Connect with us

Motorsports

CHEVROLET NCS AT MICHIGAN: Post-Race Report – Speedway Digest

TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 RESULTS: POS. DRIVER 5th – Kyle Larson 6th – Ross Chastain 8th – Kyle Busch · In a race that came down to fuel mileage, it was Kyle Larson and the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team that led Chevrolet to the checkered-flag at Michigan International Speedway – earning a fifth-place […]

Published

on


TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 RESULTS:

POS. DRIVER

5th – Kyle Larson

6th – Ross Chastain

8th – Kyle Busch

· In a race that came down to fuel mileage, it was Kyle Larson and the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team that led Chevrolet to the checkered-flag at Michigan International Speedway – earning a fifth-place finish in the FireKeepers 400. Struggling with the balance of his Chevrolet throughout much of the race, the combination of veteran leadership by crew chief, Cliff Daniels, and the experience of former Cup Series Champion, Kyle Larson, kept the team in the fight until the end to claim their series-leading ninth top-five finish of the 2025 season.

· A pair of Team Chevy teammates saw their race win contention end in heartbreak in the closing laps of the 400-mile race. Pacing the field at his home track, Michigan native, Carson Hocevar, saw the chances of his first career victory in NASCAR’s top division end when the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet team suffered a flat left-rear tire. Sharing a disappointing end to the day was William Byron and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team. Running close on fuel mileage with the race hitting a single-digit lap count, Byron lost the top position to race winner, Denny Hamlin, with just three laps to go – ultimately having to bring his Chevrolet to pit road on the final lap for fuel to finish in the 28th position.

· Despite the finish, William Byron posted yet another strong points day – collecting a race-high 51 points to maintain the point lead by 41 points over his Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Kyle Larson.

Chevrolet’s all-time NASCAR Cup Series statistics at Michigan International Speedway:

Wins: 26

Poles: 27

Top-Fives: 187

Top-10s: 392

Chevrolet’s season statistics with 15 NASCAR Cup Series races complete:

Wins: 5

Poles: 7

Top-Fives: 30

Top 10s: 64

Stage Wins: 15
UP NEXT: The 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez with the Viva Mexico 250 on Sunday, June 15, at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on Amazon Prime Video, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Post-Race Driver Quotes:

Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Finished: 6th

“We saved fuel the whole second-half of the run, so we were fine there at the end and I was able to start pushing hard again. I couldn’t really make much more lap time. You’re off the gas for 20 laps and you think – oh, I’m giving up all this lap time, and you go and get a tenth back on a big track like this. I think we finished about where we should have. When the No. 11 (Denny Hamlin) passed me on that last run, I was like, I don’t have that, so hats off to those guys. They’ve been impressive. We just haven’t been quite that good to drive up and pass those guys, but it was a solid sixth-place finish for the No. 1 Busch Light Apple Chevrolet team.”

Do you think you’re gaining on it?

“Oh yes, for sure. It’s good times at Trackhouse Racing right now.

Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Finished: 5th

The race came down to fuel saving. How difficult is it to maintain saving fuel, but you’ve got guys with a little bit more fuel running you down?

“Early in the run, I was actually surprised with how easy it was to save fuel and kind of stay attached to the No. 77 (Carson Hocevar) and the No. 24 (William Byron). I thought I was in good shape there and I was hopeful that I had a big enough gap from the group behind us that maybe we could maintain that gap; those guys would run out of fuel in front of me and we could win. But they were charging hard and my balance wasn’t very good. I really faded there with 12 laps or so to go, so because of the balance being bad, I could save more fuel naturally. I just kind of had to nurse it home from there.

We didn’t have a good No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet today, but we still got a top-five finish out of it. I’m happy about the effort and hopefully we can have some more speed these next coming weeks and just run in the top-five more often. Days like today aren’t the most fun, but they feel really good, too. Proud of the whole team. Wish we could have gotten a win for Chevrolet today, but we’ll have to try again next year.”

