Kyle Larson received major accolades from motorsports legends after capturing his first NASCAR Cup Series championship on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway.

RELATED: Kyle Larson scores first NASCAR Cup Series title 

NASCAR Hall of Famer and three-time Cup Series champion Tony Stewart as well as Mario Andretti were among the heavy hitters to applaud the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports driver for his triumph. Stewart even recognized him as the best race car driver he has ever witnessed.

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Stewart-Haas Racing driver Chase Briscoe officially earned the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors Sunday. It marks the second consecutive year the SHR team has fielded the top series newcomer. Cole Custer won it last year.

Briscoe, 26, driver of the No. 14 SHR Ford, finished out the season with a 35th place finish at Phoenix – crashing out after a tire problem while running 12th. He finished 23rd in the final championship standings.

RELATED: Sunoco Rookie of the Year winners in Cup Series

A nine-time winner while racing full-time for the team in the Xfinity Series last year, he had three top-10 finishes in the NASCAR Cup Series this season, including a best of sixth place at both the Austin and Road America road courses. He led 18 laps with a single day best of 12 laps led at the Indianapolis Road Course.

The series other Rookie of the Year contender, Front Row Motorsports driver Anthony Alfredo, 22, finished 30th in the standings with one top-10 finish, a 10th place at the fall Talladega Superspeedway race. He closed out the year with a 34th-place finish following an accident at Phoenix.

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin may have entered Sunday’s championship race as underdogs. So said Wally Brown, the team’s competition director, in the week’s run-up to the NASCAR Cup Series season finale at Phoenix Raceway.

Cinderellas or not, Truex and Hamlin chased the No. 5 Chevrolet of eventual champion Kyle Larson down the stretch before coming up short in Sunday’s season-ender. Their Toyotas held the advantage in long-haul speed in a race that threw two short runs at them late, playing into the strengths of Hendrick Motorsports teammates Larson and Chase Elliott.

RELATED: Kyle Larson wins 2021 championship | Race recap | Race results

That factor, plus a slight performance deficit on pit road at the end, left Truex second in his bid for a second Cup Series title and Hamlin third in his long-running quest for a first.

“That’s racing, as they say, and sometimes you’re just not on the right end of things,” said Truex, who led 72 laps but ended up .398 seconds behind at the checkered flag. “We were on the right end of things to get the lead there and weren’t able to hold onto it. If we could have had the lead, I think it would have been over, but that’s kind of how the 5 did it, too. So they had a hell of a season and congrats to them. Gosh, second sucks. I hate it.”

RELATED: Martin Truex Jr. reacts to another runner-up finish in the standings

Truex nearly benefitted from a decision by crew chief James Small to be the first Championship 4 contender to make their final scheduled pit stop, forcing the other title hopefuls to follow suit. When the caution flag flew for Anthony Alfredo’s hard hit with 66 laps remaining, Truex was already committed to pit road and after the No. 19 team’s stop, he left with the lead

Truex held serve up front for the next 33 laps before another yellow flag for debris prompted a final round of stops. The No. 5 crew vaulted Larson to the lead with speedy service, while Truex slipped to third for the final restart — which shifted to Hendrick’s favor with just a 24-lap run to the end.

“It wasn’t what we needed,” said Small, who described the team’s over-the-wall performance as “a little bit messy” on Sunday. “I think if it went green there, we would’ve just kept pulling away there. We had a great fight there with the 11. They had a strong car as well. Yeah, we just struggled just a little bit on pit road all day, to be honest, compared to the Hendrick cars. That 5 car crew’s been strong all year and that really won them the race. Martin did a great job on that last restart to get into second and he gave a hell of a fight.”

The title-eligible drivers ran in 1-2-3-4 formation for significant portions of Sunday’s 312-miler, but Hamlin was the only one of the four that didn’t lead a lap. The prospects of a caution-free stint to the end would have aided the No. 11 team’s hopes, but Hamlin still lined up alongside friendly rival Larson on the front row for the final restart.

“You and your buddy on the front row may not be buddies after this,” No. 11 crew chief Chris Gabehart told Hamlin before the final green flag. “Go get this.” But Larson pulled away to a lead that he wouldn’t give up, leaving Hamlin’s title cupboard empty in his third consecutive Championship 4 appearance.

