitment to excellence and justice on and off the track is admirable, and reflective of a young man wise beyond his years.”

Josh Reaume, owner of Reaume Brothers Racing, is eager to give Blake Lothian an opportunity to make his name.

“Giving drivers the opportunity to make their name is part of the reason I have continued in NASCAR for many years,” Reaume said. “I see the same passion and drive in Blake that I have in myself, and I am excited to give Blake the opportunity he deserves.”

Watch Lothian debut in the No. 43 Colette Phillips Communications, Inc/The Texas Lawbook machine during the Blu Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 Thursday, at 8 p.m. ET on April 7 on FS1. Follow all of Blake’s social media to follow his journey: @blake_lothian. 

RICHMOND, Va. — William Byron came up five laps short of earning his second victory of the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series season in Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway.

Byron and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team elected to utilize an alternative pit strategy, staying out on older tires. Others elected to pit for fresh tires with fewer than 50 laps remaining. Byron pitted from the lead on Lap 311 of the 400-lap race, while Martin Truex Jr. came down pit road on Lap 324. The difference in pit stops allowed Byron to retain the top spot.

But what threw a wrench in the plans occurred on Lap 354 when Denny Hamlin brought his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota down pit road for the final time. The 43-lap fresher Goodyears compared to Byron’s worn set allowed Hamlin to rocket through the field, making up more than a 17-second gap in the final stretch to the finish.

Hamlin tracked down Byron with five circuits to go and passed him for the race win. Kevin Harvick, who hit pit road a lap before Hamlin, took the second spot, leaving Byron to a third-place result. Truex, passed by his teammate and Harvick, finished fourth.

“I thought we did the best job we could, obviously it didn’t quite work out,” Byron said. “I thought there at the end they told me I was just racing the 19 (Truex) and I’m like, ‘Okay, I got him,’ but then the 4 (Harvick) and the 11 (Hamlin) were on a totally different planet. Just part of it.

“There was nothing I could do about them (Hamlin and Harvick),” Byron added.

RELATED: Official results | Hamlin surges to Richmond victory

Byron kicked off the race on the outside front row alongside polesitter Ryan Blaney, finishing second in Stage 1. But trouble with a rear wheel during the first round of pit stops set the No. 24 team back in the middle portion of the race.

“I thought it was helping at the beginning and at the end,” Byron said. “In the middle, we were terrible. We just couldn’t get in the corner at all. When you can’t get in the corner, you can’t put consistent laps together.”

Byron’s car lacked the speed necessary to make his way back up through the field after the pit-road misuse, so pit strategy, a decision led by crew chief Rudy Fugle, ultimately served as Byron’s best shot at victory.

There was also a point with 20 laps remaining where Byron’s pace was slowed due to cars with faster tires, which deferred his racing line to the top groove as opposed to staying on the bottom lane where they could use the yellow-painted line to maximize a little more grip out of their worn-out tires.

“Those three or four laps in a row ultimately were the second and a half that we needed,” crew chief Rudy Fugle said. There were four or five cars that passed within that five-lap window. We just got hung off the yellow line and it hurts.”

Admittedly, Fugle also thought the race victory was going to be determined by a duel between his driver and Truex, but the late-race speed of Hamlin and Harvick on new tires worked them through traffic better than anticipated.

“We weren’t going to have a car to march through the field, but obviously we had a car where every time we started up front, we could stay up front,” Fugle said. “There’s good things and bad things from that where we can learn from and get better. At the beginning of the day and after Stage 1, I would have told you, yeah, we had a car that could compete in the top five. Then after Stage 2, I would have told you I’d be happy with third, for sure. Disappointed in how it ended up because he did a great job all of Stage 3 giving us a shot to win.”

“The Closer” was closing fast Sunday at Richmond Raceway, and Kevin Harvick was prepared to do what he needed in order to get by race leader Denny Hamlin on the final lap.

He never quite got the chance.