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

Finished: 17th

“Just a hard fought day for our No. 16 group. I needed to be a little bit better, definitely made some mistakes for our race team and tried to get them back on the final restart. I felt like we got pretty close to where we probably should have been running, just more disappointed in myself today. I need to be a little bit better, but we fought hard and got everything out of it at the end there. We had to save a little bit of fuel, probably lost two spots in doing that, but at the end of the day, I think about 14th to 17th was about all we had. We did a fairly good job of maximizing our day and we’ll go to Mexico City and try to win the race.”

Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident in Stage Two.

Finished: 36th

Bowman on the accident that ended the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet team’s day early at Michigan International Speedway:

“It just looked like the No. 2 (Austin Cindric) got into the No. 41 (Cole Custer) or he was in a bad aero spot, something like that. The No. 41 got loose and at that point, being on the outside, when they get into you, you’re just along for the ride. Really quickly turned the car into the outside wall and it was a massive crash. Hate it for our No. 48 Ally Chevrolet team and everyone at Hendrick Motorsports. We just have to keep digging. It’s been a really bad two months for us, but we just have to keep working hard.”

How do you find the positives when we have a new racetrack next weekend in Mexico City and another couple of road courses in the next five weeks, with this group and speed you guys have had?

“We’ve had a lot of speed and a lot of good race cars. Obviously today, we were off from where we needed to be. But just the support that we have from Rick (Hendrick), Jeff (Gordon) and everybody at Hendrick Motorsports, they’ll give us the tools we need to get turned back around. We just needed to get pointed back in the right direction. We’re a much better race team than this.”

Michael McDowell, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Finished: 30th

“It was a rough day across the board for the No. 71 Delaware Life Chevrolet team. We got some track position about midway through. We made some improvements, but we just didn’t have it for you. And then right there at the end with five laps to go, we ran out of fuel. We went from a top-15 day to a 30th-place finish. That’s no fun, but we’ve got Mexico City next weekend and we’re looking forward to that.”

Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Finished: 14th

“It was an OK day for the No. 99 Jockey Infinite Cool Underwear Chevrolet team. We had speed on the long run, but on the short runs, we were getting destroyed. We were not super-fast on the straights… we struggled a lot on the straights, more than I was expecting. Overall, we rescued an OK day, but we need more.”

GM PR



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Motorsports

Chase Elliott wins Atlanta with last-lap pass for the lead on Brad Keselowski

Chase Elliott put on a thrilling show at his hometown track, making a last-lap pass of Brad Keselowski to earn his first victory of the 2025 season and lock into the Cup Series playoffs. Keselowski finished second EchoPark Speedway (formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway), followed by Alex Bowman, Tyler Reddick and Erik Jones. Elliott, […]

Published

on


Chase Elliott put on a thrilling show at his hometown track, making a last-lap pass of Brad Keselowski to earn his first victory of the 2025 season and lock into the Cup Series playoffs.

Keselowski finished second EchoPark Speedway (formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway), followed by Alex Bowman, Tyler Reddick and Erik Jones.

Elliott, who lives in Dawsonville, Georgia, led nine time for 41 laps in his No. 9 Chevrolet, but before leading the final circuit, the seven-time Most Popular Driver most recently had been in first on Lap 225 of 260.

19 wreck.jpg

Several contenders were out early after a crashfest at EchoPark Speedway in Atlanta.

The 2020 Cup Series champion was among nine drivers who elected to stay on track instead of pit before the final restart with 28 laps remaining. After falling as far as eighth with 10 laps remaining, he charged back to the front with some timely drafting help from Bowman, his Hendrick Motorsports teammate, and became the 12th winner of the 2025 Cup season.

“Unbelievable,” Elliott told TNT’s Marty Snider after his second win at the speedway south of Atlanta. “How about that? Are you kidding me? I never in my life. This is unbelievable. Thank you guys so much. What a special car. It was a lot of fun. This right here is something I’ll never forget.”

There were six lead changes in the final 10 laps between Elliott, Keselowski Bowman, Zane Smith and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Keselowski led seven times for 46 laps, including the last five before Elliott snatched the win.