“I have to live with the result because I can’t change it,” Hamlin said. “Disappointed, absolutely, for sure. But I knew kind of going into today I was going to need the race to go a certain way. If it goes the way it did last year, it goes green out, we’re probably winning. But it didn’t. We knew that our percentage was low, and that was the case. Many of these races come down to green-white-checkers or shootouts at the end, and that just wasn’t our strength and hasn’t been ever.”

RELATED: Denny Hamlin says ‘it just didn’t pan out’

Said Gabehart: “The short-run speed of the 5 and the 9 were evident on Friday and yesterday, but it became evident in the race that they were going to taper off enough to make us easily able to contend or be better than them. Certainly once we worked on our cars and it cooled off a bit, they really weren’t in the game as much any more. But it comes down to cautions and circumstances and that caution wasn’t what we needed. You put Kyle Larson out front with a bit in his mouth and kind of hand him that advantage, he’s going to be hard to beat and that’s what it was.”

AVONDALE, Ariz. — At the end of an almost mythical season came the quintessential story of redemption.

Taking advantage of an opportune caution and a blazingly fast pit stop by his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet crew, Larson held off Martin Truex Jr. during a 24-lap green-flag run to the finish in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos from Phoenix

The victory — Larson’s 10th of the season and the 10th at a track where he had never won before — made a deserving series champion of the 29-year-old Californian, who honed his racing skills in open-wheeled cars on dirt.

As Larson slowed his car for the cool-down lap, the tears started flowing.

“I can’t … I cannot believe it,” Larson said after climbing from his car. “I didn’t even think I’d be racing a Cup car a year and a half ago. To win a championship is crazy. I’ve got to say first-off thank you so much to (team owner) Rick Hendrick, Hendrickcars.com, Jeff Gordon, NASCAR, every single one of my supporters in the stands, watching at home and my family.

“There were so many points in this race where I did not think we were going to win. Without my pit crew on that last stop (on Lap 285), we would not be standing right here. They are the true winners of this race. They are true champions. I’m just blessed to be a part of this group. Every single man and woman at Hendrick Motorsports, this win is for all of us, and every one of you.

“This is unbelievable. I’m speechless.”

RELATED: Kyle Larson caps dominant season with Cup championship

This was the Kyle Larson who watched last year’s Cup championship race from afar after drawing a suspension from NASCAR and losing his ride with Chip Ganassi Racing for using a racial slur during a non-NASCAR-related virtual race in April 2020.

But after Larson did yeoman work to earn reinstatement, team owner Rick Hendrick hired the virtuoso driver, who won 46 dirt races in multiple divisions during his absence from NASCAR.

Hendrick’s decision paid immediate dividends and culminated in the 14th series championship for the organization (series-most).

Until Lap 282 of 312, however, Larson’s chances of victory were all but nonexistent. He was fourth among the Championship 4 drivers and trailing Truex, the leader at the time, by more than four seconds.

But on the lap that changed the race, the brakes in David Starr’s No. 13 Toyota exploded and dropped a rotor in the low lane in Turn 3. Under the resulting caution, the ninth of the race, Larson’s crew performed its second-fastest stop of the year and got Larson off pit road in the lead from pit stall No. 1, which the driver had earned by winning the pole during Saturday’s qualifying.

Larson restarted from the outside on Lap 289 with Hamlin beside him. Truex, who lost two positions on pit road, lined up behind Larson, with defending champion Chase Elliott to his inside. Larson surged into the lead, and Truex followed, passing Hamlin.

Truex contested the lead early in the run before Larson established a more comfortable margin. But Truex was closing at the finish and was just .398 seconds behind when Larson crossed the stripe for the final time to earn the 16th victory of his career.

RELATED: Martin Truex Jr. on finishing second again

“I don’t know what the caution was for, but just untimely caution for us and lost two spots on pit road, and that was the race,” Truex said. “Twenty (laps) to go, you’re not going to pass one of the fastest cars out there. We just didn’t have the short-run speed all day, and then certainly with 20 to go, it’s going to be hard to pass anybody out front in clean air.

“I think if we would have had the lead, we could have held him off. But hindsight is 20-20, and we didn’t have the lead, so here we are. Really proud of our team and our season. Come in here once again as underdogs and had a shot at it, so that was fun.”

Before the Lap 282 caution Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs racing Toyota was closing on Truex, but the yellow flag foiled a well-executed game plan by Hamlin’s team.