Both veterans drove up into the top two positions late by virtue of pit strategy and fresh tires, but the driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford — looking to win for the first time since the 2020 Bristol Night Race — simply couldn’t get to Hamlin’s bump on the final lap of the Toyota Owners 400.

MORE: Hamlin claims Richmond late | Unofficial results

“We had a shot there at the end,” Harvick told FOX Sports after finishing second for his first top-five finish of the year. “I wanted to be close enough at the white to take a swipe at him, but lapped cars got in the way there.”

The win was the first of the year for Hamlin and, as mentioned above, Harvick’s first top-five finish. It hasn’t been the easiest stretch of the 46-year-old Harvick’s career, but Richmond’s showing perhaps indicated that it’s getting better — and perhaps that breaking the winless streak is coming.

“I’m just really proud,’ Harvick said. “I’m proud (of the team) for staying in there and having a great strategy. It was really the first clean day we’ve had all year.”

Perhaps there was no better place for Denny Hamlin to finally notch his first win of 2022. Much to the pleasure of the fans at Richmond Raceway, the hometown favorite from Chesterfield, Virginia, took the lead of the Toyota Owners 400 from William Byron with five laps remaining and held off the field for a 0.552-seconds victory over Kevin Harvick.

It was Hamlin’s first top 10 of the 2022 season, though it marked his fourth NASCAR Cup Series victory at the 0.75-mile track — the very place the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota grew up watching NASCAR as a young fan. 

It was the sixth win for the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota team in the last eight races at the Richmond track — the 18th in the team’s history there.  And it is the third consecutive race there that all four JGR drivers finished in the top 10.

RICHMOND: Official results | At-track gallery | Hamlin reacts to win

The victory was also significant in that the 41-year-old Hamlin stopped a 12-race victory run by drivers 30 years old or younger — a mark dating back to last season.

“Just drove as hard as I could,” said Hamlin, a perennial championship contender who had been ranked 20th in the standings before the Richmond race.

“So proud of this whole FedEx Camry team, they just never gave up. 

“There was no doubt in my mind, maybe just a little, but they got this car right there towards the end,” Hamlin continued. “Wow, this is just unbelievable.”

We needed a data point, something, a good run to kind of balance ourselves on other tracks. Obviously, I think we got it here.”

Byron and his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team opted to stay out on older tires for the last 90 laps and at one point held a five-second lead on the field. But as the teams opted for fresher tires during a series of late-race green-flag pit stops, it became apparent Byron would have to really work for the win — and do so on worn tires.

Ultimately, Hamlin, who got new tires with 47 laps to go, was able to dice his way through the field, taking the runner-up spot from his JGR teammate Martin Truex Jr. with six laps to go and continue moving forward to dive low and move into the lead around Byron with five laps remaining. Also on fresher tires, Stewart-Haas Racing driver Harvick was able to pass both Byron and Truex to take his best finish of the season as well.

“Really it’s the first clean day we’ve had all year,” Harvick, the 2014 series champion, said. “The cars have been fast and we had a shot there at the end just, I wanted to be close enough at the white [flag] to just take a swipe at him but the lapped cars got in the way and I lost a little bit of ground. Still a great day for us and hopefully a little bit of momentum.”

MORE: Kevin Harvick was prepared ‘to take a swipe,’ settles for runner-up finish

Truex, who has three wins in the last five Richmond races, finished fourth, followed by reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports.

JGR driver Christopher Bell was sixth, followed by Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney, the pole-sitter who led the first 128 laps of the race — most on the day. Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman recovered from a pit-road penalty to finish eighth. Kyle Busch recovered from a late-race penalty as well, to claim ninth place and Richard Childress Racing driver Austin Dillon was 10th

Blaney (first) and Truex (second) each won a stage and are the only three-time stage winners so far this season.

The NASCAR Cup Series next races on the half-mile Martinsville Speedway in next Saturday night’s Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).  Truex is the defending spring-race winner.