“(Elliott) got a great push from (Bowman),” Keselowski told TNT’s Alan Cavanna. “If those guys would race, I could hold them off, but when they double-teamed me like that, it was the same thing when we had a coupe of teammates, we were able to hold them off. We lost that at the end, and they were able to double-team me. Good effort, led a lot of laps, in position. I don’t think there was anything I could do differently. Just put ourselves in position.

“Every loss hurts. I don’t dwell on it. We’ll go onto next week and try to win.”

Said Bowman: “My car was really good, but I was pretty bottom dependent just with how our handling was. I’d say that win was a little popular, so congrats to the 9 team and Chase. Glad to have a Hendrick car in victory lane. Wish it was us, but we had a really fast 48 after we crashed. Just needed to not lose control of the race. That was hard to do. Everybody that led lost control of the race. I just led at the wrong time, I guess.”

It’s the 20th career Cup victory for Elliott, who ended a 44-race winless streak dating to April 14, 2024 at Texas Motor Speedway.

“I just think that, honestly, all the cards fell on the right places there those last couple laps,” Elliott said. “What a crazy race, man. I don’t know if y’all had fun, but it was wild from my seat. I’m so glad we got to run that thing out there to the end. Some great partners… Chevrolet, say hey to Mr. Hendrick at home. Thanks for sticking with me, pal, and yeah, just again, thanks to all you guys because this right here is … you can’t dream of this.”

He was one of only four of 40 drivers who avoided getting in an accident during the 260-lap race whose complexion was significantly altered by an 18-car crash on a Lap 69 restart.

Among those eliminated in the wreck: pole-sitter Joey Logano, In-Season Challenge top seed Denny Hamlin, Ross Chastain, Daniel Suarez, Chase Briscoe and William Byron.

NACARMedia Atlanta (5).jpg

The Lap 70 crash involved the top two seeds and several other contenders.

I don’t know why we see guys pushing like dummies early down the backstretch,” said Corey LaJoie, who finished 39th in his return behind the wheel after five races as a TV analyst on Prime. “I don’t know what we’re doing. We just started the stage. I don’t know why we’re pushing like we’re damn bumper cars at Frankie’s Fun Park, but that’s not to be surprised. I think there are a lot of guys who don’t make wise decisions driving these things on speedways. Unfortunately, we were right smack in the middle of it.”

The cleanup caused the second red flag of the event.

The race was stopped earlier for about 15 minutes after a rain shower on Lap 37.

There were 16 laps remaining in the first stage on the ensuing restart, and the racing turned furious after the red flag. The chaos finally broke loose with four laps remaining in the stage as Christopher Bell lost control of his No. 20 Toyota in a Turn 4 wreck that also collected Ryan Blaney, Bubba Wallace, AJ Allmendinger and Austin Dillon.

Blaney’s No. 12 Ford was badly damaged, and he was eliminated in last place — his sixth DNF of the season.

“Story of our year: Getting caught up in other people’s garbage,” Blaney said. “As soon as I feel like we get it going pretty good and find some momentum, we never really seem to have things going our way. Tried to flip the stage and was right in the middle of it. Stinks and that’s the way it goes sometimes.”

Blaney endured the worst of a rough night for Team Penske, which also had Logano and Austin Cindric eliminated in wrecks. Josh Berry, whose No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford is prepared by Penske, also was knocked out with crash damage.

Stage 1 winner: Cindric

Stage 2 winner: Reddick

Next up: Sunday, July 6, 2 p.m. ET at the Chicago Street Race on TNT.





Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals Saturday preview

In typical Summit Motorsports Park action, NHRA Mission Foods’ top pros kicked off with two rounds of exciting qualifying, including a wild night session under the lights. The event is No. 10 of 20 races this year in the NHRA Mission Foods Pro series, and it will include Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock, and […]

Published

on


In typical Summit Motorsports Park action, NHRA Mission Foods’ top pros kicked off with two rounds of exciting qualifying, including a wild night session under the lights.