“I really liked where we were at with about 25 to go,” said Hamlin, who came home third in front of Ryan Blaney and Elliott. “We were just exceptional in the long run, which wasn’t too surprising, but started running the 19 (Truex) back down there and got within a couple car lengths, and obviously that debris caution changed a lot.

“Special congrats to Larson and his team. Those guys, any time you can win 10 races in a year, you’re absolutely a deserving champion. They did a great job on the last pit stop and got him out there, and it was just set sail after that.”

Had he won, the 25-year-old Elliott would have become the youngest driver to win multiple Cup championships, but his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet didn’t have either the track position or the necessary speed in the final run.

“I felt like our NAPA Chevy was really good, and I thought our team did a really good job preparing this week,” said Elliott, who led 94 laps, second only to Larson’s 107. “I was really proud of our group. I thought we brought a really good car and did a lot of things that we were wanting to do today. Just didn’t work out, and the sequence of the way all that went certainly was unfortunate for us.

“But look, proud of our team, a lot to build on, and also congrats to Kyle and (crew chief) Cliff (Daniels). What an amazing season. Very, very deserving champions, and glad to see Kyle have success. When you’re a good driver and a good person, and you surround yourself with good people, success is warranted. It’s good to see that.

“But we’ll be back stronger next year and try to give them a run.”

MORE: Chase Elliott’s post-race interview

Notes: Post-race inspection as well as the vehicle and engine teardown confirmed Larson as the race winner and champion. The No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of driver Kyle Busch was found to have two lug nuts not safe and secure. The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of driver Denny Hamlin, the No. 2 Team Penske Ford of driver Brad Keselowski, the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford of driver Matt DiBenedetto, the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of driver Martin Truex Jr. and the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Larson each had one lug nut not safe and secure. Fines to those respective crew chiefs will be assessed on the NASCAR penalty report, which is typically released on Tuesdays.

Kyle Larson, the season’s most dominant driver in the NASCAR Cup Series from start to finish, completed his run to the top by winning the 2021 championship Sunday at Phoenix Raceway.

Larson held off Championship 4 contenders Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin and Chase Elliott during the final restart on Lap 288 of the 312-lap event at the 1-mile Arizona oval. But it was the pit stop during the caution flag that won him the title. In a power move off pit road during the final round of stops, Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team used the first pit stall selection to his advantage, gaining the lead over Hamlin after entering pit road in fourth — the last of the Championship 4 drivers.

RELATED: Race recap | Race results | SHOP: Kyle Larson gear

“There were so many points in the race where I did not think we were going to win,” Larson said during his championship celebration. “Without my pit crew on that last stop, we would not be standing right here. They’re the true winners of this race. They’re the true champions. I’m just blessed to be a part of this group.”

Truex made a valiant effort to catch Larson in the closing laps, but came up just short of his second career championship by finishing second. Hamlin completed the podium spots with a third-place finish in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, while 2020 champion Chase Elliott finished fifth.

“I knew the only way we were going to pull it off is if our pit crew got us off as a leader, and damn, they did,” Larson said. “That was just crazy. I tried to do as good of a job as I could down pit road without speeding, getting my sign as good as I could, and those guys nailed the pit stop and got us out the leader.

“I still had to fight through,” he added. “Martin was really fast behind me. Our car was just gripped up enough for that length of a run that we could hold them off.”

RELATED: Kyle Larson hoists the Bill France Cup | Kyle Larson on his pit crew: ‘True champs’

Larson, 29, from Elk Grove, California, took his career to a new level in 2021. The veteran driver more than doubled his career wins total this season, entering ’21 with six since his first full-time season.

By essentially every measure, 2021 marked Larson’s best season — and one of the best in modern NASCAR history. He’s one of just 11 drivers and holds of one of 17 instances where a driver has won 10 or more times in a year at the top level, joining a host of NASCAR Hall of Famers to do so.

Larson started out the 2021 season with a 10th-place finish at the Daytona International Speedway before picking up his first win since 2019 just three races later at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. From there, it quickly became evident he would be a force this season.

The No. 5 driver put together the best three-race stretch of anyone this year from Charlotte Motor Speedway to Nashville Superspeedway, winning a crown jewel, his first road-course victory at Sonoma Raceway and the inaugural Cup race at the Music City track. He added another over the summer, holding off Hendrick teammate Elliott for another road win at Watkins Glen International before scoring another four in the playoffs (Bristol Motor Speedway, Charlotte Roval, Texas Motor Speedway and Kansas Speedway) leading up to Phoenix. Larson also won at Texas earlier this year in the All-Star Race.

