After a week off, the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to action with an inaugural visit to Naval Base Coronado for a race on Friday (7 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio).
The event will be the 13th points-paying race of the 2026 Truck Series season and the second street-course contest of the campaign. Layne Riggs won the first street-course race of the season, doing so at St. Petersburg in February.
Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson will pilot the No. 1 Tricon Garage Toyota in this weekend’s Truck contest. The Truck race will be the El Cajon, California, native’s second career Truck race and first since 2008 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Thirty-six trucks are entered into this weekend’s event.
Battlestations! After tackling the “Tricky Triangle” in Pocono Raceway, the NASCAR Cup Series next treks across the country to take on the 3.4-mile Qualcomm Circuit at Naval Base Coronado on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The visit to the California military base will be a first for all three of NASCAR’s national series, with the street-course layout adding a unique, one-of-a-kind flavor to the schedule. Shane van Gisbergen is the most recent street-course winner in NASCAR’s premier circuit, doing so last July at the Chicago Street Course.
The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts series transitions from the 2.5-mile Pocono Raceway to the 3.4-mile Naval Base Coronado for a race on Saturday (5 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The visit to the California military base will be a first for all three of NASCAR’s national series. The street-course race will act as the 18th points-paying race of the 2026 O’Reilly season.
Canadian Alex Labbé will drive the No. 0 SS GreenLight Racing Chevrolet for the third time this season, most recently doing so at Watkins Glen International in May, where he finished 19th. In four O’Reilly races this season, Labbé has three top-20 finishes.
Thirty-seven cars are entered into this weekend’s event.
NASCAR’s regular season reached another crucial point, with 10 races remaining before the NASCAR Cup Series’ 16-driver Chase field is set. Denny Hamlin’s bid for the Regular Season Championship gained strength with his third consecutive win in another masterful drive at Pocono Raceway, one of his favorite old haunts.
Several other noteworthy performances stood out from 400 miles around the “Tricky Triangle” in the Pennsylvania wilds, some for all the right reasons and some on the downturn. Those drivers will aim either to regroup or keep the pressure on as the Cup Series prepares to make a big Sunday splash with the inaugural San Diego street-course event at Naval Base Coronado (4 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
What happened: “It almost worked,” Reddick said of a long-run pit strategy late in Sunday’s Great American Getaway 400 that nearly helped the 23XI driver convert for his sixth victory of the season. Reddick rebounded from his only DNF of the year in the previous week’s race at Michigan International Speedway, but the bounce-back effect was offset by Denny Hamlin chopping further into his lead atop the Cup Series standings.
What’s next: Reddick’s advantage — once as high as 129 points after last month’s race at Watkins Glen International — has now shrunk to just 19 points as Hamlin has turned on the jets with a midseason surge. Reddick will potentially have road-racing expertise on his side as the circuit heads to San Diego and Sonoma Raceway in back-to-back weeks.
James Gilbert | Getty Images
2. William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Started: 9th
Finished: 3rd
What happened: Byron raved post-race about the balance of his No. 24 Chevy, which he said allowed him to make moves he hadn’t been able to pull off in months. The corresponding confidence helped him secure the team’s first top-five result since March 29 at Martinsville Speedway, providing him a one-spot bump in the Cup Series standings.
What’s next: Road courses statistically rank near the bottom of Byron’s career average-finish comparisons, though he has shown moments of glory on that track type — including a Watkins Glen win in 2023. The debut of the San Diego street course, though, holds plenty of uncertainty that Byron and the rest of the field will need to navigate. “A lot of unknowns,” he said post-race. “I’m kind of excited for it.”
Hannah Tallant | NASCAR Digital Media
3. Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Started: 24th
Finished: 8th
What happened: Some speed and some strategy were the right blend for Chastain and his No. 1 Chevy group, which turned a series of pit calls into a tire advantage near the race’s end. Chastain made the most of it, notching his first top-10 result on a non-drafting track this season.