RELATED: Watch Joe Gibbs Racing’s new pit-stop choreography

NOTE: There were no issues found during NASCAR’s post-race inspection, confirming Denny Hamlin as the winner. NASCAR indicated the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Truex Jr. and the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet of Daniel Suárez would return to the R&D Center for further inspection, which isn’t abnormal.

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 FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock | FloRacing

Monday, April 4
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS1
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Game Night — Family Edition, Burtons vs. LaJoies (re-air), FS2
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS2
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS1

Tuesday, April 5
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Martinsville (re-air), FS1
10 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS2

Wednesday, April 6
1 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS2
3 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Martinsville (re-air), FS2
5 a.m., The NASCARcade (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., Motormouths, Peacock
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Auto Racing Classics: 2019 Goody’s Fast Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2

Thursday, April 7
10 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway (re-air), FS2
3 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS1, CANCELED, weather
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Camping World Truck Series at Martinsville, FS1
8 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway, FS1

On MRN
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway

Friday, April 8
Midnight, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
3:30 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS1
5:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
9:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
11 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Xfinity Series at Martinsville, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call 811 Before You Dig 250 powered by Call 811.com at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
10 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1

On MRN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway
7 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call 811 Before You Dig 250 powered by Call 811.com at Martinsville Speedway

Saturday, April 9
Midnight, NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call 811 Before You Dig 250 powered by Call 811.com at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Blu-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 200 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
5 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FS1
6 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call 811 Before You Dig 250 powered by Call 811.com at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
8 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Martinsville (re-air), FS2
9 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Call 811 Before You Dig 250 powered by Call 811.com at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2
11 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Practice/Qualifying at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1
4 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour: Richmond (tape delay), USA
5 p.m., IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship: Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, USA
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Cup Series at Martinsville, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 at Martinsville Speedway, FS1
11 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS1

On MRN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 at Martinsville Speedway

Sunday, April 10
11 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 at Martinsville Speedway (re-air), FS2

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

Practice and qualifying for Sunday’s NASCAR Toyota Owners 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX) at Richmond were incredibly helpful for bettors.

Richmond Raceway, a 0.75-mile short, flat track, is one of the most predictable venues on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule.

Even with the Next Gen car providing a degree of uncertainty, bettors should feel relatively confident after seeing Saturday’s XFINITY Series race. The ToyotaCare 250 had only three cautions — two were for the stage breaks, and one was for debris.

This extended green-flag racing means we can feel more confident that projected speed will more closely align with actual finishing position.

That gives me quite a bit of confidence with my favorite bet of the week.

NASCAR Picks & Predictions for Richmond

*Odds as of Sunday morning

This matchup struck my eye immediately after I ran my post-qualifying model.

Despite Alex Bowman’s win at Richmond last year, my model heavily favors Kevin Harvick in this matchup.

Bowman’s win was in large part a product of a late restart, which is rare for Richmond.

In addition, Stewart-Haas Racing was struggling, while Hendrick Motorsports (HMS) was in the midst of a hot streak.

The gap has closed quite a bit between the two teams, and individual data points for Harvick and Bowman also suggest Harvick should be heavily favored here.

Harvick has finished ahead of Bowman six times in seven Richmond matchups since Bowman joined HMS.

Additionally, Harvick has been the stronger car this weekend.

Harvick was fifth over 10 consecutive laps, while Bowman was 13th.

Harvick also made a 30-lap run, while Bowman didn’t even achieve 15 consecutive laps. This discrepancy typically suggests Harvick was happier with his car than Bowman.

In qualifying, Harvick put his car into the second round, starting seventh. Meanwhile, Bowman will start in 28th place.

Harvick’s advantage extends beyond Richmond as well.

At Phoenix Raceway — the other short, flat track that NASCAR raced at earlier this year — Harvick had the third-fastest average green-flag speed. Bowman, on the other hand, was only 11th in speed.

