Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin have been atop the NASCAR Cup Series standings for the bulk of the 2021 campaign. Larson grabbed the regular-season championship, and the playoffs have seen the two drivers trading wins, combining to win four of the six playoff races run so far — two wins apiece for the title favorites.
As the Round of 8 opens Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway for the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (2 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the two aren’t separated by much. Hamlin won the most recent 1.5-mile race (at Las Vegas), but Larson’s been a beast on that track type all season. Hamlin has better Texas numbers, but Larson won here more recently in this year’s All-Star Race — although that had a different rules package associated with it.
How does each driver stack up for a head-to-head matchup around Sunday’s race? We’re breaking down the key stats between teammates ahead of the elimination race.
Kyle Larson
Category
Denny Hamlin
2
2021 1.5-mile wins
1
7.9
2021 1.5-mile average finish
7.4
324
2021 1.5-mile points scored
291
931
2021 1.5-mile laps led
223
2
2021 NASCAR Playoffs wins
2
9.5
2021 NASCAR Playoffs average finish
4.2
0
Texas wins
3
19.8
Texas average finish (all time)
13.8
21.8
Texas average finish (since 2017)
18.8
2
1.5-mile wins (since 2018)
5
Larson won the 2021 All-Star Race at Texas — but with a different rules package than the one in this race.
Notable stat to know
Hamlin has finished in the top nine in every 2021 NASCAR Playoffs race so far — the only driver to do so.
It is a little surprising to see Hamlin holding a better average finish on 1.5-mile tracks this season given how strong Larson has looked at the track type all year. The Texas stats favoring Hamlin is not a surprise given the longer body of work there. They have been pretty close all playoffs long and it’s hard not to imagine that continuing to be the case over the final four races. It should be a competitive and fun matchup to watch over 334 laps at the track known for No Limits.
Fresh off their latest run-in, Chase Elliott and Kevin Harvick are an additional matchup to watch. Harvick has won three of the last four fall races at Texas while Elliott has not finished in the top 10 in the last four Texas races. It will be interesting to see if their feud has come to a close following Harvick’s elimination in the Round of 12.
Check back on Friday as The Action Network’s PJ Walsh (@PJWalsh24) breaks down the same matchup and provides his betting insight for who and how to bet this matchup.
Kyle Larson earned the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at the Texas Motor Speedway (2 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the first race of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 8.
Larson, winner of last Sunday’s race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, will start on pole for the ninth time in 2021 in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
AJ Allmendinger will start on pole in the No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet for Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series Andy’s Frozen Custard 335 at Texas (3 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the first race in the Round of 8.
As NASCAR adapted to COVID-19 protocols last season, practice and qualifying were eliminated at a majority of national-series events to limit at-track time, exposure and to cut race weekend costs. To determine starting lineups, competition officials used grouped draws, added inversions for weekend doubleheaders, and eventually adopted a performance-metrics formula. That metrics format remains in place this season, drawing on performance from both individual races and season-long results.
NASCAR’s metrics formula for 2021 weighs:
25 percent: Driver’s finishing position from the previous race
25 percent: Car owner’s finishing position from the previous race
35 percent: Team owner points ranking
15 percent: Fastest lap from the previous race
See the full lineup for Sunday’s Cup Series race below.
Start pos.
Driver
Car #
Team
1
Kyle Larson
5
Hendrick Motorsports
2
Denny Hamlin
11
Joe Gibbs Racing
3
Kyle Busch
18
Joe Gibbs Racing
4
Ryan Blaney
12
Team Penske
5
Joey Logano
22
Team Penske
6
Chase Elliott
9
Hendrick Motorsports
7
Brad Keselowski
2
Team Penske
8
Martin Truex Jr.