Larson’s race win at Phoenix to earn the title was his 10th of the 2021 season.

“I think just thinking about the journey and how tough of a road it’s been to get to this point for so long, but especially the last year and a half, and too,” Larson said. “I think just the atmosphere, I haven’t felt an atmosphere like this maybe ever. With the pressure of this race and everything that was on the line, to win this championship — every one of these fans made me feel it. I was trying to tell myself to just chill out, stop tearing up. I make fun of my dad all the time for crying, and I’m worse than he is.

“It’s just so cool. So cool. So thankful. Thank you to Rick Hendrick, Jeff Gordon. We have so many people from Hendrickcars.com here, Hendrick Motorsports. This is just awesome, an awesome day.”

Larson is signed on again to drive for Hendrick next year, along with his three ’21 teammates, positioning the longtime organization to once again compete for the title as NASCAR enters its Next Gen era.

The championship comes a year and a half after Larson used a racial slur while competing in an iRacing event during the pandemic shutdown in April 2020. Larson was suspended from NASCAR, lost his job driving Chip Ganassi Racing’s No. 42 Chevrolet and did not race in NASCAR again until this year after being reinstated in October 2020.

The championship is Larson’s first at the national series level, though he also has a 2012 title in what was then the K&N Pro Series East. He has 12 wins in 108 career Xfinity Series starts, with two victories in 14 races in the Camping World Truck Series.

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 NBCSN | Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, Nov. 8
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., Unrivaled: Earnhardt vs. Gordon, FS1 (re-air)

Tuesday, Nov. 9
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: Phoenix, FS2 (re-air)
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Lucas Oil 150, FS2 (re-air)

Wednesday, Nov. 10
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Thursday, Nov. 11
5 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West Arizona Lottery 100, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (tape delay)
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Friday, Nov. 12
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Saturday, Nov. 13
Noon, IMSA Auto Racing: Petit Le Mans, NBC/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Petit Le Mans, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Respect is not lacking among the Championship 4 teams.

During Thursday’s Media Day at the Phoenix Convention Center, there was no trash talking – at least not about any of the title-eligible drivers (sorry, Alex Bowman). Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott had nothing negative to say about Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. And vice versa.

And yet somehow, despite the obvious teammate pairings, the competitive spirit remains at an all-time high.

“I definitely think it’s us versus the other three guys, for sure,” Larson said. “Obviously if I can’t win, I want Chase to win. But I’m going to race Chase just as hard as I’m going to race Denny and Martin.”

PHOENIX: Betting odds | Weekend schedule | Paint schemes

Sunday’s showdown at Phoenix Raceway (3 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App/Peacock, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) is a straight-up battle for the title. Whichever Championship 4 driver posts the best result wins the whole shebang. Technically, he doesn’t even need to finish in first place.

Since the NASCAR Playoffs’ elimination format was installed in 2014, though, the season-finale winner has always been a championship contender. For that reason, all four of the title hopefuls are looking at Phoenix as a must-win situation.

This season, Larson boasts the most wins with nine. Truex owns four. Hamlin and Elliott each hold two.

“We haven’t won as many races as they have,” Hamlin said. “The championship is decided on this race track, not any of the others.”

At Phoenix, Hamlin leads the way with two career victories in Cup. Elliott and Truex have one apiece. Larson has weathered a drought in the desert.

The 750-horsepower package will be in play Sunday. Excluding dirt and road-course events – because Phoenix is a 1-mile asphalt oval – there have been 11 instances where this package has been used in 2021. Truex won a series-best four of those. Larson received the nod twice, Hamlin once. Elliott did not; albeit a very different layout and therefore a technicality, both his wins did come on road courses with this package.

“If it doesn’t make us go faster, I’m not concerned about it,” Elliott said. “We have a motivation amongst our team to go get the job done, and that’s where our focus is.”

RELATED: 2021 race winners | Championship Weekend photos | Phoenix 101 info

Hendrick Motorsports boast the most championships (13 compared to Joe Gibbs Racing’s five), but the current field is evenly split when it comes to titleholders.

Elliott is the defending champion. Truex is the 2017 champion. Neither Hamlin nor Larson has captured a Bill France Cup Trophy.

