• NASCAR Cup Series
  • Xfinity Series
  • NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series

Cook Out 400 Race Results

Richmond Raceway

July 30th, 2023

Join now to earn points for watching the race! Thank you for visiting NASCAR Race Center. Fan Rewards members earn 50 points to check in to a race on the leaderboard.
Join now to earn points for watching the race! Earn 50 rewards points when you check in to the race. LEARN MORE Already registered? Click here to sign in

RESULTS

START POS

FINAL STATUS

LAPS COMPLETED

LAPS LED

POINTS

PLAYOFF POINTS

1

Chris Buescher

17 |

26

Running

400

88

49

5

2

Denny Hamlin

11 |

3

Running

400

20

49

0

3

Kyle Busch

8 |

2

Running

400

0

39

0

4

Joey Logano

22 |

23

Running

400

0

34

0

5

Ryan Preece

41 |

11

Running

400

0

41

0

6

Brad Keselowski

6 |

13

Running

400

102

43

1

7

Martin Truex Jr

19 |

10

Running

400

18

33

0

8

Aric Almirola

10 |

24

Running

400

0

32

0

9

Austin Dillon

3 |

17

Running

400

0

28

0

10

Kevin Harvick

4 |

8

Running

400

0

33

0

11

Chase Briscoe

14 |

20

Running

400

0

26

0

12

Bubba Wallace

23 |

5

Running

400

80

41

0

13

Chase Elliott

9 |

4

Running

400

0

31

0

14

Ryan Blaney

12 |

25

Running

400

2

23

0

15

Ty Gibbs

54 |

7

Running

400

0

25

0

16

Tyler Reddick

45 |

1

Running

400

81

39

1

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr

47 |

9

Running

400

0

20

0

18

Alex Bowman

48 |

15

Running

400

0

19

0

19

Kyle Larson

5 |

14

Running

400

0

18

0

20

Christopher Bell

20 |

29

Running

399

0

17

0

21

William Byron

24 |

6

Running

399

0

20

0

22

Michael McDowell

34 |

18

Running

399

9

15

0

23

Erik Jones

43 |

27

Running

399

0

14

0

24

Ross Chastain

1 |

19

Running

399

0

13

0

25

Todd Gilliland

38 |

16

Running

399

0

12

0

26

Austin Cindric

2 |

30

Running

399

0

11

0

27

AJ Allmendinger

16 |

36

Running

399

0

10

0

28

Noah Gragson

42 |

12

Running

398

0

9

0

29

Ryan Newman

51 |

32

Running

398

0

8

0

30

Justin Haley

31 |

28

Running

398

0

7

0

31

Harrison Burton

21 |

22

Running

397

0

6

0

32

Corey LaJoie

7 |

31

Running

397

0

5

0

33

Daniel Suárez

99 |

33

Running

396

0

4

0

34

Ty Dillon

77 |

34

Running

396

0

3

0

35

JJ Yeley

15 |

35

Running

396

0

0

0

36

BJ McLeod

78 |

21

Running

395

0

1

0

Join now to earn points for watching the race! Thank you for visiting NASCAR Race Center. Fan Rewards members earn 50 points to check in to a race on the leaderboard.
Join now to earn points for watching the race! Earn 50 rewards points when you check in to the race. LEARN MORE Already registered? Click here to sign in
  • POS 1 | LEADER

    headshot of Chris Buescher

    POS1

    LEADER

    Chris Buescher

    Driver badge number 17 |

  • POS 2 | 0.549

    headshot of Denny Hamlin

    POS2

    0.549

    Denny Hamlin

    Driver badge number 11 |

  • POS 3 | 0.817

    headshot of Kyle Busch

    POS3

    0.817

    Kyle Busch

    Driver badge number 8 |

Chris Buescher clinches playoff berth with Richmond win

RICHMOND, Va. — Chris Buescher capped RFK Racing‘s dominant day at Richmond Raceway with a trophy, holding off the field on a restart with three laps remaining to win the NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out 400 Sunday afternoon — his and the RFK team‘s first victory of the season.

Buescher and his teammate Brad Keselowski, a co-owner of RFK Racing, combined to lead a race-best 190-of-400 laps, with Buescher pacing the field for 88 circuits, the second-most he‘s led in a race in his eight-year Cup career. And it all results in an important automatic bid into the 16-driver playoff field with only four races remaining in the regular season.

MORE: Race results | At-track photos: Richmond, Road America

Buescher‘s No. 17 RFK Ford ultimately held off last week‘s race winner Denny Hamlin by a slight 0.549-second margin, although Buescher had held more than a five-second advantage on Hamlin‘s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota up until that caution flag flew for an accident involving Noah Gragson and Daniel Suárez in the closing laps.

“It was smooth sailing trying to take care of this Fastenal Mustang,” Buescher said with a smile. “It was so good and trying to take care of it there, and about the time (crew chief) Scott (Graves) said over the radio ‘It‘s working perfect, keep it up,‘ and then there‘s a caution.

“But we were so strong during the race, I had a good feeling there about it. So awesome to pull it off. I‘m proud of everybody. That was a long way from the back.‘‘

That late-race yellow flag was the only caution flag on the day other than the two stage breaks. And the afternoon racing at the Richmond 0.75-mile track was physically demanding under intense heat — over 130 degrees Fahrenheit inside the race car. Seventh-place finisher Martin Truex Jr. said smiling: “My cheek feels like it‘s sunburnt. It was like a hair dryer blowing on you.‘‘

The 30-year-old Texas native Buescher, however, handled the heat and the field, starting 26th but steadily working his way forward en route to his third career Cup win. He first cracked into the top five by Lap 160 of the 400-lap race, chasing down then-leaders Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, Keselowski and Hamlin.

Though the race featured so many green-flag laps, issues on pit road were what thwarted several winning efforts, not problems racing on the track.

Wallace‘s 80 laps out front mid-race in the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota marked the most laps led in a race in his career. But he ultimately had to play catch-up when his team had a slow tire change during a green-flag pit stop on Lap 175. He finished 12th.

With 56 laps remaining, race polesitter and Wallace‘s 23XI teammate Reddick was flagged for a commitment-line violation coming to pit road for a green-flag stop at Lap 338, relegating him from running second to desperately trying to remain on the lead lap with the laps counting down. He finished 16th after leading 81 laps early — every lap of Stage 1 en route to claiming his fourth stage win.

Similarly, Keselowski suffered a misstep in the pits after his No. 6 RFK Ford led a race-best 102 laps. He made an awkward turn into his pit during a green-flag stop with 115 laps remaining, costing him just enough time to allow his teammate Buescher to take the lead with under 100 laps remaining.

“We wanted to finish one-two, that‘s the ultimate goal, but we still had a heck of a day,‘‘ said Keselowski, who finished sixth and won Stage 2, his third stage win of the season.

RELATED: Catch all the highlights in Race Rewind

Richard Childress Racing‘s Kyle Busch — the all-time active winner at Richmond — finished third, his best showing on a short track this season. Team Penske‘s Joey Logano rallied in the late laps to finish fourth, and Stewart-Haas Racing‘s Ryan Preece turned in his best showing of the season with a fifth-place run.

Keselowski and Truex finished sixth and seventh, followed by SHR‘s Aric Almirola, Richard Childress Racing‘s Austin Dillon and SHR‘s Kevin Harvick. Chase Briscoe finished 11th, giving SHR one of its best full-team efforts of the season, with all four cars inside the top 11.

Every car in the 36-car field finished the race, the first time the full field was running at the end since 2018.

Buescher is now the 12th driver to win a race in 2023, leaving four playoff positions still available for a new winner or the top drivers in points. Harvick and Keselowski hold more than a 100-point advantage on the 16th-place elimination line. Wallace holds a 54-point advantage, and Front Row Motorsports driver Michael McDowell holds an 18-point buffer on Joe Gibbs Racing rookie Ty Gibbs for that 16th place. Kaulig Racing‘s A.J. Allmendinger is 22 points behind McDowell.

Four races remain to settle the field for the 2023 NASCAR Playoffs. The series moves north next week for Sunday‘s FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Harvick is the defending race winner.

Note: Post-race technical inspection concluded without issue, confirming Buescher as the race winner.