19
Joe Gibbs Racing
9
Tyler Reddick
8
Richard Childress Racing
10
Chris Buescher
17
Roush Fenway Racing
11
Christopher Bell
20
Joe Gibbs Racing
12
William Byron
24
Hendrick Motorsports
13
Matt DiBenedetto
21
Wood Brothers Racing
14
Alex Bowman
48
Hendrick Motorsports
15
Austin Dillon
3
Richard Childress Racing
16
Michael McDowell
34
Front Row Motorsports
17
Kurt Busch
1
Chip Ganassi Racing
18
Bubba Wallace
23
23XI Racing
19
Daniel Suarez
99
TrackHouse Racing
20
Cole Custer
41
Stewart-Haas Racing
21
Erik Jones
43
Richard Petty Motorsports
22
Aric Almirola
10
Stewart-Haas Racing
23
Ryan Preece
37
JTG Daugherty Racing
24
Kevin Harvick
4
Stewart-Haas Racing
25
Ross Chastain
42
Chip Ganassi Racing
26
Chase Briscoe
14
Stewart-Haas Racing
27
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
47
JTG Daugherty Racing
28
Anthony Alfredo
38
Front Row Motorsports
29
Corey LaJoie
7
Spire Motorsports
30
Quin Houff
00
StarCom Racing
31
Ryan Newman
6
Roush Fenway Racing
32
Justin Haley
77
Spire Motorsports
33
Josh Bilicki
52
Rick Ware Racing
34
Cody Ware
51
Petty Ware Racing
35
BJ McLeod
78
Live Fast Motorsports
36
Garrett Smithley
15
Rick Ware Racing
37
Joey Gase
53
Rick Ware Racing
38
David Starr
66
Motorsports Business Management
39
Timmy Hill
13
Motorsports Business Management
Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Just one race remains with Busch Pole Qualifying on the schedule — the season-ending championship race Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway.
Unofficial test speeds from organizational Next Gen testing for the NASCAR Cup Series on Oct. 11-12 at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s road course. Note that times are unofficial, with no technical inspection conducted before each session.
CONCORD, N.C. — Early driving impressions from NASCAR Cup Series regulars are trickling in as two days of testing the 2022 Next Gen model wound to a close Tuesday at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Roval.
Competition officials continued to tweak on some of the car’s challenges, working with teams to improve the model before its on-track debut in February, and teams and drivers absorbed their first chance to tune on the vehicle. Even with some issues still to be resolved, initial reviews tended toward the positive.
“It’s a great step to take for NASCAR for the foreseeable future,” said Spire Motorsports driver Corey LaJoie. “It’s a nice race car, a little bit heavy, NASCAR’s built some clips to build crush zones to mitigate some of that energy that’s going to be transferred to the driver in a crash, and those guys are taking it very serious overall with having a test go very smooth with a majority of the teams here. I think it’s been way more positives than negatives so far.”
Like the test’s opening day, the 21 assembled teams logged laps without major incident. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Bubba Wallace each looped their cars in relatively harmless solo spins, and Chris Buescher continued after scuffing the right-front fender on his No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford in the first half of the day.
Among the impressions and topics discussed by drivers during the second day of Next Gen testing:
• Steering vibrations continued to be a struggle for several teams, who reported some wear and design issues with parts in the steering rack. John Probst, NASCAR’s Senior Vice President of Racing Innovation, said that in some instances set-screws had backed out of their positions and that officials were working on a long-term fix. Some drivers suggested that the issue could not be resolved in the two-day window of this organizational test.
“Some guys have it all the time, some guys only have some of the time,” said Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman about the steering issue. “We’ve been on both sides of that. I think we’re on steering rack four or five, so we’re working really hard at trying to fix it. I think the advantage to having so many cars here and so many people here is that there’s a ton of smart people working on fixing it. So obviously, we all got to get that dialed in.”
• Early impressions also suggest the competitive balance in the garage could make incremental shifts, with LaJoie among those hopeful that smaller organizations could gain on the Cup Series’ powerhouses. LaJoie’s No. 7 Chevy tester was eighth on the unofficial speed chart after Monday’s opening day.
“For us to have a competitive car right out of the jump at a road course where I’m a mid-pack guy at best,” LaJoie said, “for me to be able to acclimate to these cars quicker, get the most as I can out of the braking zone and figure out the sequential shifter, for me — like I tweeted last night — I’m super positive about the opportunities it presents a smaller team to close that gap with the bigger teams.”
