Motorsports
‘It’s a ballet’: Inside the intricate choreography of a NASCAR Cup Series pit stop in the Next Gen era
Still, lost in the midst of a green flag run or buried amid a busy pit road during a caution flag, the individual movements and execution displayed by each crew member for each team can be lost. So, we gathered a Hendrick Motorsports crewman from each of the five positions and representing all four teams […]

Still, lost in the midst of a green flag run or buried amid a busy pit road during a caution flag, the individual movements and execution displayed by each crew member for each team can be lost.
So, we gathered a Hendrick Motorsports crewman from each of the five positions and representing all four teams to walk us through their thought processes and movements, step-by-step, from inside their helmets.
Spoiler alert: The amount of time it took them to explain far exceeded the amount of time of the stops themselves.
Without further ado:
RELATED: Know your Hendrick Motorsports pit crew – the No. 5 team
TJ Semke, jackman, No. 9 team
“First and foremost, practicing as much as we do throughout the week, really hoping to get the muscle memory down to where I’m not out there thinking, I’m just reacting. Before I jump off the wall, I like to know I had a great week of prep and I’m feeling confident jumping out onto pit road. The worst thing that hurts a lot of teams is when one guy is lacking confidence going over the wall. If you don’t have confidence, you’re already in a bad position.
“As I go out to the right side of the car I’m trying to get the car up as fast as I can, well under a second – about six tenths – that’s my goal from when the car stops to when the car is off the ground. Then, I want to help the tire changers get started sooner to pull the tires off faster. Then I’m trying to get to the right-front tire as fast as I can to get on the right-front hub and drop the jack. One thing with this top, there’s not a lot of time for a jackman. There’s no pauses. With the five lug, we had time before each movement. This is just a faster stop and so much more fluid. I don’t want to be the guy anyone is waiting on.
RELATED: Kyle Larson seizes NASCAR Cup Series points lead
“Dropping the car fast on the right side is always an important piece for me. I need to do it fast and accurately as soon as the guys are done putting the lug on then dropping the car and bolting to the left side as fast as possible to get the car up again so they’re not waiting for me to pull the tires off.
“As a jackman, we’re kind of managing the entire stop and kind of can make or break you. Ultimately, you’re the one that’s going to be the hero for dropping the car on time or the zero looking at a two-week suspension if a tire isn’t secured. It can’t be understated how difficult that is and how much pressure that is but it helps being alongside solid teammates and knowing what they’re doing and trusting in them.”

John Gianninoto, fueler, No. 9 team
“Our jackman, TJ, does a great job marking the box and making sure we have the sign where we need it depending on if there’s a car in front of us or behind us, whether we’re going to stop short or long, all that stuff. From there, it’s just communication with each other. We have a lot of hand gestures because it’s so loud at the track. Especially as a fueler, me and the rear changer, we have to communicate really well because he has to know what I’m doing fuel wise and that changes what his job is going to be. Am I going to be out of the way? Is he going to have to go underneath me? Is he going to have to check up? All that kind of stuff.
“The first thing we have to do is make sure our communication is checked off so we know what the stop is and from there, it’s a ballet we try to put together just making sure it’s cohesive and it runs well.”
PIT CREW CHALLENGE? For Hendrick Motorsports crewmen, every tenth is a test
Mike Moss, rear-tire changer, No. 5 team
“It starts with the crew chief; he’s giving the call that the car is 10 stalls away. From there, I take a deep breath, and you just feel light. As the car enters the next box, that’s when we can jump off the wall. I jump off the wall and I like touching the left side of the car, just feeling the speed of it and I try to get to the right side of the car within three seconds. I engage the lug nut and push the tire off. As I’m setting the tire, my tire carrier, Allen Stallings, is indexing the tire.
“And then my most important job is to make sure the lug nut is on there completely. As I see that – I have stripes on my gun that’s an indicator of how tight the nut is – I get up, approach the left side, do my runaround, engage the left-side lug nut and do the same thing over there but now the jackman is indexing the tire. Then, I just make sure the tire is tight.”
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Donnie Tasser, front-tire changer, No. 48 team
“It starts with your mindset. Breath-work I think is important, or however guys get into the zone so to speak. So, when the car gets one spot away, I take a slow, deep breath and that’s my trigger.”
