• NASCAR Cup Series
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RESULTS

START POS

FINAL STATUS

LAPS COMPLETED

LAPS LED

POINTS

PLAYOFF POINTS

1

William Byron

24 |

18

Running

415

88

46

5

2

Kyle Larson

5 |

1

Running

415

86

53

1

3

Chase Elliott

9 |

3

Running

415

64

49

0

4

Bubba Wallace

23 |

2

Running

415

0

51

0

5

Ryan Blaney

12 |

9

Running

415

0

32

0

6

Joey Logano

22 |

6

Running

415

84

42

0

7

Tyler Reddick

45 |

19

Running

415

0

30

0

8

Alex Bowman

48 |

10

Running

415

0

34

0

9

Ryan Preece

41 |

22

Running

415

0

28

0

10

Chase Briscoe

14 |

5

Running

415

8

38

0

11

Denny Hamlin

11 |

8

Running

415

66

40

1

12

Erik Jones

43 |

17

Running

415

0

25

0

13

Todd Gilliland

38 |

16

Running

415

0

24

0

14

Ross Chastain

1 |

12

Running

415

0

25

0

15

Chris Buescher

17 |

30

Running

414

0

22

0

16

Kyle Busch

8 |

11

Running

414

0

22

0

17

Carson Hocevar

77 |

25

Running

414

0

20

0

18

Martin Truex Jr

19 |

4

Running

414

0

25

0

19

Ty Gibbs

54 |

15

Running

414

0

18

0

20

Noah Gragson

10 |

26

Running

414

0

17

0

21

Michael McDowell

34 |

35

Running

414

0

16

0

22

Daniel Suárez

99 |

21

Running

414

13

15

0

23

Austin Cindric

2 |

14

Running

414

6

14

0

24

Brad Keselowski

6 |

13

Running

414

0

13

0

25

Josh Berry

4 |

7

Running

413

0

15

0

26

Kaz Grala

15 |

31

Running

413

0

11

0

27

Josh Williams

16 |

33

Running

413

0

0

0

28

Daniel Hemric

31 |

36

Running

413

0

9

0

29

Ricky Stenhouse Jr

47 |

23

Running

413

0

8

0

30

Justin Haley

51 |

27

Running

413

0

7

0

31

Zane Smith

71 |

24

Running

412

0

6

0

32

Corey LaJoie

7 |

32

Running

412

0

5

0

33

Harrison Burton

21 |

34

Running

412

0

4

0

34

Austin Dillon

3 |

28

Running

412

0

3

0

35

Christopher Bell

20 |

20

Running

411

0

2

0

36

John H. Nemechek

42 |

29

Accident

396

0

1

0

37

David Starr

66 |

37

Steering

311

0

0

0

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  • POS 1 | LEADER

    headshot of William Byron

    POS1

    LEADER

    William Byron

    Driver badge number 24 |

  • POS 2 | 0.550

    headshot of Kyle Larson

    POS2

    0.550

    Kyle Larson

    Driver badge number 5 |

  • POS 3 | 0.790

    headshot of Chase Elliott

    POS3

    0.790

    Chase Elliott

    Driver badge number 9 |

William Byron caps emotional, memorable day for Hendrick Motorsports with Martinsville victory

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — William Byron has a penchant for milestones. Last year, Byron picked up the 300th NASCAR Cup Series victory for Hendrick Motorsports at Texas Motor Speedway.

In Sunday’s Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway, he got another.

In a race that went into NASCAR Overtime, Byron led an unprecedented 1-2-3 finish for owner Rick Hendrick at the 0.526-mile short track as the organization celebrated its 40th anniversary in NASCAR’s premier division.

In front of a throng of employees and supporters gathered in tents overlooking Turn 2, Hendrick became the only organization to sweep the podium positions in a Cup race at Martinsville. Byron’s victory was the 29th for Hendrick Motorsports at the track, the most for an organization at a single NASCAR venue.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos 

“Just so proud of everyone at Hendrick Motorsports,” Byron said. “Grew up a big Hendrick fan. To be here for the 40th anniversary, all that goes into just this organization, all the people, it’s all about the people. Just want to thank Mr. Hendrick and (wife) Linda and everyone involved.

“It’s pretty awesome. Badass to win at Martinsville. We’ve been struggling at the short tracks. Just kept inching up on it. I’ve got a great team. They just kept my head in it. It stunk to do a restart there at the end like that, but that’s the way it goes.”

An early green-flag pit stop proved the difference for the driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet, who earned his third victory of the season, his second at Martinsville and the 13th of his Cup career.

With Denny Hamlin in the lead, crew chief Rudy Fugle called Byron to pit road on Lap 297 as the first of the lead-lap drivers to get fuel and fresh tires. Hendrick teammates Kyle Larson, the pole winner, and Chase Elliott followed a lap later.

The early stops allowed the Hendrick drivers to leap-frog Hamlin, who pitted on Lap 299 and could not advance past the fourth position before the caution for John Hunter Nemechek’s accident in Turn 4 on Lap 398 of 400 sent the event to overtime.

On Lap 310, Byron passed Elliott for the ninth position, and as the drivers ahead of him made pit stops, he worked his way forward, passing Daniel Suárez for the lead on Lap 327 before Suárez came to pit road.

Byron led the next 86 laps, and after Elliott was credited with leading Lap 413 at the overtime restart, Byron surged ahead for the final two circuits and crossed the finish line 0.550 seconds ahead of Larson.

SHOP: Buy William Byron winner gear

“Congrats to William,” said Larson, who won the first 80-lap stage wire-to-wire. “He did a really good job. Kind of schooled us all there after that green flag stop. Did a really good job passing all of us. He was able to set a good pace. Still get through traffic good.

“My car felt really good. I think we were all kind of the same speed, honestly. Just lost a little bit of track position there in the second stage. Was never able to overcome it.”

Byron held a lead of more than two seconds before the fifth and final caution of the race. On the overtime restart, he survived a bump from Elliott, who slipped to third behind Larson at the finish.

WATCH: Byron discusses memorable win for Hendrick | Larson on runner-up finish

Bubba Wallace ran fourth, followed by reigning series champion Ryan Blaney. Joey Logano, Tyler Reddick, Alex Bowman, Ryan Preece and Chase Briscoe completed the top 10. Hamlin, who pitted for fresh tires before the overtime, restarted 10th and came home 11th.

“We were just trying to do anything we could to steal one with our Sport Clips Toyota,” Hamlin said. “The tires didn’t wear enough to matter. We saw that when Joey (Logano) stayed out on those 80-lap lefts and led most of the stage (Stage 2).

“Tires didn’t wear, and we just struggled to pass all day. Once I came out of that cycle, third or fourth, that’s kind of just where I stayed.”

Larson, who led 86 laps, took over the series lead by 14 points over Martin Truex Jr., who finished 18th on Sunday, and by 17 over Hamlin.

The only negative aspect of the Hendrick party was the absence of the team owner, who underwent knee replacement surgery and couldn’t attend. But NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon was there to serve as grand marshal and represent the organization.

“These guys, these three guys, as well as Bowman, they drove their butts off,” Gordon said. “How about that William Byron, the 24 car? Every time we have a milestone day or opportunity or moment, he steps up.

“He got number 300. This is going to be a huge win for him and the whole organization.”

MORE: 2024 Cup Series schedule | 2024 Cup Series standings

The Cup Series will next head to the Lone Star State to race at Texas Motor Speedway on April 14 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Martinsville garage concluded without issue, confirming Byron as the race winner.