A second for Elliott or Truex would mean just as much as a first, regardless of alliances.

“Sunday morning, that’s it, it’s over,” Truex said. “They’ll talk pit strategies during the race or whatever is happening like they always do, I would say, but on the race track, we’re racing. There’s no teamwork. We’re not helping each other. We’re racing to win.

“I’m sure the other team is the same way. That’s just the way sport is. It’s every man for themselves once Sunday rolls around.”

WHAT THEY SAID: CHAMPIONSHIP 4

Chase Elliott: “I feel like it’s a good group. I think we can all go race really hard and put on a good race and race clean and all the things. Yeah, I don’t have anything bad to say about anybody.”

Kyle Larson: “I can’t speak on how they feel about me. I mean, I respect the heck out of the three competitors and their talents. I’m really looking forward to battling each of them. I feel like it’s the best four teams that are in the final four.”

Denny Hamlin: “They’re all going to be fast. The HMS guys, pit crews have been really, really fast this year. JGR has been really good on the shorter tracks. It all kind of weighs out to however the race plays out.”

Martin Truex Jr.: “A high level of respect from me towards all those guys. Chase has been a champion already, even as young as he is. Larson, amazing driver, obviously what he’s done this season. And then Denny, I’ve raced with him since 2003. I’ve run a lot of laps with these guys, never had any issues, raced very clean.”

STATISTICAL TEAM NOTES AMONG THE 2021 CHAMPIONSHIP 4 

Championships: Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing are tied.

2021 stats: Hendrick Motorsports leads in wins, top fives and top 10s.

Phoenix stats: Joe Gibbs Racing leads in wins, top fives and top 10s.

750-HP tracks: Joe Gibbs Racing leads in wins, top fives and top 10s.

Screen Shot 2021 11 06 At 5.04.51 Pm

 

AVONDALE, Ariz. — One set of corners. Austin Cindric was that close to securing a repeat NASCAR Xfinity Series championship Saturday night, all before shipping off to the Cup Series next season.

Cindric wound up a full fender and that pivotal last couple of turns short, getting the shorter end of a full-contact pass from eventual series champion Daniel Hemric in the season finale. The runner-up finish by a scant .030 seconds ended the Team Penske driver’s title defense in a blink, and his No. 22 Ford showed the battle scars on the driver’s side — all stemming from the right side of Hemric’s No. 18 Toyota.

RELATED: Daniel Hemric scores 2021 Xfinity Series titleWeekend schedule | Race results

The title bids also went awry for Championship 4 contenders Noah Gragson, who scrubbed the outside retaining wall in the late going and finished 12th, and AJ Allmendinger, who spun less than 20 laps left from the scheduled 200-lap distance and never quite raced back into contention, ultimately placing 14th. Cindric, however, came closest — not being able to put Hemric away in a series of late restarts, leaving the door open for him to bruise his way by on the final lap.

“With the final restart I think the catalyst there was not getting clear off of Turn 4,” said Cindric, who move up to the Team Penske Cup program in the No. 2 Ford as a Cup Series rookie next year. “Obviously he drove it in stupid deep and left reared me, was still able to stay side-by-side. I feel like that was the catalyst for him still being close heading into Turn 3. That was all he needed to be was close.”

RELATED: Austin Cindric ‘one lap’ from repeating as Xfinity champion

Cindric was denied by a driver perhaps not known for an overly aggressive style, but one who had tired of answering the questions about his 0-for-119 career winless mark. Crew chief Dave Rogers was in Hemric’s ear over the No. 18 radio before each of the late restarts: “Offense, offense, offense,” he said before the two-lap run to the end. “I don’t care what lane you’re attacking from, but just attack.” Hemric is now 1-for-120 with a title, to boot.

2021 Nov6 Noah Gragson Main Image
Terrin Waack | NASCAR Digital Media

Rogers said post-race that he was hoping any final-lap contact wouldn’t result in Cindric spinning or crashing. Cindric showed his disappointment as he stood silently by his car on pit road, but didn’t cry foul later over Hemric’s winning move.

“I’ve certainly had worse,” Cindric said of Hemric’s bump. “Wasn’t enough to wreck it. Until you spin somebody out, it’s not dirty racing.”