The event is No. 10 of 20 races this year in the NHRA Mission Foods Pro series, and it will include Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock, and Pro Stock Motorcycle, along with the Flexjet NHRA Factory Stock Showdown, the Johnson’s Horsepowered Garage NHRA Mountain Motor Pro Stock class, Holley EFI NHRA Factory X, and 10 NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series classes, meaning there will be 17 racers honored with the treasured Norwalk Ice Cream Scoop, as well as an NHRA Wally.

Saturday’s highlights will also include the GETTRX Pro Stock NHRA All-Star Callout in addition to the latest round of the Mission #2Fast2Tasty NHRA Challenge, which will pit the semifinal finishers from the recent Richmond event in a race for bonus cash and additional points. These rounds are run concurrently with Saturday qualifying.

On Friday, Justin Ashley powered his SCAG dragster to a 3.752 at 330 mph to earn the pole, barely holding off Antron Brown’s 3.755 and Tony Stewart, who blasted to a 3.755 while blowing up in the lights. In fact, Stewart exploded an engine in grand fashion on the first pass as well. Brittany Force, Shawn Langdon, Dan Mercier, Spencer Massey and Josh Hart rounded out the top eight. Lex Joon sits on the bump.

Veteran Cruz Pedregon was the class of the Funny Car field, delivering the only run in the 3.80s. Pedregon went 3.890 at 318 mph, with Austin Prock not far behind with a 3.900. Stacked behind them are Ron Capps (3.908); Jack Beckman (3.913) and Matt Hagan (3.926). The top half of the field also included Alexis DeJoria, Hunter Green and Dan Wilkerson. Paul Lee ran 4.22 to hold the 16th spot and there are 21 Funny cars on the property, which means there should be plenty of bumping and shuffling on Saturday.

With three previous wins at Summit Motorsports Park, Greg Anderson will be looking to add a fourth. The reigning champion got off to a good start qualifying his HendrickCars.com/Summit Racing Equipment Camaro on the provisional pole with a 6.594. Anderson was chased by team drivers Dallas Glenn (6.596) and Matt Hartford at 6.604. With a spread of just .018 of a second, you’ll find Greg Stanfield, Eric Latino, Cody Coughlin, Erica Enders and Cory Reed in fourth through eighth respectively.

Saturday’s action ramps up with the GETTRX Pro Stock NHRA All-Star Callout, where eight of the top drivers will race for $40,000! The matchups include Anderson vs Enders; Glenn vs Troy Coughlin Jr.; Hartford vs Latino; and Aaron Stanfield vs Jeg Coughlin Jr.

Matt Smith, who like Anderson is looking for his fourth Norwalk win, leads Pro Stock Motorcycle qualifying after two sessions, riding to a 6.824 on his Buell. John Hall, also on a Buell slotted in behind Smith with a 6.832. Also in the 6.80s was Ron Tornow (6.874) followed by the Vance and Hines machine of Gaige Herrera (6.888). Rounding out the top eight was Angie Smith, Richard Gadson, Jianna Evaristo and Marc Ingwersen.

2024 EVENT WINNERS
Antron Brown, Top Fuel; Bob Tasca III, Funny Car; Aaron Stanfield, Pr0 Stock; Gaige Herrera, Pro Stock Motorcycle
.
MOST EVENT VICTORIES
Steve Torrence, 3, TF; Jack Beckman, 3, FC; Greg Anderson and Erica Enders, 3 PS; Matt Smith, 3, PSM

TRACK RECORDS
Top Fuel – 3.666 sec. by Brittany Force, June ‘22; 337.15 mph by Doug Kalitta, June ’24.
Funny Car – 3.853 sec. by Austn Prock, June ’24; 336.82 mph by Bob Tasca III, June ‘24.
Pro Stock –  6.523 sec. by Erica Enders, July ’14; 212.63 mph by Erica Enders, July ’14.
Pro Stock Motorcycle – 6.698 sec. by Gaige Herrera, June ‘24; 201.58 mph by M. Smith, June ‘21