What’s next: Chastain has qualified among the top five for both road-course events this year, starting off second at Circuit of The Americas and fourth at Watkins Glen. The outcomes of both races landed him outside of the top 25, but he’ll have an ace in teammate Shane van Gisbergen to lean on for advice.
Hannah Tallant | NASCAR Digital Media
THREE DOWN ⬇️
1. Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
Started: 35th
Finished: 28th
What happened: Preece sorely needed a positive finish after three consecutive weeks of DNFs. After dropping to the rear at the start because of unapproved adjustments, Preece was sitting 16th in the home stretch at Pocono until the fuel tank in his No. 60 Ford sputtered dry on his way to the white flag. The 35-year-old driver bemoaned the late-race communication breakdown and needed a push from RFK teammate Chris Buescher to reach the checkered flag. He was scored as the first driver one lap down.
What’s next: Preece enters San Diego still searching for his first Cup Series top-five finish on a road course. Perhaps worse, when the In-Season Challenge tournament begins the next week at Sonoma Raceway, Preece will draw road-racing star and heavy favorite Shane van Gisbergen in a first-round matchup, something he made light of in a Sunday evening social-media post.
David Jensen | Getty Images
2. Shane van Gisbergen, No. 97 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Started: 31st
Finished: 31st
What happened: The four oval races since SVG’s victory at Watkins Glen last month have been a mixed bag, and Pocono presented a second straight week of disappointment. Van Gisbergen’s No. 97 Chevrolet was one of nine cars caught up in the event’s biggest wreck, and he wound up two laps down by the checkered flag.
What’s next: The schedule takes a fortuitous turn with a pair of road courses in the next two weeks, including the street circuit inaugural in San Diego this weekend ahead of Sonoma on June 28. Knowing how SVG made his grand Cup Series entrance in the debut of the Chicago Street Race, the biggest of turnarounds might be approaching.
James Gilbert | Getty Images
3. Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford
Started: 11th
Finished: 34th
What happened: Logano earned points with a ninth-place effort in Stage 1, but a split in pit strategy put him back in the pack and right in the crosshairs of the same Stage 2 crash that corralled SVG and others. Logano’s No. 22 Ford sustained right-front damage in the melee, and he wound up four laps down as the last driver still running at the finish.
What’s next: Logano had assembled two top 10s in the last three weeks, but Sunday’s Pocono run thwarted that rhythm. “Just a matter of wrong place, wrong time for us today,” Logano said. “We were starting to build some good momentum over the last few weeks with some decent runs, so we need to get back in that rhythm again.”
For just the fourth time in series history, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will travel to White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, New Hampshire, for Saturday night’s running of the Thunder in the Mountains 200 (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing).
The quarter-mile asphalt oval, which opened for business in 1993, first hosted the Modified Tour in 2020. Four-time series champion Justin Bonsignore won the first Modified Tour event at the track with Doug Coby and Kyle Bonsignore also collecting victories within the last few years.
This year, more than 20 drivers are expected to chase the checkered flag at White Mountain Motorsports Park, which will host the seventh race of the 2026 Modified Tour season.
Tickets to Saturday’s Thunder in the Mountains 200 are available trackside. Below is everything you need to know about Saturday’s race.
White Mountain Motorsports Park will host the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour for the fourth time Saturday night. (Photo: Jaiden Tripi/ARCA Racing)
Thunder in the Mountains 200 at White Mountain Motorsports Park
Jon McKennedy seems to have figured something out.
The 2022 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion has won two of the last three events on the schedule — at Seekonk Speedway and Oxford Plains Speedway — allowing him to pull within nine points of championship leader Stephen Kopcik after six events this season.
McKennedy will attempt to keep that momentum going Saturday at White Mountain Motorsports Park during the Thunder in the Mountains 200. He has a best finish of fourth in his three previous White Mountain starts and will attempt to add a win to his ledger Saturday night.
Stephen Kopcik continues to lead the Modified Tour standings entering Saturday’s race at White Mountain. One season ago, Kopcik finished a close second to winner Kyle Bonsignore, which automatically makes Kopcik a favorite to win the Thunder in the Mountains 200 aboard the Wanick Motorsports No. 21.
Doug Coby, who won the second Modified Tour race held at White Mountain in 2020, returns to the series for another start in the Jett Motorsports No. 28. Ronnie Williams, who is fresh off a top-five finish in the most recent Modified Tour event at Oxford Plains Speedway, will again join the field Saturday night at White Mountain.
Dave Sapienza could be a sleeper contender during Saturday’s race. In his two previous starts at White Mountain, Sapienza has secured a pair of top-10 finishes. He’s one of only seven drivers to finish in the top 10 during at least two of the previous three series events at White Mountain.
Other notable entrants include defending Modified Tour champion Austin Beers, Patrick Emerling, Tyler Rypkema, Mike Christopher Jr., Eric Goodale, Matt Hirschman, Paulie Hartwig III and Jayden Harman, among others.
The complete entry list for Saturday’s Thunder in the Mountains 200 will be available later this week.
White Mountain Motorsports Park is a tight quarter-mile asphalt oval tucked into the White Mountains of New England. (Photo: Jaiden Tripi/ARCA Racing)
SCHEDULE: Saturday, June 20: Practice from 3 – 3:45 p.m. ET … Final practice from 3:55 to 4:25 p.m. ET … American Racer Pole Award qualifying at 6 p.m. ET … Start of the Thunder in the Mountains 200 at 8 p.m. ET (200 Laps / 50 Miles)
QUALIFYING: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Thunder in the Mountains 200 is limited to 28 starters including Provisional Positions.
TIRE ALLOTMENT: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is ten (10) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by NASCAR Officials, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event. A maximum of two (2) tires of the allotment may be used as change tires. The tire change rule is two (2) tires per stop. This includes “swapping” tires front to back.
RE-DRAW PROCEDURE: The fastest qualifier will spin the wheel to determine the number of drivers that will re-draw for their starting positions: 4, 6, 8 or 10 positions will re-draw. Once the fastest qualifier spins the wheel, NASCAR will have the various buckets ready to immediately start the re-draw procedure. Driver will re-draw in their qualifying order after qualifying has been completed (1 through 10, or however many are applicable). The pole position and/or any bonus point(s), if applicable, will be awarded to the fastest qualifier and will be the pole of record. If, due to adverse conditions, qualifying is canceled, the field will be set in accordance with the 2026 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Rule Book. The re-draw procedure will still take place regardless of how the field is set.
HICKORY, N.C. — Wherever Eloy Falcón competes, a smile hardly ever leaves his face.
That trait was prevalent Saturday at Hickory Motor Speedway for a good reason; it marked Falcón’s return to the United States after spending the first half of the year racing in his home country of Mexico. A NASCAR Drive for Diversity program alum, Falcón teamed with MCM Racing Development at Hickory with the goal of making a strong impression in his return stateside.
The night brought mixed emotions. Falcón was fastest in final practice for the Late Model Stock feature and qualified on pole, but his race ended after 50 laps due to a broken hub. Falcón was expectedly disappointed with such an outcome, yet he still found plenty of reasons to be optimistic.
Through all the highs and lows of Saturday, Falcón considered his first U.S. outing of 2026 a success.
“I’m really grateful to be back in the seat with a new team,” Falcón said. “I gained a lot of experience today. Obviously it was a frustrating ending for us. At the beginning, something [felt] weird on the car. It was out of our hands, but I’m really happy with all the effort the team [did] during the weekend. We had a pretty solid day.”
Eloy Falcón pictured during the ARCA Menards Series’ annual pre-race practice at Daytona International Speedway on Jan. 9th, 2025. (Photo: James Gilbert/ARCA Racing)
What started Falcón’s journey toward NASCAR was a Christmas present he received from his family at 5 years old: a go-kart.
The family began entering Falcón in events around Mexico once he had acquired enough practice. The success he enjoyed garnered plenty of attention, which led to an opportunity to contest the FIA-sanctioned F4 Spanish Championship in 2020.