My model gives Harvick a 69% to win this matchup against Bowman.

Even if my model is a bit generous to Harvick, it far outpaces the 52.8% implied odds that Harvick will win according to FanDuel‘s odds.

Other books have Harvick as an even larger favorite, but I still don’t think they are rating Harvick highly enough.

I’ve triple checked every data point here, and I just can’t see Bowman running better than Harvick without a problem for Harvick, or multiple late restarts.

I’d feel comfortable betting Harvick to -175 in this matchup.

The bet: Kevin Harvick (-112) over Alex Bowman at FanDuel.

The more things change, the more they stay the same. For the first time on a points-paying weekend, the Next Gen car turned laps on a short track. And while Ryan Blaney will start from the pole position for the second consecutive week, Joe Gibbs Racing still looked solid at a track it has owned for years. The Stewart-Haas Racing Fords didn’t look too shabby, either, taking three of the top 10 spots in qualifying.

MORE: Full Richmond Cup lineup | Best photos from the “Action Track”

Dustin Albino’s race-day lineup:
Starter 1: Martin Truex Jr.
Starter 2: Christopher Bell
Starter 3: Kyle Busch
Starter 4: Aric Almirola
Starter 5: Kevin Harvick
Garage pick: Erik Jones

NEXT IN LINE: Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, William Byron.

RELATED: Fantasy Fastlane: Expect a strong JGR showing at Richmond | Set your lineups now!

RISING: Historically, Ryan Blaney has been, self-admittedly, terrible at Richmond. In 11 Cup starts at the track, he has just one top 10, that being a 10th-place outing last fall. The No. 12 Ford was among the quickest cars on single-lap, five-lap and 10-lap averages on Saturday, however. Even with all that positive mojo, starting Blaney at Richmond would be bold.

Kevin Harvick is riding a 49-race winless streak and hasn’t won a stage since the second Dover race in 2020, but Saturday was the best the No. 4 car has looked this season. In addition, the 2014 Cup champion is a three-time winner at Richmond. If you want even more reason to look at Harvick, his teammate Chase Briscoe won at 1-mile Phoenix, the series’ last race at a track with a similar style to Richmond’s 0.75-mile layout.

Entering the 2022 season, expectations were neutral for Erik Jones’ No. 43 team. But his Petty GMS Motorsports team has been quick more times than not this year, and that continued in practice and qualifying with Jones starting fifth on Sunday. While it might not be necessary to put him in your lineup yet, the option of choosing the No. 43 car by the end of the second stage could be valuable.

FALLING: Over the past five races at Richmond, Austin Dillon has been among the best drivers at Richmond with three top-10 efforts, leading a personal-best 55 laps in 2020. But the No. 3 Chevrolet was 27th in practice and will start 25th. This has been one of the biggest head-scratchers of the weekend.

For the first time in his career, Denny Hamlin hasn’t recorded a top-10 finish through the opening six races of the season. While the No. 11 team has shown speed at times, it has been absent at others. With that, Richmond could be a fresh start for the Virginia native toward the 2022 season. But he was the lone JGR driver to miss the second round of qualifying.

FEATURED MATCHUPS: Kyle Busch vs. Alex Bowman: Over the last year, the defending race-winner Bowman has a tendency of being in the right place at the right time. But Kyle Busch is elite at Richmond, entering Sunday as a six-time winner at the track. The No. 18 Toyota was sporty in practice and qualified third; this could be his breakthrough race of the year.

Ross Chastain vs. Tyler Reddick: Momentum, what a beautiful thing. The advantage after practice and qualifying goes to Chastain, turning the quickest lap during Group B’s qualifying session. It’s hard to believe Chastain’s success will stop at Richmond, as he’s entering the week with four consecutive top-three finishes.