The car is coming in. As the front-tire changer, the jackman and tire carrier are coming off the wall in front of me. I’m finding my own line of sight. I’m trying to get that right-front lug engagement as quick as possible so, as the car is coming up, I can be pulling the tire and sending it to the wall. Then zip it back up and get out of the way so that my jackman can haul around the car, enter the left front and do it again. As soon as we finish the left front, I’m looking at the jack because in some situations, I end up dropping that. Making sure that when the left-rear is done if (jackman Allen Holman) is not back at the jack yet, I’m moving toward it so we can save any amount of time that we can.”
RELATED: Check out Alex Bowman’s paint scheme for the Coca-Cola 600!

Ryan Patton, tire carrier, No. 24 team
“So, for me as the tire carrier, and this has been instilled in me for years, I’m kind of like the voice of the team. I don’t want to say, ‘captain’, but that might be the best terminology. So, the car is on the track running and (driver) William (Byron) is giving feedback and relaying that to (crew chief) Rudy (Fugle. Rudy gets a plan of how we’re going to make this car run a little bit better – could be an adjustment, could be no adjustment – and then Tyler Jones, our car chief, relays that to me. We all hear it on the radio but I specifically go to every member of the team and tell them, ‘This is what we’re doing.’
“We hear the cue and (jackman) Spencer (Bishop) picks up the jack, I pick up the tires and we get ready to roll. Once the car approaches, we leave and kind of form a flying ‘V’ in front of the race car with Spencer and myself being the peak. I pick up my visuals out of the race car and out of my peripherals kind of get a feel of where Spencer is at, where (front-tire changer) Jeff (Cordero) is at so that way, when I drop off the right front, that’s not impeding their performance. Then go to the right rear, make sure I get a good hang for (rear-tire changer) Orane (Ossowski) so he can have a quick change.
RELATED: Check out William Byron’s paint scheme for the Coca-Cola 600!
“If we make an adjustment, make sure we get that taken care of and then just haul to the left front. So, we kind of retrace our steps back around the front of the race car and then put the left-front tire on. So, once the right side is done, I don’t want to say you can take a breath, but you can kind of feel the pace of the stop. Like, ‘Hey, we’ve got a good one going here. If we can just be clean on the left side, we should have a good one.’ And then, once the car drops, you kind of have a feel like, ‘Hey, that was pretty good.’”
Motorsports
Saucon Valley grad is Chase Elliott car chief at NASCAR at Pocono
Chase Elliott won a NASCAR Cup race at Pocono in 2022, but it came in the most bizarre fashion. Long after the race had ended and the track’s grandstands had cleared, the apparent race winner, Denny Hamlin, and the apparent runner-up, Kyle Busch, were disqualified when their cars didn’t pass inspection. Elliott, who had finished […]

Chase Elliott won a NASCAR Cup race at Pocono in 2022, but it came in the most bizarre fashion.
Long after the race had ended and the track’s grandstands had cleared, the apparent race winner, Denny Hamlin, and the apparent runner-up, Kyle Busch, were disqualified when their cars didn’t pass inspection.
Elliott, who had finished third, found out about his “victory” after he got back home in Georgia.
Matt Barndt found out about Elliott’s win while getting ready to get on a plane at the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport. He was stunned, but happy.
Barndt, a Lower Saucon Township native and Saucon Valley High School graduate, has one wish this weekend as he returns to familiar turf at Pocono Raceway as Elliott’s car chief.
“This time I want us to win because we were the first ones across the finish line,” Barndt said. “I don’t want to win it any other way. And I want to get a celebration in Victory Lane. That didn’t happen the last time.”
Barndt, a 2009 Saucon grad, has been working with Elliott since Elliott joined Hendrick Motorsports on a full-time basis in 2016. Barndt previously worked with NASCAR legend Jeff Gordon, a staple of Hendrick’s dominant racing team.
“Basically, everyone who worked on Jeff”s team went on Chase’s team,” Barndt said.
Bardnt has formed a strong bond with Elliott, who is 29 and five years younger than Barndt.