The time Falcón spent in Europe did not yield the results he wanted, so he returned to his home country the following season to focus on the Mikel’s Truck Series, a key part of the developmental ladder in Mexico. Falcón’s first campaign in the Mikel’s Truck Series was a successful one that saw him record four top-five finishes.
One year later, Falcón was the Mikel’s Truck Series champion. Two victories and just one finish outside the top 10 were enough for the points lead, which helped him progress into the NASCAR Mexico Challenge Series full-time in 2023.
The Challenge Series sharing the track with the premier NASCAR Mexico Series was beneficial for Falcón in numerous regards. It gave him a chance to go up against some of the best drivers from his country and take away lessons that helped him chase a Challenge Series championship.
Just like in the Mikel’s Truck Series, a quiet-but-successful rookie season for Falcón in the Challenge Series translated to a title campaign the following year that saw him earn five victories, including a sweep of the final three events.
The accolades Eloy Falcón has accumulated in his home country of Mexico include titles in the NASCAR Mexico Challenge Series and Mikel’s Truck Series. (Photo: Rachel Mummey/ARCA Racing)
Falcón has leaned on several NASCAR Mexico Series alums throughout his journey. They include Rubén García Jr. and his current driving coach Rogelio López, both of whom are series champions who have also won in the ARCA Menards Series East. Their advice on competing in the U.S. guided Falcón as he started competing in the country more frequently.
“There is a lot of talent in Mexico, and there is a lot of good drivers,” Falcón said. “We run hard down there. All the experience [López and García] gave me was valuable for me. They helped me understand how the air works, how to run on [big tracks] and how to learn the differences [in the] cars and also the tires.”
Like García before him, Falcón found a pathway to the U.S. through Drive for Diversity, which he first applied for during his Mikel’s Truck Series title campaign. Falcón’s performance in the Drive for Diversity combine earned him a spot on Rev Racing’s roster for 2023, when he competed in Legends cars while balancing his commitments in Mexico.
The list of graduates from Drive for Diversity includes Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Daniel Suarez and Nick Sanchez, so Falcón understood the expectations placed upon him. Being embedded with Rev Racing made Falcón understand why there so many successful Drive for Diversity alums. Every part of the program encouraged growth.
“They helped me a lot to develop my abilities,” Falcón said. “On the program, they prepared me [physically and mentally], but we also had a [driver’s coach] with a lot of experience in Mark Green. All the crew chiefs, all the mechanics and all the experience they have, they gave me all the knowledge, and I worked really hard all those years.
“It was pretty, pretty good years learning all the stuff.”
Falcón’s final year with Drive for Diversity in 2025 was his most adventurous. After spending a couple years progressing through Legends and into Late Model Stocks, Falcón embarked on a part-time season across the ARCA Menards Series platform with Rev Racing.
The first race could not have gone any better. In the second event of the East Series season at Rockingham Speedway, Falcón climbed from 10th in a 26-car field to finish third behind William Sawalich and race-winner Brent Crews.
In his three other starts, Falcón completed all but two laps and secured two top-10 finishes at Michigan International Speedway and Iowa Speedway. Falcón was brimming with confidence by the end of the year, eager to continue his American odyssey and start competing for victories on a regular basis.
In his first ARCA Menards Series start of any kind last year, Eloy Falcón, No. 10, recorded a third-place finish at Rockingham Speedway. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)
Yet change was on the horizon for Falcón in a way he did not expect. He was left without an ARCA ride at the start of 2026 when Rev Racing ceased operations, forcing him to shift his focus back to Mexico for the time being.
Patience and persistence led Falcón to Max Calles, who established MCM Racing Development in the early 2020s with the goal of helping foreign-born drivers adjust to racing on American soil. While he wishes the circumstances were different, Calles is cherishing the chance to help develop Falcón as he resumes his quest to find sustainability in the U.S.
“It’s very sad that [Rev Racing] went away, because it built a lot of good drivers,” Calles said. “We’re not trying to be them, but we want to try and help the people who were around that and see how we can help them continue their careers. [Falcón] adapted quick, and I love having him around. He is from Mexico like I am, so it’s really cool to have this relationship.”
During MCM Racing Development’s lifespan, the program has fielded late models and Legends cars for drivers who hail from countries like Mexico, Brazil, Spain and others. Calles expanded his organization’s reach into the ARCA platform this season with Toro Rodriguez contesting races at Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway and Hickory.
Ahead of Saturday’s late model race, Falcón worked closely with Calles all week to ensure their No. 38 could reach its best possible performance. Both had experience at Hickory on which to rely, but Falcón felt the communication he shared with Calles was their biggest strength and translated to their early success.
Once the green flag waved, Falcón’s fortunes changed. After jumping the initial start, he began losing positions rapidly as he tried to find pace in his car while simultaneously managing his tires on Hickory’s abrasive surface. The broken hub in the feature’s closing moments prevented Falcón from regaining any lost ground.
Falcón knew his first race on U.S. soil in months was going to be both physical and mentally demanding at a track like Hickory. Saturday did not go in his favor, but Falcón is eager to build upon the strengths and weaknesses from the weekend so he can tackle his next Late Model Stock race with confidence.
“I need to learn more,” Falcón said. “I’m going to watch [a replay of] the race. I couldn’t run as I wanted, but [Hickory] is a track where you need a lot of laps. We’re going to take all this information home, and [Calles and I] are going to work together to make a faster car.”
Two additional races are planned for Falcón in Calles’ Late Model Stock in July, but there could be room for more events if the funding materializes. If everything goes the way Calles envisions, he believes Falcón could end up driving MCM Racing Development’s ARCA Menards Series car before the year ends.
Calles is taking everything with Falcón one step at a time. He knows Falcón has the talent to thrive in the U.S., so Calles wants to fulfill his role by providing Falcón everything he needs to take that next step forward.
“The main thing now is to get [Falcón] noticed in the U.S. again,” Calles said. “He is still trying to chase his career in the U.S., [so] hopefully we can win with him on this level and see if we can get some funding for him. We have a strong program in ARCA, and I feel like he can be a very good asset.”
Eloy Falcón’s journey has taken plenty of twists the past year, but he is ready to proudly represent his home country of Mexico while competing in the U.S.
Even though Falcón is just now returning to the U.S., he is by no means having a quiet year. Falcón broke through for his first NASCAR Mexico Series victory at Aeropuerto Internacional De Telum in April, defeating many of the same drivers he once idolized.
Mexico’s proud tradition of motorsports regularly carries over to the U.S. through drivers like Daniel Suárez, who in May became the first Mexican-born driver to win the Coca-Cola 600. Falcón is determined to continue that tradition and hopes his debut outing with MCM Racing Development restarts the momentum he enjoyed in the U.S. last year.
Falcón’s first stint in the ARCA Menards Series provided a preview. Now he wants to experience the euphoria of turning laps around the U.S.’s most prestigious tracks once again, something he believes is close to becoming a reality.
“At the beginning of last year, I made the test at Daytona, and it was like being in Disneyland,” Falcón said. “I was so happy to make this race. [It’s] still alive, that dream that I have. I want to be back on the wheel at good tracks and with good drivers. We’re going to work really hard, try to be [successful] and look for that win.
“When some doors close, others open. I think this is a new beginning, and I need to work really hard.”
A lot of unknowns await Falcón after Hickory. He still needs to find sponsorship and can do that by showing consistency across his planned starts with MCM Racing Development. Yet Falcón understands the best way to create clarity about his future is to win, something he has done plenty of times between the U.S. and Mexico.
No matter where Falcón’s racing journey takes him next, one thing is certain: He will have a smile on his face.
LONG POND, Pa. — All is right in the land of Legacy Motor Club lately.
John Hunter Nemechek and Erik Jones combined to impress at Pocono Raceway, with both qualifying inside the top 10 on Saturday and running well enough Sunday to finish there as well. Nemechek wheeled the No. 42 Toyota to a fourth-place finish — his first top five of 2026, tying his career-best result — while Jones motored the No. 43 Toyota to a sixth-place finish around the “Tricky Triangle,” each earning 41 points in Sunday’s contest.
Legacy M.C. has flexed its muscle in recent weeks, particularly through a runner-up effort for Jones one week earlier at Michigan, which followed an 11th-place run at Nashville. Pocono felt different, though, with both teams displaying speed Saturday and executing sterling performances Sunday at Pocono.
“It’s huge,” Nemechek told NASCAR.com. “I think that we’ve seen a lot of potential out of both the 42 and the 43 the last few weeks, probably the last month and a half overall. And it’s one team. We’re here, we push each other. We all work really close alongside each other. Our processes and procedures that we have in place, there’s a lot of things that make this one team, and the culture continues to grow that way. So it’s exciting to see speed from the 42 and 43.”
Nemechek led a career-high 42 laps Sunday after qualifying eighth and capitalizing on strong restarts and track position early. One early restart resulted in a multi-lap battle with Cup Series points leader Tyler Reddick, circling the 2.5-mile triangle side-by-side turn after turn. That experience is invaluable for Nemechek, who, with an average finish of 21.4 this season, typically finds himself in a mid-pack hornet’s nest.
“It’s way different,” Nemechek said. “It’s just like restarts, right? Like, how to execute restarts up front compared to in the back; how to execute passes when you’re side by side, racing for the lead. That was really one of the first instances that I’ve been able to do that in the Cup Series with the speed and potential that we had in our race car today and how well we executed today.
“Definitely still a lot to learn on my side — not even close to being, I feel like, at the top level to contend for race wins and stuff yet. But we’re working on that and being able to run up front and get the experience from running up front, executing restarts, and racing for the lead and how to position your car in order to drag them back and make them tight aero-wise.”
Jones, Nemechek’s veteran teammate, has typically done well at Pocono Raceway, even dating back to his days in ARCA Menards Series competition. He made sure his newfound momentum didn’t go to waste, scoring 40 or more points in consecutive weeks for the first time this year. His points gain Sunday propelled him three spots to a tie for 15th, placing him inside the provisional 16-driver cutline for The Chase with 10 races remaining in the regular season.
“We’ve got to just keep putting them together, you know?” Jones said. “This was a race where, honestly, we just ran to our ability. It was nothing more, nothing less. I feel like we were maybe a little better than the 5 (Kyle Larson) at the end, but sixth place is kind of where we were. Got a bunch of stage points, which was good, in the second stage, and we’re doing what we need to do to work towards these playoffs. Proud of the speed, proud of the effort, continued speed, and continued, just, cars that are driving good right now and hopefully we keep going.”
The unity Nemechek referred to was top of Jones’ mind as well, especially now that both Legacy Toyotas were up front and collected similar data to share in Monday’s competition meetings.
“It just makes everything in the company simpler,” Jones said. “I feel like (when) we’re going to have our meeting (Monday), John Hunter’s balance is going to be way more similar to what I’m fighting when he’s running up front instead of 15th or 20th. That makes everybody’s life easier when you’re trying to build cars and work on the same things. Not just the momentum and the confidence in the company, the people that work and build these cars put together better race cars, cleaner, nicer, that momentum builds in the shop, too, when everybody’s running well.”
The first four months of the 2026 Cup Series season have seemingly created a wide gap between the true contenders for the championship in the return of The Chase format and those that are just competing for a spot in the 16-driver field.
Tyler Reddick and Denny Hamlin are blitzing the field as we enter the summer stretch of tracks, while the likes of Ryan Blaney, Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson and Ty Gibbs are racing consistently enough to be potential competitors that can knock off Reddick and Hamlin by the time September comes around for the 10-race Chase.
In the latter half of the current top 16 after Sunday’s event at Pocono Raceway, there’s an established purgatory of talented drivers stuck in a funk that’s plagued their respective campaigns.
Looking at a group that consists of Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace and three-time Cup Series titleholder Joey Logano, this trio seemed like surefire locks to make the field of 16. Now, all three of their spots are in limbo thanks to a string of bad luck catalyzed by their own unforced errors, and at tracks where they had a bit more control of their destiny versus what’s to come.
While it was early in the season, both Wallace and Logano were once safely inside the top 10 in points, and it was futile to consider them drivers on the outside looking in as the push to The Chase ramped up. Now in mid-June, the No. 22 Team Penske driver finds himself 18th in points, 21 points off teammate Austin Cindric for the final provisional spot in the postseason. Wallace, now 13th, owns just a 43-point buffer to the cutline.
Keselowski was ninth after Watkins Glen, and it took just four races to bottom out with four finishes of 30th or worse in the last five races as he’s now the first driver outside the top 16.
If we set Keselowski, Wallace and Logano’s numbers post-Kansas, it’s been a nightmare for the trio.
Just four top 10s combined in a seven-race stretch between Talladega and Pocono. Wallace delivered the only top five at Michigan with a third-place run.
Average finish in that stretch among the three? 24.8. Not good.
So it’s only fitting that their woes would result in a direct collision course at Pocono as the trio was caught up in a Stage 2 incident down the frontstretch that ended Keselowski’s day and parachuted Wallace and Logano to finishes outside the top 20.
James Gilbert | Getty Images
And what lies ahead are current trends that don’t favor all three, and a wide array of tracks where managing points will be incredibly difficult.
Legacy Motor Club’s rise is apparent right now. Erik Jones vaulted to 15th in points with a second straight top 10.
Shane van Gisbergen, while similarly struggling like Keselowski, Wallace and Logano, could really run up the score over the next two weeks at Naval Base Coronado and Sonoma Raceway. Same goes for Michael McDowell, who may not contend with SVG for victories, but will stack the deck on points to be within striking range of the Chase bubble.
Christopher Bell and William Byron aren’t having great seasons for their standards, but their stocks are rising despite up-and-down finishes. Chase Briscoe is only getting better and rose to 12th after Pocono. Spire Motorsports teammates Daniel Suárez and Carson Hocevar (eighth and ninth in points, respectively) may be too fast for the bubble drivers to catch up to.
However, the next stretch of the schedule offers an equal mix of optimism and result horrors that could nearly paint the picture of who will be in The Chase and who will be left pondering what went wrong.
After back-to-back road courses in California, it’s off to Chicagoland Speedway in NASCAR’s return trip for the first time since 2019. Then, it’s EchoPark Speedway for Sunday night action and pack-racing that can really cause a stir. Following EchoPark, the first points race at North Wilkesboro Speedway since 1996. The slate then culminates with the crown jewel Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which can always be treacherous to navigate.
A lot of racing to go and still 10 races to decide the postseason fates of most of the field, but as we’ve seen how strong starts can quickly turn sour in sports (too soon, San Antonio Spurs fans?), it may already be desperation mode for Wallace, Keselowski and Logano to save their seasons.
With the field now set following Sunday’s Great American Getaway 400 at Pocono Raceway, NASCAR’s second In-Season Challenge is ready to begin, giving 32 drivers a chance to battle through five races for a $1 million prize at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Getting hot at the right time can change everything in NASCAR, and drivers know that five strong races could turn a long-shot contender into a millionaire, with last year’s finals being determined between No. 6 seed Ty Gibbs and the final driver into the tournament, Ty Dillon.
The road to glory will test drivers across nearly every discipline in NASCAR. The In-Season Challenge opens June 28 at Sonoma Raceway (3:30 p.m. ET, TNT Sports, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) before shifting to the returning intermediate layout of Chicagoland Speedway, the high-speed drafting action of EchoPark Speedway, a historic stop at North Wilkesboro Speedway and a finale at the iconic Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Let’s see who could prevail with seeding finalized!
Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing, No. 45 Toyota
Seed: 1
Comment: There have been no weaknesses in Reddick’s game in 2026, leading the regular-season championship battle since hoisting the Harley J. Earl Trophy in February at Daytona International Speedway. The five-time victor this year has proven to excel at all types of race tracks, with the lone exception being short tracks, and even that has improved from prior years. The No. 45 team feels like a near lock for at least the semifinals.
Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing, No. 11 Toyota
Seed: 2
Comment: Hamlin is white-hot, winning the last three Cup Series races before the seeds were locked. Admittedly, his biggest weakness remains road courses, but an opening-round matchup with Ty Dillon leaves optimism. And then, when the series returns to turning left, nobody is currently better.
Chase Elliott, Hendrick Motorsports, No. 9 Chevrolet
Seed: 4
Comment: While Elliott hasn’t won a road-course race in the Next Gen car, he’s always formidable and should stay clear of a first-round matchup with Noah Gragson. The No. 9 team has also flown under the radar at intermediate tracks in 2026, best in camp at HMS. Elliott should be considered one of the favorites for the entire tournament, though he does have potential contests against Bubba Wallace and Ty Gibbs to be among the last four.
Ty Gibbs, Joe Gibbs Racing, No. 54 Toyota
Seed: 5
Comment: You can’t forget about the reigning winner! The primary difference is that Gibbs had an atrocious start to the 2025 season, whereas he’s a bona fide championship threat in 2026. This set of tracks lays out perfectly for the No. 54 team, with the biggest question mark being EchoPark.
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STAY AWAY FROM:
Carson Hocevar, Spire Motorsports, No. 77 Chevrolet
Seed: 9
Comment: Unless there’s absolute chaos at Sonoma, it’s tough to see Hocevar advancing through the first round. He goes into road-course races expecting to be the weak link of the No. 77 team, with finishes of 28th and 31st in two attempts this year.
Bubba Wallace, 23XI Racing, No. 23 Toyota
Seed: 13
Comment: The luck of the draw did no favors for Wallace. He has improved tremendously at road courses, but has an average finish of 24.0 at Sonoma through seven starts. Meanwhile, he’s pinned against Michael McDowell, who has never finished worse than seventh in the Next Gen car at the 1.99-mile road course.
Joey Logano, Team Penske, No. 22 Ford
Seed: 18
Comment: Logano should never be discredited for his relentlessness. He might even sneak through to Round 2 in a contest against Erik Jones, who has never finished better than 19th in the Next Gen at Sonoma. But a likely matchup against Hamlin at Chicagoland, an area where Ford has struggled mightily in 2026, doesn’t bode well for the three-time champion.
Ryan Preece, RFK Racing, No. 60 Ford
Seed: 19
Comment: Preece may have received the worst draw at Sonoma, as he’ll have the unenviable task of trying to beat Shane van Gisbergen, arguably the best road-course driver to ever strap into a Cup Series car. Good luck!
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DARK HORSE:
Shane van Gisbergen, Trackhouse Racing, No. 97 Chevrolet
Seed: 14
Comment: Van Gisbergen has sailed to victory in six of the last seven road-course events, and has improved his craft tremendously at ovals, scoring a personal best fifth-place effort in the most recent intermediate race at Nashville Superspeedway. Fast forward to EchoPark and anything can happen, meaning it’s not unrealistic to see the No. 97 car in the semifinals at North Wilkesboro.
Zane Smith, Front Row Motorsports, No. 38 Ford
Seed: 24
Comment: Let’s go off the beaten path with this pick. Smith grew up racing karts and has a competitor in Hocevar (road courses aren’t his specialty) in the opening round. The No. 38 team hasn’t seen the deserved results in recent weeks, wrecking out at Michigan International Speedway and Pocono while competing inside the top 10. With either Daniel Suárez or Front Row teammate Todd Gilliland waiting in the wings at Chicagoland, Smith is a real sleeper to advance to the quarterfinals.