Martin Truex Jr. vs. Kyle Larson: Typically, this would be an even matchup. However, Richmond has been Truex’s playground over the past six years, winning three of the past five races. The No. 19 Toyota made it to the second round of qualifying for the first time this season on Saturday. Meanwhile, Larson will take the green from 21st.

Denny Hamlin vs. Joey Logano: Based on both drivers’ past accomplishments at Richmond, this is the hardest matchup of the weekend. Hamlin, though, has yet to get a grip on the Next Gen car, while Logano sits third in points. Even with the No. 22 car starting 11th and the No. 11 team starting 13th, the small advantage goes to Hamlin, who has eight top-five finishes in the last 10 race at his home track. Last year, Hamlin led more than half the laps between the two races last season (404 of 800).

RICHMOND, Va. — Just because you can knock someone out of the way for a victory doesn’t mean you should, or does it?

Ross Chastain’s aggressive move on AJ Allmendinger to win his first career NASCAR Cup Series race last Sunday at Circuit of The Americas has churned up talk regarding the line drivers are willing to cross to triumph. Chastain stood by his move, while Allmendinger had to live with it.

It seems as though the old standard, using the chrome horn to achieve a race victory, has evolved into the new standard in today’s day and age. But, according to Denny Hamlin, there’s one stark difference that pales in comparison to the philosophy of years past — the lack of consequence.

“I don’t think there is any consequences to it,” Hamlin said Saturday at Richmond Raceway. “We’ve seen you can kind of do whatever. You might be worried about getting wrecked here and there in the future, but I think it’s just become accepted. The art of passing is just something that isn’t quite used as much nowadays. The easier route is getting them out of your way as quick as possible by moving them. I’ve done it — every time I’ve done it, it has been unintentional, but I think it’s become more of an intentional move in the years lately.”

RELATED: Kevin Harvick’s take on young, aggressive drivers

Last year, Hamlin held the lead late in the fall race at Martinsville Speedway. A victory would have locked Hamlin into the Championship 4, but Alex Bowman moved him out of the way with seven laps remaining, sending Hamlin for a spin and a 24th-place finish. Hamlin still earned a spot to compete for the title, but it was the principle of how he felt Bowman raced him that got under his skin.

Despite preventing Bowman from a celebratory burnout after that race, to this day, Hamlin has yet to retaliate on the race track.

“I think the win at all costs, they have seen it is worth it because there really isn’t any cost,” Hamlin said. “I got spun out of the lead in two races last year, one cost us the championship. I haven’t done anything about it. So, maybe that’s a message to the competitors that you can do that, and we ain’t going to do anything.

“But, I haven’t had the opportunity, either.”

Martin Truex Jr., Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, recalled a recent flight with Kevin Harvick where the pair discussed how young drivers take no issue with running into each other on the race track from the start. Harvick said that mentality was even apparent while watching his son, Keelan, during his go-kart events.

Truex noted a key difference could be the way the next generation has learned to race, which contrasts with how he, Hamlin and other veterans were brought up in the motorsports world.

“I know when I was making my way through the ranks I was working, I was building my cars,” Truex said. “I didn’t want to tear the nose off of the thing because I knew I had to fix it on Monday. I had to keep the car in one piece. We had to keep our stuff – we couldn’t just go out and buy new stuff. We didn’t have the money when I was doing it. Maybe that’s it — I think it’s different.

“The field gets younger, new guys come in and what used to fly or didn’t used to fly maybe can now. I think it’s a lot different than when I started here.”

As for Harvick, a run-in with Chastain during an Xfinity Series race at Darlington Raceway in 2018 put Harvick’s respect for the Trackhouse Racing driver on ice at the time, calling Chastain an inexperienced driver. It was Chastain’s first Xfinity start with Chip Ganassi Racing.

RELATED: Hear Corey LaJoie’s take on Stacking Pennies

Nearly four years removed from that incident, Harvick’s tune about Chastain has changed.