“His experience far exceeds his years because he grew up in a racing family,” Barndt said. “He’s a great person to work with, and we communicate quite well. We both grew up around race tracks.”
Of course, Barndt must also work with crew chief Alan Gustafson, who has been working with Elliott since 2016 and entered this season as the longest-running driver-crew chief pairing in the Cup Series. Barndt and Gustafson also have a great rapport.

(Hendrick Motorsports/Adrian Lauerman)
During an interview available on the Hendrick Motorsports website, Barndt said he was fortunate that Gustafson saw something in him when he was ready to graduate from college.
“You transitioned from design engineer to race engineer to car chief in a really short period of time, and you’re still really young.” Gustafson said. “And now you have a really difficult job.”
Barndt said that NASCAR’s newest car, now in its third season, makes it difficult for any team to gain an advantage. That’s one reason why Hendrick, which used to be considered the Yankees of NASCAR because of its all-star lineup and dominance in the Cup series, no longer dominates.
But Barndt said Hendrick remains a great place to work. He started working there on an internship while a sophomore at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, which is located right smack dab in the home base for NASCAR and its teams.
Barndt earned a degree in mechanical engineering, but his heart was in racing, which is something he started at the age of 5.
“I started in quarter-midgets, then did mini-cups, asphalt late-models, and after starting at local tracks, I went to national events around the country,” he said. “My sister was racing, too. We were a racing family. The dream was always to make it to this level of the sport, but it happened in a different capacity. That competitive drive and desire to win when I was a kid is still there. But now I’m not on the track, but you still want to find an edge. I still want to win.”
Elliott, the 2020 Cup Series champion, is a seven-time winner of NASCAR’s Cup Series Most Popular Driver Award as voted on by the fans. His father, Bill, won the same award 16 times.

There are a lot of people who hope Elliott can end a drought and win a Cup points race for the first time since April 2024 at Texas.
While he hasn’t won a race, he has a streak of 16 top-20 finishes going for him.
“I go into every race thinking we can win,” Barndt said. “And I feel the same way about this race. We’ve been running well. We would love to get one at Pocono.”
Win or lose, Barndt, who flew to Pennsylvania late Friday afternoon from Charlotte, said it’s tough to find time to go home and visit with family.
“We now put on two-day shows in NASCAR, and things aren’t spread out like they used to be when you’d get to town on Thursday night,” he said. “From the time we get there, we’ll be going to work and try to figure out what we need to do to be successful.”
Kurt Busch named grand marshal
Kurt Busch made his way into Victory Lane at Pocono Raceway three times and won on the Cup circuit 34 times.
He’s on his way into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in January.
But he will make a pitstop at Pocono Raceway on Sunday to serve as grand marshal of The Great American Getaway 400, the marquee event of NASCAR’s three-race weekend at Pocono.
Governor Josh Shapiro will serve as the honorary starter and wave the green flag for the 2 p.m. race being live-streamed by Amazon Prime.
“We’re honored to celebrate Kurt’s Hall of Fame career with our fans,” Pocono Raceway President Ben May said. “Pocono Raceway is proud to be a small part of that illustrious career with Kurt being a three-time race winner and two-time polesitter.
Busch, 46, won at Pocono in 2005, ’07, and ’16. He also won the pole in 2005 and ’11. He totaled 21 top-10 finishes, including 14 in the top five, in 41 career starts in Monroe County.
In 23 years on the circuit, Busch won the series title in 2004 and the 2017 Daytona 500. He also won at least four times in each of the three NASCAR national series — Cup, Xfinity, and Craftsman Truck.
In addition to being named grand marshal, Busch will be honored by Pocono with “TY KURT” painted on the start/finish line, and the Mattioli Foundation will donate $10,000 to Vet Tix in his honor.
Pocono Raceway schedule
Saturday
8 a.m. — Gates, Fan Fair & Paddock Open
10 a.m. — NASCAR Xfinity Series practice
11:05 a.m. — NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying
12:35 p.m. — NASCAR Cup Series practice
1:45 p.m. — NASCAR Cup Series qualifying
3:30 p.m. — Explore the Pocono Mountains 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series Race (100 Laps / 250 Miles)
Sunday
8 a.m. — Gates, Fan Fair & Paddock Open
2 p.m. — The Great American Getaway 400 NASCAR Cup Series Race (160 Laps / 400 Miles)
Originally Published:
Motorsports
NASCAR Truck Series MillerTech Battery 200 at Pocono
For the first time this season, Layne Riggs (Front Row Motorsports) found himself in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Victory Lane, winning the MillerTech Battery 200 at Pocono Raceway. Piloting the No. 34 Bare Knuckle Boxing Ford F-150, Riggs led the final 20 circuits around the 2.5-mile triangle shaped racetrack to secure his third career win. […]

For the first time this season, Layne Riggs (Front Row Motorsports) found himself in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Victory Lane, winning the MillerTech Battery 200 at Pocono Raceway.
Piloting the No. 34 Bare Knuckle Boxing Ford F-150, Riggs led the final 20 circuits around the 2.5-mile triangle shaped racetrack to secure his third career win.
Tanner Gray (TRICON Garage) was second, with Kaden Honeycutt (Niece Motorsports), Brandon Jones (TRICON Garage), and Daniel Hemric (McAnally-Hilgemann Racing) rounded out the top-five.
Pos |
# |
Driver |
Diff |
Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
34 |
Layne Riggs |
— |
Running |
2 |
15 |
Tanner Gray |
3.640 |
Running |
3 |
45 |
Kaden Honeycutt |
6.460 |
Running |
4 |
1 |
Brandon Jones |
7.268 |
Running |
5 |
19 |
Daniel Hemric |
8.732 |
Running |
6 |
81 |
Connor Mosack |
11.929 |
Running |
7 |
38 |
Chandler Smith |
12.346 |
Running |
8 |
52 |
Stewart Friesen |
15.266 |
Running |
9 |
98 |
Ty Majeski |
16.873 |
Running |
10 |
71 |
Rajah Caruth |
17.108 |
Running |
11 |
17 |
Gio Ruggiero |
17.524 |
Running |
12 |
66 |
Luke Baldwin |
22.586 |
Running |
13 |
7 |
Carson Hocevar |
23.115 |
Running |
14 |
91 |
Jack Wood |
24.359 |
Running |
15 |
07 |
Patrick Emerling |
25.360 |
Running |
16 |
77 |
Andres Perez De Lara |
26.007 |
Running |
17 |
9 |
Grant Enfinger |
26.955 |
Running |
18 |
99 |
Ben Rhodes |
32.720 |
Running |
19 |
33 |
Frankie Muniz |
32.830 |
Running |
20 |
42 |
Matt Mills |
33.094 |
Running |
21 |
02 |
Nathan Byrd |
34.243 |
Running |
22 |
5 |
Toni Breidinger |
38.519 |
Running |
23 |
11 |
Corey Heim |
50.052 |
Running |
24 |
69 |
Tyler Tomassi |
50.358 |
Running |
25 |
76 |
Spencer Boyd |
59.553 |
Running |
26 |
18 |
Tyler Ankrum |
2 laps |
Running |
27 |
88 |
Matt Crafton |
2 laps |
Running |
28 |
13 |
Jake Garcia |
4 laps |
Running |
29 |
26 |
Dawson Sutton |
32 laps |
Accident |
30 |
22 |
Clayton Green |
33 laps |
Accident |
31 |
44 |
Conner Jones |
33 laps |
Accident |
32 |
74 |
Dawson Cram |
47 laps |
Mechanical |
33 |
2 |
Cody Dennison |
62 laps |
Accident |
34 |
6 |
Norm Benning |
70 laps |
Too Slow |
35 |
28 |
Bryan Dauzat |
71 Laps |
Too Slow |
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Motorsports
NASCAR Craftsman Truck MillerTech Battery 200 Results
Friday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.50 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Layne Riggs, Ford,… Friday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.50 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Layne Riggs, Ford, 80 laps, 58 points. 2. (5) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 80, 41. 3. (2) Kaden Honeycutt, […]

Friday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.50 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Layne Riggs, Ford,…
Friday
At Pocono Raceway
Long Pond, Pa.
Lap length: 2.50 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (1) Layne Riggs, Ford, 80 laps, 58 points.
2. (5) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 80, 41.
3. (2) Kaden Honeycutt, Chevrolet, 80, 48.
4. (9) Brandon Jones, Toyota, 80, 0.
5. (19) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 80, 32.
6. (12) Connor Mosack, Chevrolet, 80, 40.
7. (15) Chandler Smith, Ford, 80, 33.
8. (13) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, 80, 34.
9. (16) Ty Majeski, Ford, 80, 28.
10. (8) Rajah Caruth, Chevrolet, 80, 27.
11. (6) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 80, 26.
12. (17) Luke Baldwin, Ford, 80, 25.
13. (4) Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet, 80, 0.
14. (24) Jack Wood, Chevrolet, 80, 23.
15. (10) Patrick Emerling, Chevrolet, 80, 22.
16. (7) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, 80, 30.
17. (14) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 80, 20.
18. (34) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 80, 23.
19. (27) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 80, 18.
20. (21) Matt Mills, Chevrolet, 80, 17.
21. (23) Nathan Byrd, Chevrolet, 80, 16.
22. (29) Toni Breidinger, Toyota, 80, 15.
23. (3) Corey Heim, Toyota, 80, 24.
24. (28) Tyler Tomassi, Ford, 80, 0.
25. (26) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 80, 12.
26. (18) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, 78, 17.
27. (20) Matt Crafton, Ford, 78, 10.
28. (11) Jake Garcia, Ford, 76, 22.
29. (35) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, dvp, 48, 8.
30. (33) Clayton Green, Ford, accident, 47, 7.
31. (22) Conner Jones, Chevrolet, accident, 47, 6.
32. (30) Dawson Cram, Chevrolet, clutch, 33, 0.
33. (25) Cody Dennison, Ford, accident, 18, 4.
34. (31) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, tooslow, 10, 3.
35. (32) Bryan Dauzat, Chevrolet, tooslow, 9, 2.
___
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 116.176 mph.
Time of Race: 1 hour, 43 minutes, 18 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 3.640 seconds.
Caution Flags: 4 for 24 laps.
Lead Changes: 7 among 4 drivers.
Lap Leaders: L.Riggs 0; C.Heim 1-17; L.Riggs 18-22; S.Friesen 23-26; C.Heim 27-43; R.Caruth 44-46; C.Heim 47-60; L.Riggs 61-80
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): C.Heim, 3 times for 48 laps; L.Riggs, 2 times for 25 laps; S.Friesen, 1 time for 4 laps; R.Caruth, 1 time for 3 laps.
Wins: C.Heim, 4; C.Smith, 2; D.Hemric, 1; L.Riggs, 1; T.Ankrum, 1; S.Friesen, 1; R.Caruth, 1.
Top 16 in Points: 1. C.Heim, 629; 2. C.Smith, 505; 3. D.Hemric, 486; 4. L.Riggs, 482; 5. G.Enfinger, 461; 6. K.Honeycutt, 456; 7. T.Ankrum, 441; 8. T.Majeski, 421; 9. J.Garcia, 411; 10. S.Friesen, 381; 11. R.Caruth, 363; 12. G.Ruggiero, 363; 13. B.Rhodes, 361; 14. T.Gray, 338; 15. M.Crafton, 291; 16. C.Mosack, 287.
___
NASCAR Driver Rating Formula
A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race.
The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
Copyright
© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.
Motorsports
NASCAR Cup Series at Pocono Raceway odds, expert predictions for Great American Getaway 400
The NASCAR Cup Series is in Pennsylvania this weekend for The Great American Getaway 400 at Pocono Raceway. As drivers prepare to face NASCAR’s “Tricky Triangle,” we’re getting race insights from our motorsports experts, Jeff Gluck and Jordan Bianchi. They’ll fill us in on NASCAR’s future in San Diego, the roiling feud between Carson Hocevar […]

The NASCAR Cup Series is in Pennsylvania this weekend for The Great American Getaway 400 at Pocono Raceway. As drivers prepare to face NASCAR’s “Tricky Triangle,” we’re getting race insights from our motorsports experts, Jeff Gluck and Jordan Bianchi.
They’ll fill us in on NASCAR’s future in San Diego, the roiling feud between Carson Hocevar and Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and of course, favorites and long shots for Sunday’s race.
Take it away, guys!
How to watch NASCAR at Pocono
- Race: The Great American Getaway 400
- Track: Pocono Raceway — Long Pond, Pa.
- Time: Sunday, June 22, 2 p.m. ET
- Watch: Prime Video
NASCAR Cup Series at Pocono Raceway Q&A, predictions
Jordan reported that NASCAR is nearing a deal for a Cup Series street course race in San Diego. Will this replace Chicago, or will it be an additional street race? What are your thoughts on the increasing street course races in the NASCAR schedule? How does it shift strategy among teams?
Jeff: Personally, I think there’s only room for one street course race per year in NASCAR. A street course needs to be highlighted in its own way, and it could quickly become less special if there are multiple per season. It’s sort of like the NHL’s Winter Classic when it was diluted with the Stadium Series; there’s a careful balance when it comes to these special events. NASCAR is not traditionally a road racing series (it only had two road course races per season for decades) and certainly wasn’t a circuit with street races until a couple of years ago, with the addition of Chicago. Fans are already weary of too many non-ovals anyway, but it’s certainly an opportunity for teams like Trackhouse Racing, who can hire a road course ace to launch them into the playoffs.
Jordan: While NASCAR’s original three-year contract with the city of Chicago is up at the end of the year, the possibility is there that NASCAR could return next year by exercising the option it holds. But to Jeff’s point, having two street courses on the schedule could potentially take away some of the novelty, which is part of the appeal of doing this. Plus, there is the cost to consider when staging two such races. It certainly isn’t cheap. Looking at it from the team perspective, it’s a further indication that the schedule going forward, consisting of five to six road/street courses and six drafting tracks, will continue to feature a good mix of various tracks.
Whew, Carson Hocevar really can’t keep himself out of trouble, can he? (Though it seems he’s good at apologies!) What do you think will happen with him and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.? Is it really just a coincidence that Stenhouse was the one Hocevar had a run-in with? Is that just bad luck or intentional? Could this boost performance for either of them? Is this a powder keg about to blow?
Jeff: Yeah, Stenhouse is not going to let this one go. Unfortunately for Hocevar, that was the worst possible person he could have collided with, and it shows bad judgment on his part, because it was completely unnecessary. Hocevar was a lap down at the time, and he shouldn’t have even let himself get close enough to Stenhouse for them to have contact; Hocevar wasn’t racing for anything but cleaned Stenhouse out. Whoops. So now Stenhouse is going to have to enact some sort of revenge, or he’ll come across as not being a man of his word, which is antithetical to his personal code. In other words, Hocevar either needs to watch his back or his rear-view mirror.
Jordan: Word of advice for Carson Hocevar: If you see Ricky Stenhouse Jr. this weekend and he’s wearing his shorts with the camo design, quickly walk in the other direction.
I believe this is the final race to determine seeding for the in-season challenge. What should we know about this process, and what are the stakes at Pocono for that tournament? Do the drivers care? Is this on the teams’ minds?
Jeff: This has been such a silly way to seed the in-season tournament. Instead of just taking the point standings and going 1 vs. 32, 2 vs. 31, etc., NASCAR has been seeding the top 32 drivers over a three-week stretch based on their best finish. So the No. 1 seed right now is Denny Hamlin, who won at Michigan and then didn’t even race last week at Mexico City. Meanwhile, Joey Logano is the No. 27 seed — so would it be an “upset” if he knocked off a No. 6 seed in Round 1? Of course not, and he’ll probably be heavily favored. So, again, doing it this way is a miss and will only confuse bettors. As for whether the teams care, the answer is no — not until next week, anyway. Once we start seeing the matchups and they start getting asked about it, then it could be on their minds more.
Jordan: In addition to what Jeff said about the seeding, keep in mind that the opening tournament race is at Atlanta, a track with a well-deserved reputation for generating chaos where multi-car accidents are commonplace. There’s a good chance the bracket will see some notables knocked out early, with a good number of “Cinderellas” moving forward. Additionally, the fact that the Chicago Street Course follows Atlanta only creates additional opportunities for upsets to happen. It will be very interesting to see what this bracket looks like after a couple of races.
Who is your favorite to win this weekend and why? Who has been dominant here in the past?
Jeff: Denny Hamlin is Pocono’s all-time wins leader — yes, all-time, not just among active drivers — with seven victories. That’s almost too easy, and he’s a heavy favorite after going win-win-second in the three Next Gen races there. Oh, what’s that you say? You’re not seeing a win for Hamlin in 2022? That’s because he got disqualified for a very minor infraction (still illegal, but minor) after winning that year. For betting purposes, you need to view it as a win. But again, that seems like a pretty obvious pick, so if you’re looking for slightly better value? Perhaps go with William Byron, who is Pocono’s all-time leader in average finish despite never actually winning there. He has +800 odds.
Jordan: That William Byron doesn’t have another win or two or three this season is surprising, considering how dominant he’s been at times. He’s due, overdue, to finally get that second victory, and Pocono represents a great place to do it. He’s finished in the top 10 in over 50 percent of his starts here, and this is one of those tracks where the best teams in a given season tend to shine. Also, don’t be surprised if Kyle Larson puts a tough few weeks behind him by putting a classic No. 5-team stomping on the field where he sweeps the stages, leads a ton of laps and rolls to the win.
Who is a long shot you like here?
Jeff: Pocono is the type of race where we could see an upset if fuel mileage plays out the right way. But that doesn’t help you much, because there are a lot of people to choose from in that regard. A better play might be to see if you can parlay a couple of plus-money top-10 picks together. Like, is it a stretch to think AJ Allmendinger (+10000 to win) and Michael McDowell (+20000) could both be in the top 10? Not at all. So maybe play around with that and see if you can come up with a combination that might work. After all, it would have been a great strategy last week when John Hunter Nemechek and Cole Custer landed surprising top-10s in Mexico City.
Jordan: Legacy Motor Speedway has shown considerably more speed in its cars recently, and if this speed is again present on Sunday, Erik Jones at +8000 makes for a great sleeper pick. Among active drivers, he has the fifth-most top-five finishes and seventh-best average finish, and with Pocono being a track known for long green-flag runs, the opportunity could be there for LMC to gamble with a Hail Mary strategy to score an upset win.
Race winner odds for The Great American Getaway 400
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(Photo of Denny Hamlin: Chris Graythen / Getty Images)
Motorsports
NASCAR race betting odds for Pocono: Denny Hamlin latest favorite
Daytona Motor Mouths: Shane van Gisbergen wins NASCAR Mexico City race The guys break down Shane van Gisbergen’s NASCAR win in Mexico City, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s beef with Carson Hocevar and more before Pocono. It was this week, 25 years ago, when Pocono was the stage for one of NASCAR’s rare occurrences of that age. […]


Daytona Motor Mouths: Shane van Gisbergen wins NASCAR Mexico City race
The guys break down Shane van Gisbergen’s NASCAR win in Mexico City, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s beef with Carson Hocevar and more before Pocono.
It was this week, 25 years ago, when Pocono was the stage for one of NASCAR’s rare occurrences of that age.
It was mid-June of 2000 when Dale Earnhardt got the bum’s rush on the final lap, entering the final turn, with the checkers in sight. Jeremy Mayfield did the honors, executing a textbook bump-and-run to get the third of his five Cup wins before his career flamed out in a big way (do your own research because we’re here to gamble, not air dirty laundry).
You couldn’t consider it an upset victory since Mayfield had a couple wins and was running with the lead pack regularly. The only surprise was the how and who — how Mayfield did it and who paid the price.
Pocono isn’t a place for shockers. Chris Buescher (with Front Row Motorsports) and Ryan Blaney (Wood Brothers) won back-to-back at Pocono in 2016-17, but in the 12 races since, it’s been nothing but pre-race favorites puttering into Victory Lane.
Pocono Raceway is such a tri-oval it’s actually triangle-shaped. And it’s 2.5 miles around, with the three corners banked rather low at just 6, 8 and 14 degrees. Much like Indy, a car needs to turn well, not just go fast.
In other words, don’t go too far down the odds board looking for a potential payday.
Could Denny Hamlin possibly be well-rested?
+425: Denny Hamlin
+550: Kyle Larson
+650: Ryan Blaney, William Byron
+850: Christopher Bell
+1000: Tyler Reddick
The bettors seem to think New Dad Denny will arrive with some reserve horsepower, given how he took last weekend off. And Reddick? He’s winless this season and has one top-10 since mid-April (and that was a ninth!). But there’s this: In the three Pocono races of the Next Gen era, he’s finished second, second and sixth.
Chase Elliott leaves the group of favorites
+1200: Chase Elliott
+1750: Joey Logano, Ty Gibbs, Chris Buescher
+2000: Brad Keselowski, Carson Hocevar, Ross Chastain
+2500: Kyle Busch, Bubba Wallace, Chase Briscoe
Our boy Billy Clyde won at Pocono three years ago, and was ninth and 10th the next two years. Add a chicane and maybe one big sweeping right-hander at Pocono, and Chase might’ve remained in the lead pack of favorites like he was last week. He’s double-dipping this weekend and, for what it’s worth, co-favored in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race.
Three Daytona 500 winner way down here
+3000: Alex Bowman
+4000: Josh Berry, Austin Cindric
+5000: Erik Jones, Ryan Preece
+7500: Ricky Stenhouse, Daniel Suarez
+10000: Zane Smith, Michael McDowell, AJ Allmendinger
Cindric, Stenhouse and McDowell have all won a very famous race on a 2.5-mile track. Pocono is also 2.5 miles around. Your odometer can be deceiving, however.
Sorry SVG, nothing but left-hand turns at Pocono
+15000: Shane van Gisbergen, Noah Gragson
+20000: Austin Dillon, John Hunter Nemechek
+25000: Riley Herbst, Cole Custer, Todd Gilliland, Justin Haley
+50000: Ty Dillon
+100000: Brennan Poole, Cody Ware
It’s not often you find last week’s winner dwelling down among the betting public’s bottom feeders. That alone tells you how much of a road-course specialist Shane van Gisbergen remains at this point of his NASCAR career.
— Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com
Motorsports
How to watch Saturday’s Xfinity race at Pocono: Start time, TV info and weather
The NASCAR Xfinity Series will return to Pocono Raceway for its longest race on the 2.5-mile track since 2019. Saturday’s race is scheduled for 100 laps (250 miles) at Pocono, whose past five Xfinity Series races were scheduled for 90 laps. The Xfinity Series’ 2016-19 races at Pocono were scheduled for 100 laps. Cole Custer […]

The NASCAR Xfinity Series will return to Pocono Raceway for its longest race on the 2.5-mile track since 2019.
Saturday’s race is scheduled for 100 laps (250 miles) at Pocono, whose past five Xfinity Series races were scheduled for 90 laps.
The Xfinity Series’ 2016-19 races at Pocono were scheduled for 100 laps. Cole Custer won the June 1, 2019 race that was extended to 103 laps by a late caution flag.
Custer also won the Xfinity race at Pocono last year but won’t return to defend after moving back up to the Cup Series this season. Austin Hill (who won at the 2.5-mile track in 2023) is the only past Xfinity winner at Pocono in the field.
Details for Saturday’s Xfinity race at Pocono Raceway
(All times Eastern)
START: The command to start engines will be given at 3:29 p.m. … The green flag is scheduled to wave at 3:40 p.m.
PRERACE: The Xfinity garage will open at 8:30 a.m. … Practice is at 10 a.m. … Qualifying is scheduled to begin at 11:05 a.m. … Driver introductions are at 3 p.m.
DISTANCE: The race is 100 laps (250 miles) on the 2.5-mile track.
STAGES: Stage 1 ends at Lap 25. Stage 2 ends at Lap 50.
ENTRY LIST: Click here for the 38 cars entered at Pocono Raceway.
TV/RADIO: CW will broadcast the race starting at 3 p.m. … Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio will have radio coverage.
FORECAST: WeatherUnderground — A mixture of sunshine and clouds with a high of 82 degrees and winds from the west at 5 to 10 mph. It’s expected to be 80 degrees with a 13% chance of rain for the start of the Xfinty Series race.
LAST TIME: Cole Custer led the final nine laps to beat Justin Allgaier by 0.670 seconds on July 13, 2024.
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