RELATED: Dave Rogers expects Daniel Hemric to win plenty in 2022

Gragson was next-closest to contending for the title, keeping pace with the lead pair after rallying from a sluggish pit stop at the Stage 2 break. But Gragson’s No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet first brushed Hemric’s car, then later popped the outside wall as he tried to mount a charge. He dropped outside the top five, then eventually the top 10.

“That’s what the Xfinity Series is, it’s hard racing,” said Gragson, who said the team fought to strike the right balance over the course of the 204-lap finale. “Once I got into Turn 1, just in tight, on the splitter. I hit it really bad. But we never quit. I don’t know, 12th. Not where we wanted to be, but we were a little off today. Had to try something on the restarts and stuff. Just came up short.”

MORE: Noah Gragson emotional about final race with Dave Elenz

Allmendinger’s lazy spin with less than 20 laps to go in regulation touched off that fateful series of restarts, prompting him to apologize later for changing the complexion of the race. His No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet had begun to develop a vibration some 20 laps earlier, and Allmendinger speculated that a wheel had worked itself loose.

Though Allmendinger ended up last among the title contenders, he found plenty of solace in his post-race remarks. The 39-year-old driver has rejuvenated his career, claiming the series’ regular-season championship by a whisker over Cindric, scoring five Xfinity wins and adding a Cup Series win at Indianapolis in a part-time role.

RELATED: AJ Allmendinger reflects on five-win season

“It was truthful when I said I wouldn’t change having an OK year or a good year, somehow you make it to the final four, and if you become the champion, then you win the championship,” Allmendinger said. “For me, I’ve gotten to kiss the bricks in the Cup race at a track I’ve always dreamed about running at. We’ve won five Xfinity races. We were able to win a regular-season championship. Sure, it stings not having a shot at it today really. But we knew it was going to be a tough challenge to come here and contend against these three and have a real shot at it.”

AVONDALE, Ariz. – Daniel Hemric picked the perfect time to win his first NASCAR national series race—and a title came with it.

Executing an aggressive bump-and-run in Saturday night’s NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship Race, Hemric passed Austin Cindric in the final two corners at Phoenix Raceway.

Approaching the finish line, the cars collided side-to-side, with Hemric crossing the stripe .030 seconds ahead of Cindric—roughly five feet—denying the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford a second straight championship. 

The victory came in Hemric’s 208th NASCAR national series start, silencing critics who kept asking, “Will Hemric ever win a race?”

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos from Phoenix

The answer came from crew chief Dave Rogers moments after the winning driver crossed the stripe and clinched the title.

“How about that, champion?” Rogers said. “You’ll never have to hear that stupid question again.”

“Never again!” Hemric shouted in reply.

Hemric, who is leaving the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in favor of a ride with Kaulig Racing next year, was unapologetic about moving Cindric’s Ford up the track to win the race at the end of a two-lap overtime that extended the event from 200 to 204 laps.

“I’m blacked out, blacked out,” Hemric said at the start/finish line after turning a back flip off the roof of his car. “Just knew I had to be the first one to the line. I thought I let him get too much of a run off of (Turn) 4 (on the first lap of overtime).

“Drove into (Turn) 1, knew I was close, not to completely use them up, but we work our asses off for an opportunity like this—excuse my language. This is what it’s all about, winning at the second highest level in all of motorsports. What an honor…

“How about those race fans? That back flip good enough for you? I’ve been waiting a long damn time to do that.”

RELATED: Daniel Hemric discusses the race finish | See Daniel Hemric’s backflip at Phoenix

Cindric took the loss with consummate grace. 

“Until you spin somebody out, it’s not dirty racing,” said Cindric, who entered the championship event with five wins to his credit this season. “If everyone in the stands enjoyed it, it’s good racing. 

“I’m appreciative of the opportunity to race on such a big stage, race for Roger Penske, represent Ford Performance, all of our sponsors that helped us this season. It would have been awesome to finish this out. I felt like we had a dominant race car, felt like we did everything right. Come up a little short.”

As a consolation prize, Cindric secured the Xfinity Series Owners Championship for Roger Penske with his runner-up result.

RELATED: Austin Cindric was ‘one lap’ away from back-to-back titles

The other two Championship 4 drivers—Noah Gragson and AJ Allmendinger—were in contention at the end. Gragson slammed the wall shortly after a restart on Lap 193 and fell to 12th at the finish.