“Ross is just a super aggressive driver,” Harvick said. “I think balancing that with not wrecking and putting yourself in bad spots, there’s a fine line between that. I think that’s the biggest difference. He does all the things that he needs to do but has learned not to put himself in where he totals his car or tears his car up.”

Harvick correlated Chastain’s driving style to that of his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Chase Briscoe. In his rookie season last year, Briscoe made headlines while battling with Hamlin for the lead late in the race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. Briscoe spun Hamlin entering Turn 10 and later received a penalty for cutting the course on the same lap.

Briscoe earned his first career Cup Series victory in March at Phoenix Raceway.

“(Chastain) has the background of a hard-core racer, had to battle for everything that he’s got,” Harvick said. “The most important thing for guys like that is not to lose the desire that got them to this point. Learn how to still treat this like you don’t have a job tomorrow and still carry that same enthusiasm year after year after year. That’s the trick to being successful for a long time.”

It’s that feisty racing style of Briscoe, Chastain and others among the Cup Series’ rising stars that provides entertainment for fans in the grandstands and watching from afar.

Dylan Buell | Getty Images
Dylan Buell | Getty Images

“I think that’s important to have that flare and fire because that’s what’s going to set you aside from everybody else,” Harvick said. “Having some of that personality and that ‘I don’t give a (expletive)’ attitude about what happens and if you don’t like it, sorry. Having that edge is something that will make him popular because of the way that he races. He doesn’t have to do anything else. Just race like that and the people will gravitate toward you because it’s exciting to watch and you’re winning.”

Regardless of what side of the fence you stand on regarding what should be tolerated, Harvick believes the driver depth chart taking the sport by storm should be appreciated.

“We’re super fortunate as a sport to have a lot of really young, talented, aggressive drivers that are coming up through this deal to make it exciting,” Harvick said. “Both of those guys are one of them.”

RICHMOND, Va. — While Ty Gibbs celebrated his third win of the 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series on the frontstretch at Richmond Raceway, his teammate, John Hunter Nemechek, was left fuming on pit road.

Nemechek, competing in select Xfinity races for Joe Gibbs Racing, reeled in Gibbs during the closing circuits of Saturday’s ToyotaCare 250 at the 0.75-mile Virginia short track, taking the lead with five laps remaining. But Gibbs fought back, laying the bumper to Nemechek once the white flag flew.

Gibbs put pressure on Nemechek until he made his move entering Turns 3 and 4, diving low and making contact with the left side of Nemechek’s No. 18 Toyota, sending him up the race track.

Nemechek was able to hold onto the second-place position, while also holding onto strong emotions toward Gibbs after the race.

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“He was able to get a run beating my back bumper off, got inside of me,” Nemechek said. “Thought we would be able to run side-by-side there, him running low and me running high in (Turns) 3 and 4. It didn’t play out that way. He just didn’t even try to make the corner. It is what it is.”

During his post-race interview, Gibbs said he “deserved one back” from Nemechek.

“We’re racing for wins and they’re hard to come by,” Gibbs said. “I had to take it. … Just got in there deep and had to bump him out of the way going up the track. We’re short-track racing.”

Gibbs’ expectation of getting one back from Nemechek didn’t hold much clout.

“It doesn’t mean anything,” Nemechek said. “We didn’t take home the hardware today.

“I guess I should know that when the last lap is out, teammate rules are off or whatever,” he added. “But, I thought it would have been awesome to be able to duel it out side-by-side coming to the checkered flag. Whether it was him or me winning, rubbing doors to the start-finish line is awesome, but don’t just completely miss a corner.”

The battle between the two teammates was close all day. Nemechek led a race-high 135 laps, while Gibbs held the point for 114 of the 250. For Nemechek, competing for a championship in his full-time NASCAR Camping Truck Series effort with Toyota-backed Kyle Busch Motorsports, a runner-up result doesn’t do him much good.

“I’m not going to sit here and say it’s fair or not fair,” Nemechek said. “Just racers never forget, that’s all.”