NATIONAL RECORDS
Top Fuel – 3.623 sec. by Brittany Force, Sept. ‘19, Reading; 341.59 mph by Brittany Force, April. ‘25, Charlotte
Funny Car – 3.793 sec. by Robert Hight, Aug. ’17, Brainerd; 341.68 mph by Austin Prock, Nov. ’24, Pomona
Pro Stock – 6.443 sec. by Greg Anderson, March ’25, Gainesville, Fla.; 215.55 mph by Erica Enders, May ’14 Englishtown
Pro Stock Motorcycle – 6.627 sec. by Gaige Herrera, Oct. ’23, Dallas; 205.04 mph by Matt Smith, July ‘22, Sonoma.

EVENT SCHEDULE

SATURDAY, June 28
Lucas Oil Series eliminations at 8:30 a.m.
GETTRX All-Star Pro Stock Callout opening ceremony at 11:30 a.m.
Mission Foods Pro qualifying session at noon
Mission Foods Pro qualifying session at 2:30 p.m. 

SUNDAY, June 8
Pre-race ceremony at 9:45 a.m.
Mission Foods Series eliminations begin at 11 a.m. 

TELEVISION 

SATURDAY, June 28, FS1 will televise one hour of GETTRX Allstar Pro Stock Callout coverage at 3 p.m.

SUNDAY, June 29, FS1 will televise one hour of qualifying coverage at 11 a.m. (ET)

SUNDAY, June 29, FOX TV will televise three hours of final eliminations coverage at 2 p.m. (ET).



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

NASCAR halts Atlanta Cup race after huge crash collects half the field

Early in the second stage at Atlanta, complete chaos broke out on Lap 69. John-Hunter Nemechek was running inside the top ten when the race got back underway, but down the back stretch, a bump from Denny Hamlin sent him into the outside wall. Immediately, cars started spinning and with moments, the entire track was […]

Published

on


Early in the second stage at Atlanta, complete chaos broke out on Lap 69. John-Hunter Nemechek was running inside the top ten when the race got back underway, but down the back stretch, a bump from Denny Hamlin sent him into the outside wall.

Immediately, cars started spinning and with moments, the entire track was blocked. 23 cars were collected in one of the biggest crashes you will ever see. NASCAR stopped the race as the lengthy cleanup got underway.

It was a shocking accident that turned the race track into a junkyard with 23 cars involved. The following drivers were forced to go behind the wall are completely fell out of the race: Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Corey LaJoie, Austin Cindric, Denny Hamlin, William Byron, Chase Briscoe, Daniel Suarez, Noah Gragson and Josh Berry. Most of them never returned to the track due to the severity of the damage.

 

Corey LaJoie is running a part-time schedule this year and he had plenty to say after being taken out of the race.

“We see people pushing like dummies early, and then I just come in here and get pushed into it,” said LaJoie after being shown the replay. “I come out of the smoke and every corner on my Mustang was knocked off of it. Unfortunately, that was the end of my day.

“I don’t know what we’re doing. We just started the second stage. I don’t know why we’re pushing like we’re damn bumper cars at Frankie’s fun park. That’s not to be surprised. I think there’s a lot of guys who don’t make wise decisions driving these things on speedways.”

Joey Logano, Austin Cindric, and Denny Hamlin

Joey Logano, Austin Cindric, and Denny Hamlin

Photo by: Krista Jasso / Getty Images

Logano, who started the race from pole position, was among those who were unable to continue. 

“I was in the middle of it and I haven’t seen a replay to even know what happened. Cars were sideways and you hit the brakes and everyone is just running into each other. Just a speedway wreck. Wrong place at the wrong time. Tried to win the stage and we couldn’t get that done, and you got to pay the piper when you go to the back there.”

Upon seeing the replay, this was Logano’s reaction: “The whole field wrecked, and I’m just in the soup there. Oh my gosh — look at that. Oh, that’s horrible.” 

He then added with a smile: “Sometimes you’re the ball, sometimes you’re the bat. Tonight we were the ball.”