Chalk some of the early potential for parity up to the elimination of wheel-hop with the car’s new independent suspension, bigger and more forgiving brakes, and the new sequential shifter. The driving characteristics are all-new, and the mastery of the old way of muscling a stock car around a road-course layout needs to be relearned — or un-learned — for the new vehicle.
“I feel like with the current car, there’s so many variables,” said William Byron, “so when you go into braking zones, you’ve got to feel your rear tires, you’ve got to match up the RPMs and make sure you get the downshift right, and if something in that sequence goes off, you’re off. So with this car, let’s just go as fast as you can in that braking zone, be as aggressive as you can and get the downshift done whenever you have time to.
“So I think it’s gonna make for a lot more aggressive passing, because I think guys are gonna dive-bomb and if you’re close to the guy, you’re going to obviously try to outbrake him.”
• NASCAR continued to work on rectifying some previously reported issues with heat inside the cockpit, adding ducts and vents to some of the windshield and window areas in an effort to improve ventilation. Conditions were far warmer at the 2.32-mile Charlotte track on Tuesday after a cool, damp Monday, but still less oppressively hot than the Sept. 7-8 session at Daytona International Speedway.
“It’s hotter down there, but you’ve still got to get the things to where you know, you’re not cooking turkeys inside the race car,” said Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney. “So I think it’s close. I think they’ve done a good job of developing it, you know, that’s with all these tests the last few days and then you know the three, four tests we have coming up in the winter is trying to work some of the bugs out. I think it’s getting there.”
• The Next Gen car’s growing similarity to some of the components used in sports-car racing prompted the question of whether Cup Series drivers might explore finding rides in IMSA’s season-opening Rolex 24 at Daytona or in other road-racing events next year. Bowman was among the stock-car crowd saying sign me up.
“I’d race a lawnmower, so yeah for sure, I’d love to run some sports car stuff,” Bowman said. “Looking at my racing skills, I don’t know a sports-car team that’d be like, ‘yeah let’s get him in our car,’ but … I think, you know, it’s way more similar to a sports car than anything we’ve ever had. So I definitely could see some crossovers there and some sports-car guys coming over for road-course season. Not that they weren’t already successful when they came over in the past, but being extremely successful right off the bat, because of how similar they are now.”
NASCAR penalized three teams in the Cup Series and one in the Xfinity Series for lug-nut violations after last weekend’s races at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course.
One of those penalties resulted in the suspension of crew chief Ben Beshore for the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing team. NASCAR found two lug nuts not safe and secure on Kyle Busch’s Toyota Camry in post-race inspection, so Beshore will miss this weekend’s playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway and was fined $20,000. Race engineer Seth Chavka, 37, is listed as the crew chief on the team’s roster for Texas, replacing Beshore. Chavka was credited as the crew chief for Erik Jones’ fifth-place finish in the second spring race at Darlington in 2020 — his lone crew chief appearance in the Cup ranks.
The other Cup penalties were for one lug nut not safe and secure, also listed in Sections 10.9.10.4 of the NASCAR Rule Book. Those violations resulted in $10,000 fines for crew chief Chris Gabehart of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team and crew chief Scott Graves of the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing team.
In the Xfinity Series, NASCAR gave a $5,000 fine to crew chief Alex Yontz of the No. 11 Kaulig Racing team for one lug nut not safe and secure.
CONCORD, N.C. — NASCAR teams wrapped up the first day of testing with the Next Gen car on Monday at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Roval, getting a clearer view of what’s to come in the 2022 Cup Series. Part of that learning came from several hours of on-track shakedowns and part came from John Probst, NASCAR’s senior vice president of racing innovation.
Probst provided several updates about the Next Gen model’s progress during a midday availability, including news about the rules packages to be used next year. The update included briefings about what competition officials are working on with the car’s crashworthiness, its ability to disperse heat in the cockpit and reports of steering vibrations during testing.
“By and large, I would say we’re pretty pleased with what we see here,” Probst said. “We do have some guys working through steering, for sure. That’s something we’ll continue to work with them. It is something that they’re making some progress on right now, and it’s why we test, right? … This is the first time we’ve had this many cars run by the teams at the track. We had eight at Daytona, but here we have 21, so we’re going to find these little things here and there and that’s why we test.”
Monday’s session was completed without major incident on the 2.32-mile circuit, wrapping up eight minutes early because of increasing darkness in the course’s infield sections. Day 2 of testing began Tuesday at 9 a.m. ET, with the majority of the session scheduled to be live-streamed.
• NASCAR released two components to the 2022 rules package to teams on Oct. 1.
For road-course events, short tracks and ovals up to the size of Nashville and Darlington, teams will use a target engine output of 670 horsepower and a rear spoiler height of 4 inches — the same configuration teams tested with Monday. For intermediate-sized tracks, the horsepower target will be 550 with an 8-inch spoiler.
Probst said the 2022 rules package for the superspeedways at Daytona and Talladega has not been determined. The new car has been tested twice at the 2.5-mile Daytona oval — last December for single-car runs, and last month with eight cars to gather information in the aerodynamic draft.
Despite the reduction in horsepower from the current-generation car to the 2022 model, speeds were notably faster with Next Gen. Bigger tires, better brakes, cooler track conditions and potentially faster shifts with the car’s sequential gearbox all factored in.
Chase Briscoe turned the fastest lap on Monday’s speed chart at 104.115 mph at a time of 1 minute, 20.219 seconds — a figure that’s unofficial without technical inspection for the two-day test. That compares to the pole speed of 103.198 mph (1:20.901) set by William Byron the last time qualifying was held here in 2019, and the fastest lap from Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 –a 100.145 mph clocking by race winner Kyle Larson.
• Probst provided updates based on the findings of a June 30 crash test at Talladega Superspeedway, where a Next Gen model was fitted with a test dummy and driven into a retaining wall by robotic means.
Competition officials cleared the chassis for distribution to teams July 19, but Probst said Monday that measures are being taken to reduce the rigidity of the front and rear frame sections (or “clips”), allowing them to better disperse energy in a crash impact.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media
“So for example on the front clip, what we’ve done there is taken existing crossmembers and put little football cuts, we call them, so basically drilled holes in the crossmember,” Probst said. “We modified, one of the lower legs have like a little kick-in, with the idea of allowing more deformation in a crash situation. The idea there is we’re trying to spread the deformation out over a longer period of time, and actually, when we’re trying to work on the rear it actually helps when you work on the front as well. So, if, if we’re able to spread out the load earlier in the crash, it actually helps later in the crash.”
Probst said he anticipated teams having new or retrofitted parts with those structural changes to the frame and suspension in place when teams return for an organizational test on Charlotte’s 1.5-mile oval Nov. 17-18. He also added that the changes are not expected to alter the car’s durability during close-contact racing.
“We were all pleased to continue moving forward with the test plan and releasing cars for testing. As we do, like I said, make a punch list of things that we would like to make better, not all of them related to the severity of the crash but sometimes just how things break and in the like. So we’ve implemented some of those changes to the clip, and to some of the suspension parts.”
• Officials worked to address concerns about building heat inside the cockpit that arose during the most recent Next Gen test. Though Monday’s conditions — overcast and with temperatures barely breaking 70 degrees — didn’t mimic the late-summer swelter from Daytona, four teams took part in trying alternate cooling solutions.
Among those potential remedies were shorter exhaust pipes, which ended just before the door area — keeping the exhaust system from heating the area under the driver compartment. Probst said teams also tried out slots in the front and rear glass, plus added vents to improve air flow between the undertray and chassis.
• Probst also addressed issues that teams reported with their cars’ steering, saying the competition department is learning more about the vibration.
“As of right this moment, and including all the testing that we’ve done, none of that has been a durability issue,” Probst said. “It’s been more of a case of like set screws not holding tension on torsion bars and things like that. But I feel like we’ll fix that, move on at some point here, especially now that we’ve had more teams involved.”
• Probst also provided insights into potential additions to the Next Gen testing schedule, with the vehicle’s competition debut less than four months away. That included planned stops for tire testing at Bowman Gray Stadium’s quarter-mile, the dirt high banks of Wythe Raceway in Virginia and the reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Four more organizational tests are in the works, to be added to the existing Next Gen test schedule.
• Two cars — the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford driven by Austin Cindric and the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet driven by Daniel Suarez — featured chrome numbers or accents on their test cars’ paint schemes. A NASCAR spokesperson said reflective numbers will be allowed next season, but bound by certain parameters coming to the 2022 rule book and subject to approval by competition officials.
If ever there was a major test of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team’s mettle, it happened Sunday afternoon at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.
Kyle Larson and company entered the NASCAR Cup Series Bank of America Roval 400 as heavy favorites to advance to the Round of 8. The regular-season champion had six points-paying wins under his belt and has been as dominant as anyone at road courses this season. They had the power to control their own destiny. And then, they didn’t. Literally.
Early in the race, Larson relayed over the radio that his No. 5 Chevrolet was losing voltage — quickly. Teammate Alex Bowman, whose problem proved to be a separate issue in hindsight, voiced the same concern to add to the intensity.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
“Had a lot of different emotions throughout the middle portions of that race,” said Larson. “Thinking that this is so depressing and sad and crazy that I’m going to lose my shot at a championship because of an alternator issue.”
That issue — coupled with a bad day at Talladega Superspeedway — plummeted Larson below the elimination line by as many as 11 points in the live standings. For the first time in the 2021 playoffs, Larson’s title hopes were significantly in question.
But if there’s a will, there’s a way. And in crew chief Cliff Daniels’ mind, there were both.
“The guys did a great job to diagnose, and we had to come up with a plan on what to do to fix it,” said Daniels. “Had to think pretty fast on our feet. The tough part is, I try to operate with my gut feeling based on the information that’s right in front of me, the information we had that was very well-reviewed by me and Jesse (Saunders, car chief) and Steven (Legendre, engine tuner) for what we had to do. The pit crew was 100% onboard like we spelled out behind the pit box what our game plan was going to be. Made sense to do it the way we did.”
That spur-of-the-moment team meeting behind the pit box may have saved Larson’s championship hopes. After a caution came at the right time, the team was able to operate on the car and resolve the issue.
The No. 5 car rallied its way to the front of the field, overtaking Denny Hamlin on a late restart. The team never looked back en route to its series-high seventh checkered flag (not including the All-Star Race) this season.
“I’m glad I’m through. I’m glad I somehow got five more points to take into the next round for sure,” said Larson. “I think you look at probably where had I been in the same … you eliminate four cars out of this round, I’m much closer to the (elimination) line going into Martinsville, if I have an average first race, a bad second race, then we’re in an extra stressful situation going into Martinsville.”
The stress of elimination can mostly subside for now, as Larson regains his lead atop the playoff leaderboard — jumping back out to 42 points above the elimination line after the Roval rollercoaster.
The NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs resume with the Round of 8 opener Sunday, Oct. 17 at Texas Motor Speedway for the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Just three races remain before the Championship 4 at Phoenix Raceway.
CONCORD, N.C. — A top NASCAR official in charge of the Next Gen car’s development said that Goodyear tire tests are planned for two short tracks — historic Bowman Gray Stadium and Wythe Raceway’s half-mile dirt track.
John Probst, NASCAR’s Senior Vice President of Racing Innovation, spelled out other details — some final, some in-progress — for remaining tests of the NASCAR Cup Series’ 2022 vehicle Monday. The news came during Day 1 of the Next Gen car’s first organizational session at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.
The tire test for the Next Gen car at Bowman Gray is intended to prep for the Feb. 6 Clash at the Coliseum exhibition, which will be held in Los Angeles at a similar quarter-mile paved layout. Dates for that test at the Winston-Salem, N.C., venue have not been confirmed, Probst said.
The Wythe Raceway test will be held on the high-banked half-mile dirt layout in Rural Retreat, Va., on Nov. 16. Camping World Trucks driver and dirt-track veteran Stewart Friesen will drive the Next Gen car there to prepare for Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt-track event April 17. Probst said the selection of Friesen as the test driver was designed to prevent a Cup Series regular from getting a sneak preview of the Next Gen car’s performance on dirt.
An additional tire test is planned at a to-be-determined date for Atlanta Motor Speedway, which is undergoing a full repave and reconfiguration ahead of its two NASCAR race weekends next year.
Organizational tests had previously been announced for this week at the Roval, Nov. 17-18 at Charlotte’s oval layout, and Dec. 14-15 at Phoenix Raceway. Probst said an organizational test had also been established for Jan. 11-12 at Daytona International Speedway, in what could be considered a revival of the Preseason Thunder winter test days that last ran in 2014.
Probst said that three more organizational tests are likely to be scheduled, one at Martinsville Speedway, one at an intermediate-sized track (Las Vegas or Kansas, Probst indicated), and a third track also TBA — a road course, World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway and Homestead-Miami Speedway among those under consideration. “So we’re working through those scenarios, but there’d only be four total — Daytona counting as one of them next year,” Probst said.
The prospects of seeing Cup Series cars at Bowman Gray for the first time in 50 years, even if only for testing, has the ring of nostalgia to it. The tight circuit known as “The Madhouse” is NASCAR’s first weekly track, having hosted events since 1949. NASCAR’s top division competed at Bowman Gray from 1958-1971, and founder Bill France Sr. was active in the promotion of its earliest race meets.
The proposed quarter-mile track at the Los Angeles Coliseum takes inspiration from Bowman Gray Stadium’s layout, a flat quarter-mile around a football field. But a tire test there prompts the question of whether a similar one-off event could one day happen with Cup Series cars at the Madhouse.
“That’s fascinating you say that, but that’s for another part of our company to work on. I would say that that is right now 100% in preparation for the Coliseum. I think that it’s not a case that we’re going there, I don’t expect it to go more than about four or five hours. We just want to go there, turn a bunch of laps just to make sure that the tires — when we’re going through formats for that event — I think that we just want to know, can we run 150 laps in a row, can we run 75 laps in a row?”
Probst also hinted that a special guest appearance was possible.
“I think I won’t ruin it, but I think we’ll have a pretty cool driver for that, too. It’ll be a good story. … It’s not finalized yet, but it’ll be pretty cool.”
CONCORD, N.C. — Road-course racing used to be a source of apprehension for Tyler Reddick. The skin-crawling thought of mixing in right turns among the left, and the NASCAR Cup Series schedule’s recent expansion to a half-dozen twisty circuits only heightened the phobia.
Recent road-course runs suggest the fears are starting to subside, evidenced by Reddick’s Sunday surge to a runner-up finish on the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval. The Richard Childress Racing driver’s day was dotted by a pair of crucial miscues — one that left him nursing slight right-side damage early and another that had him playing damage control late with William Byron — but the outcome matched a Cup Series career-best result.
Reddick started 29th after his crash the previous week at Talladega skewed his performance metrics for Sunday’s Roval lineup. A scrape of the wall during the race’s opening stage left him second-guessing what the car’s potential could have been as he tried in vain to chase down the No. 5 Chevrolet of eventual race winner Kyle Larson.
“It does leave a ‘what if’ in your mind,” Reddick said post-race. “It’s like if I hadn’t crashed this car early in the race, and almost ended our day, it should have been a little bit faster.”
But Reddick’s No. 8 Chevy has shown glimmers of improvement in road-racing environs this year. He also won the pole position in qualifying for the Cup Series’ inaugural race at the Circuit of The Americas in May. The organization’s overall betterment also rubbed off on RCR teammate Austin Dillon, who historically hasn’t counted road racing as a strong suit but resided among the top five for certain stretches Sunday before settling for 15th place.
All of those components have gone a long way toward reducing Reddick’s goosebumps.
“I tell you what, when he got over to RCR in 2019, man, there wasn’t anything he dreaded more than road racing,” said Randall Burnett, the No. 8 team’s crew chief. “That’s all Tyler Reddick there. He’s put in the work and the effort to get better at these places, and it just kind of shows the talent this kid’s got. He’s unbelievable and able to adapt to a lot of things. Put in a lot of effort this winter, and they’ve put a lot of effort in our road-course cars to make them better. … He’s putting everything together, and we’re going to have a handful next year.”
Reddick acknowledged the extra effort on RCR’s own behalf, but also tipped his cap to the technical alliance shared with Kaulig Racing and road-racing veteran AJ Allmendinger, an Xfinity Series title contender and Cup Series winner at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course this season.
“Our team worked really hard in the offseason to clean up and make better what was our worst type of racing,” said Reddick, who made his first postseason appearance this season but was eliminated in the Round of 16. “A year ago here, I was absolutely terrible and just dreading getting to it, but now with this car, we felt like we had the best shot to win. It’s just a shame to not take advantage of it.”
Reddick also had his regrets about contact with William Byron as their contest for position heated up with 19 laps to go. Reddick admitted that he “just flat-out made a mistake” as he raced in close quarters with Byron and Larson, and that his bump cost the former a shot at winning — his only means of advancing from the Round of 12.
“We hated that to happen. We were racing him hard, and we’ve raced those guys clean all year long,” Burnett said. “Tyler’s one of the cleanest drivers out there. By no means intentional, you’ve just got the 5 here on your door and the 24’s right in front of you, you’re kind of in the middle and you sail off in there and the 24 checks up just a tick before you’re ready to and stuff like that happens. Like I said, it’s unfortunate and kind of ruined their chances of maybe winning the race, but we’re here racing our guts out, too. We’re racing for our life, and at end of the day, wind up still second.
“Still got a little bit to learn. The guy in the 5 car’s pretty good, so still got to figure out a way to beat him, and we’ll go from there.”
A senior NASCAR official said members of the sanctioning body would speak with rivals Chase Elliott and Kevin Harvick in an effort to mitigate their feud that has escalated through the Cup Series Playoffs.
Scott Miller, NASCAR Senior Vice President of Competition, addressed the latest in a series of incidents between the two drivers during a Monday morning appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
“We definitely have something brewing between those two,” Miller told SiriusXM. “We spoke to them after the thing at Bristol and we’ll circle around, and I don’t know if we’ll have them together or talk to them individually to see where they are right now, but we don’t need that continuing on and we’ll do what we think is necessary to kind of get that one calmed down.”
The conflict between the two sparked up during the postseason’s Round of 16 finale at Bristol Motor Speedway, where late-race contact prompted Elliott to impede Harvick’s progress in the closing laps. That triggered a heated conversation on pit road and a later talk inside a team hauler.
The two drivers suggested days later that their differences remained unresolved. A mid-race bump from Harvick that sent Elliott’s No. 9 Chevrolet into a retaining wall during Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 confirmed that notion. Elliott rallied to keep his playoff hopes alive, and Harvick’s crash 11 laps from the end terminated his postseason eligibility.
Rick Hendrick, team owner for both Elliott and eventual Roval race winner Kyle Larson, suggested post-race that NASCAR officials intercede to soothe the tensions.
“Well, I think they’re the only ones that can really stop it,” Hendrick said. “I hope they do because the crew chiefs and everybody can do the best they can, but it’s up to the drivers themselves. I’ve been in this situation before. NASCAR can handle it.”
Monday, Miller said competition officials handle driver conflicts on a case-by-case basis, adding that he hoped to avoid any sort of harsh punishment.
“Every situation, it can’t be a blanket statement, right? Every situation is different,” Miller said. “Now we’ve had Bristol, which one felt slighted on, and obviously yesterday, which the other feels slighted on, so hopefully we can put a truce in place there. But we will just continue to monitor the situation and try not to let it get out of control. We don’t want to park anybody. We want all the fans to see the drivers that they came out to see, so that’ll try to be a last resort. If we keep seeing things, then we will absolutely have to take some sort of action there.”