Allmendinger suffered a loose wheel late in the race and spun in Turn 2 on Lap 181, causing the eighth of 10 cautions. Cindric, who led a race-high 113 laps, had a commanding lead at the time, but the yellow bunched the field and set up the late-race shootout.

Harrison Burton ran third on Saturday, followed by Riley Herbst and Justin Haley. John Hunter Nemechek, Brandon Jones, Brett Moffitt, Justin Allgaier and Sheldon Creed completed the top 10.

Notes: Ty Gibbs took Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

Post-race inspection confirmed Hemric as the race winner. The No. 11 of Justin Haley and the No. 54 John Hunter Nemechek were found to each have one lug nut missing.

Daniel Hemric capped his lone season at Joe Gibbs Racing in style by winning the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series championship on Saturday at Phoenix Raceway.

But like many instances in his career, it didn’t come easy for the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver. Hemric started on the inside lane alongside Championship 4 competitor Austin Cindric in an overtime restart. Cindric initially had the edge after the final restart, but a last-ditch effort by Hemric in Turns 3 and 4 coming to the checkered flag saw Hemric nudge the back bumper of Cindric’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford. Hemric and Cindric doored each other to the line and Hemric earned the milestone triumph in a photo finish.

RELATED: Daniel Hemric scores first Xfinity, national series win

The championship marks Hemric’s first in any NASCAR national series and is the third for JGR in the Xfinity ranks after Daniel Suarez won the organization’s second title in 2016.

“I felt like I blacked out, to be honest,” Hemric said after earning the title honors. “I don’t want people to think I’m not emotional because I’m probably one of the most emotional guys there are. When you go through as much, I think back immediately, honestly, to 2019 when I lost my ride. I felt like my life was unraveling before me. Everything I build from the time you’re five years old till you’re 27, 28, the next thing you know the decline starts. I was counting it out, especially then.”

RELATED: Race results | Why Daniel Hemric’s car showed up late to Phoenix

The weekend started off on a rocky note for Hemric when the No. 18 Toyota race hauler broke down in Texas. The team was able to obtain an alternative transporter to get the primary car to Phoenix in time for Friday. They also used Ty Gibbs’ ARCA Menards Series West hauler and operation for tools and other necessities to get the car prepared for technical inspection and Friday’s lone practice session, which they managed to do in time.

The 30-year-old Hemric had a steady regular season with several close calls as he hunted for a first victory. Among his season highlights were a pit road run-in with Gragson in March and then ending up on the wrong side of a battle for the lead with Kyle Busch in July. Coincidentally, both of those developments took place at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

In the playoffs, Hemric elevated his consistency with five top fives in the six races entering Phoenix and an average finish of 5.3 — second-best among the Championship 4 drivers. He had particularly strong runs in the Round of 8 at Texas Motor Speedway (second to teammate John Hunter Nemechek) and Martinsville Speedway (third to Gragson and Cindric).

“Knew that, whatever reason, it was going to work out,” Hemric said. “Even when I felt like I gave one up last week in order to make sure we got here as a race team, I knew there was a purpose. I knew the good Lord had a plan. I promise you there can’t be much more of a testament of continuing to show up when you don’t want to, when you don’t think you can anymore.

“For whatever reason I knew when I had that dream two months ago that it was going to come full circle,” he added. “We didn’t really have a good short run car all night, and Dave Rogers made incredible adjustments to give me exactly what I needed to keep me in sight with an opportunity when we saw the white flag. That’s all I wanted, all I needed.”

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In each of Hemric’s three full-time Xfinity Series seasons (2017-18, 2021), he reached the Championship 4. The first two came with Richard Childress Racing; he ran a partial schedule for JR Motorsports in 2020.

In addition to his Xfinity experience, Hemric spent the 2019 season in the Cup Series driving the No. 8 Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing. The Kannapolis, North Carolina, native won the Sunoco Rookie of the Year award in the Cup ranks that season. He also drove two full seasons for Brad Keselowski Racing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series from 2015-16.

In 2022, Hemric will drive the No. 11 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series. He will be the first reigning champion to drive for another organization since Tyler Reddick won the title for JR Motorsports in 2018 before moving to RCR the following year.

“It isn’t for all those kids, about racing trying to get to a level, it’s about people in life,” Hemric said. “It’s about coming from nothing and making yourself all that you work for. That’s what it’s all about. This is the American dream, I’m living proof of it. Just unbelievable.”