Briscoe, who won last week’s race at Pocono, said of his race-ending crash: “Yeah, I don’t know how bad our damage was. They were fixing it, and we were about ready to go, and I guess NASCAR came over there and saw that our chassis was broke or bent or something and were like, you can’t go back out. So, kind of a waste of 30 minutes working on it. Just unfortunate night for our Bass Pro Shops Toyota.”

Photos from Atlanta II – Race

Read Also:

 

In this article

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Ryan Blaney gets “caught up in other people’s garbage” at Atlanta

While the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion is locked into the playoffs, the year has still been an up-and-down one for Ryan Blaney. On Lap 58, the intensity was picking up as the field raced toward the end of Stage 1. Christopher Bell ended up losing control, spinning sideways. Advertisement A handful of cars were […]

Published

on


While the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion is locked into the playoffs, the year has still been an up-and-down one for Ryan Blaney.

On Lap 58, the intensity was picking up as the field raced toward the end of Stage 1. Christopher Bell ended up losing control, spinning sideways.

Advertisement

A handful of cars were collected including Bubba Wallace,  AJ Allmendinger and Austin Dillon, but Blaney thought he was going to be okay. However, he got clipped on his way by and took the hardest hit of anyone as the No. 12 Team Penske Ford slammed the outside wall.

He will finish 40th — last place. After being released from the infield care center, Blaney said of the incident: “I couldn’t see much. They kind of started spinning and coming down. I tried to get to the apron and by the time I got there, kind of got blocked.

“Yeah, like you (the reporter) said, the story of our year. Just getting caught up in other people’s garbage. Just when we get it going pretty good and find some momentum, we don’t seem to have things go our way.”

Ryan Blaney, Austin Dillon, AJ Allmendinger, Christopher Bell crash

Ryan Blaney, Austin Dillon, AJ Allmendinger, Christopher Bell crash

Ryan Blaney, Austin Dillon, AJ Allmendinger, Christopher Bell crash

The wreck forced the race to opening stage of the race to end under caution. And while Blaney never returned to the race, Bell did, albeit more than 70 laps down.

Advertisement

A few laps later, NASCAR actually had to red-flag the race after a far bigger incident broke out on the backstretch, collecting 23 cars.

Blaney also failed to finish the races  at Phoenix, Las Vegas, Homestead, Talladega, and Charlotte. Last year, he had seven DNFs throughout the entire season and he’s nearly matched that, halfway through 2025.

Read Also:

NASCAR halts Atlanta Cup race after huge crash collects half the field

To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

CHEVROLET NCS AT ECHOPARK SPEEDWAY: Byron, Chastain and Suarez Accident Quotes – Speedway Digest

William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet – Sidelined by damage sustained in the opening lap of Stage Two. Chaos ensued on the opening lap of Stage Two. What did you see from your perspective? “There wasn’t really a whole lot I could see. I was kind of catching the No. 22 (Joey Logano) with […]

Published

on


William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet – Sidelined by damage sustained in the opening lap of Stage Two.

Chaos ensued on the opening lap of Stage Two. What did you see from your perspective?

“There wasn’t really a whole lot I could see. I was kind of catching the No. 22 (Joey Logano) with a little bit of a run. All the guys at the front had pitted during the stage break and cycled to the mid-20s. We were just running a great race in the top-five. They all stacked up and at that point, I went right a little bit; the wreck was already happening and I just kind of got shoved into it.

It’s just a bummer that early in the race. I don’t really know what was going on. We were getting up to speed and everyone was throwing a lot of blocks or something, I don’t know. It was fun out there, honestly. The first stage was fun. Handling really mattered. I thought my No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet was good. I thought our team was calling a great race and we were doing everything we could do.”

Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet – Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident on the opening lap of Stage Two.

“It’s just unfortunate being that early in the race. I couldn’t really see what happened. All of a sudden, they were crashing and our No. 1 Wendy’s Chevrolet got caught up in it. Our Chevy was a four out of 10 to start the race, and then we got it to a seven out of 10 on the first pit stop. We were halfway to where we needed to be. We still had some work to do, but we set ourselves up well there restarting 12th and full of fuel for the start of Stage Two.”

Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet – Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident on the opening lap of Stage Two.

“The sad part for me was that our No. 99 Quaker State Chevrolet was very good. I was being patient, and I felt like we were coming through the field pretty well during Stage One. I felt like our Chevy had potential. It was the start of Stage Two and we didn’t get to race. It’s a shame. Our team did a very good job with the car and we just got caught up in the mess.”

GM PR



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passes Brad Keselowski on final lap to win NASCAR Atlanta race | National News

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap and won the the crash-filled NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night for his 20th career victory. Elliott, the popular driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his first victory since April 2024 at […]

Published

on


HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap and won the the crash-filled NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night for his 20th career victory.

Elliott, the popular driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his first victory since April 2024 at Texas. It was his first win in Atlanta since 2022.

“I’ve never in my whole life, this is unbelievable,” Elliott said. “This is something I’ll remember the rest of my life.”

Keselowski was second, followed by Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet teammate, Alex Bowman, and Tyler Reddick. Bowman helped block Keselowski following Elliott’s last-lap pass.

“The 48 and 9 just got together,” Keselowski said, referring to Bowman and Elliott. “… At they end they were able to double-team me.”

Elliott climbed into the stands to celebrate with fans after ending a 44-race winless streak.

“I’m happy for the 9 team,” Bowman said. “It’s a big win for him in his hometown. … I’m glad to have a Hendrick car in victory lane. I wish it was us.”

The race’s second crash early in Stage 2 took out many of the sport’s biggest names and left others with damaged cars. Pole-winner Joey Logano, who led the first 36 laps before light rain forced the first caution, was among the many drivers caught up in the big crash.

Among others knocked out of the race: William Byron, Austin Cindric, Ross Chastain, Josh Berry, Corey LaJoie and Daniel Suarez.

“It wrecked the whole field,” Logano said. “I still don’t know exactly how it started … but it was total chaos. Cars were sideways and on the brakes. I got hit from every corner possible.”

Added Denny Hamlin, who suffered damage to his Toyota in the crash: “Some zigged. Some zagged. Most crashed.”

The Atlanta race at EchoPark Speedway, formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway, was the debut of the 32-driver In-Season Challenge, a five-race, bracket-style tournament.

The parade of highly regarded drivers to be knocked out so early in the race showed the perils of trying to pick NASCAR winners on a March Madness-style bracket sheet. The top two seeds were among the early casualties.

Hamlin, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, finished 31st and lost to Ty Dillon, who finished eighth.

Chase Briscoe, who held off Hamlin for his first win for Joe Gibbs Racing last week at Pocono Raceway, was the No. 2 seed before being knocked out in a crash and losing to Noah Gragson in the tournament.

A $1 million prize awaits the winner as part of a new media rights deal that includes TNT.

Elliott and Keselowski were on the front row when a caution with 33 laps to go forced a decision on whether to pit for fresh tires. Both stayed on the track and Elliott faded following the restart until making his decisive charge at the very end.

Bracket busters

Ryan Blaney, the race favorite according to BetMGM Sportsbook, was knocked out on a wreck late in the first stage. Christopher Bell hit the wall, triggering the crash that ended the stage with Cindric in the lead.

Cindric was involved in the bigger crash early in Stage 2. Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Bubba Wallace were among others involved in the crash.

Photo finish

Tyler Reddick beat Elliott to the finish line by .001 seconds to win Stage 2 in a battle between drivers looking for both their first stage win and overall win of the season.

Weather woes

Lightning and rain delayed qualifying Friday and the Xfinity race won by Nick Sanchez late Friday night. More lightning and rain threatened Saturday night’s race. Fans were encouraged to leave the stands about 90 minutes before the race due to severe weather in the area but were allowed to return as pre-race were conducted as planned.

Up next

The Cup Series moves to Chicago for the Chicago Street Race on Sunday, July 6.


AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending