RFK, Team Penske opt against appealing Talladega disqualifications
RFK Racing and Team Penske will not appeal their disqualifications from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway. Ryan Preece and the No. 60 RFK Racing team were disqualified from second place for violating section 14.5.8.F of the NASCAR Rule Book, which covers the spoiler. The car must have two shims on the spoiler, […]
RFK Racing and Team Penske will not appeal their disqualifications from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway. Ryan Preece and the No. 60 RFK Racing team were disqualified from second place for violating section 14.5.8.F of the NASCAR Rule Book, which covers the spoiler. The car must have two shims on the spoiler, and the team put on three.
Preece was moved to 38th position in the finishing order and received one point. The original second-place finish would have netted him 40 points and put him 12th in the championship standings. Instead, Preece is 14th in the standings.
“RFK Racing acknowledges and accepts NASCAR’s decision to disqualify the No. 60 Ford Mustang following post-race inspection at Talladega and will not appeal the ruling,” the team said in a statement. “The infraction stemmed from an unintentional adjustment during pre-race inspection to correct a spoiler angle issue. While the change did not provide a competitive advantage, it did not meet the approved compliance method. We respect the ruling and remain committed to integrity and adherence to NASCAR’s standards.”
Joey Logano (main image) and the No. 22 Team Penske team crossed the finish line fifth. However, Logano’s car violated sections 14.5.8.E and 14.1.P, which are for the spoiler and overall assembled vehicle rules. The car had a missing spoiler bolt.
Logano was moved to 39th in the running order and received one point. This negated Logano’s first top-five finish this season and the 41 points that came with it. He fell from eighth to 11th place in the championship standings.
A statement from Team Penske read, “One of the 18 bolts on the surface of the spoiler that connect to the base was found to be loose, and NASCAR penalized the team as a result. This was not intentional and happened throughout the course of the race event. Team Penske accepts the disqualification.”
Cup Series teams return to action Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway.
NASCAR Results Today: Brad Keselowski and Christopher Bell on top again as All-Star Race starting lineup set
The results are in from the two NASCAR Cup Series All-Star Race Heats, with Brad Keselowski and Christopher Bell coming out on top.
After setting the fastest time in qualifying on Friday night, Keselowski was guaranteed to start out front in Sunday’s All-Star Race, but that didn’t stop him from putting up a strong defence […]
The results are in from the two NASCAR Cup Series All-Star Race Heats, with Brad Keselowski and Christopher Bell coming out on top.
After setting the fastest time in qualifying on Friday night, Keselowski was guaranteed to start out front in Sunday’s All-Star Race, but that didn’t stop him from putting up a strong defence at times during the 75 racing laps in Heat 1, holding off the likes of Ross Chastain and William Byron at different times to take the heat win.
In fact, of the 75 laps, Keselowski led for all but three of them. As a result, the 2012 Cup Series champion will surely be feeling confident heading into Sunday’s main event as he chases his first All-Star Race victory.
In Heat 2, it was Bell who came out on top, with the Joe Gibbs Racing star edging the likes of Joey Logano in the No. 22 and Chase Elliott in the No. 9 to take the heat race victory.
As a result of the above, Bell will now start Sunday’s All-Star Race alongside Keselowski on the front row.
With that said, let’s take a look at the results from both heats, as well as the confirmed starting lineup, so far, for the All-Star Race itself.
READ MORE: NASCAR Race Today: All-Star Heats start times, schedule and how to watch live on TV
NASCAR Cup Series results: Who won the All-Star Race Heats?
All-Star Race Heat 1 Results
Position
Driver
Car No.
Team
Gap (Secs)
1
Brad Keselowski
6
RFK Racing Ford
LEADER
2
Ross Chastain
1
Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
+0.497
3
William Byron
24
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
+0.556
4
Ryan Blaney
12
Team Penske Ford
+1.007
5
Alex Bowman
48
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
+1.616
6
Josh Berry
21
Wood Brothers Racing Ford
+4.436
7
Tyler Reddick
45
23XI Racing Toyota
+6.173
8
Austin Dillon
3
Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
+6.747
9
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
47
Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet
+7.110
10
Kyle Larson
5
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
DNS
NOTE: With Kyle Larson taking part in Indy 500 qualifying today, neither he nor the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet ran in the heat race.
READ MORE: NASCAR legend Kyle Busch makes family announcement as new deal revealed
Keselowski, Bell Take Wins in NASCAR All-Star Qualifying Heat Races
The starting lineup for Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race, aside from the identities of the three drivers who will transfer into the race through the NASCAR All-Star Open, has been set following a pair of Heat Races, which featured vastly different levels of action, at North Wilkesboro Speedway on Saturday afternoon. STARTING LINEUP: NASCAR All-Star Race […]
The starting lineup for Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race, aside from the identities of the three drivers who will transfer into the race through the NASCAR All-Star Open, has been set following a pair of Heat Races, which featured vastly different levels of action, at North Wilkesboro Speedway on Saturday afternoon.
STARTING LINEUP: NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro
In Heat Race 1, Brad Keselowski was able to back up his performance in Friday’s NASCAR All-Star Qualifying Session, which netted the driver of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse the pole position for Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race.
Keselowski started from the pole in Saturday’s race and dominated the event by leading 72 laps to take the win in the 75-lap Heat Race, but it wasn’t a breeze by any means. Keselowski found himself in a ton of battles for the top spot, but he utilized the momentum in the high line to keep the race lead and to ultimately take the race win.
“It’s definitely not a single groove race track,” Keselowski said of North Wilkesboro Speedway, which was repaved heading into last year’s All-Star Race weekend. “They were running me real hard, and had good pace. It was a little bit of a dog fight. So, I thought it was great racing.”
Under the competition caution near the mid-way point of the race, Keselowski and crew chief Jeremy Bullins opted to remain on the track, while the majority of the nine-car field hit pit road for fresh tires. When the race went back green, Keselowski had to fight tooth and nail to hang onto the race lead.
It wasn’t easy, but it was sure fun to watch as Keselowski held off challenge after challenge from Tyler Reddick, Ross Chastain, and William Byron.
“That’s what this is supposed to be, right? It’s supposed to be a fun race, and I think I ran beside [Tyler Reddick], [Ross Chastain], and [William Byron] for at least a dozen or maybe two-dozen laps,” Keselowski said. “It was a good battle. Glad that we came out on top. That’s how it’s supposed to be.”
Chastain would take home the runner-up spot in Heat Race 1 as he crossed the finish line narrowly ahead of William Byron in a side-by-side race to the finish. Chastain started at the rear of the field, but was able to work his way through the field, and he became the biggest thorn in everybody’s side in the closing laps of the race.
Chastain will start Sunday’s All-Star Race from the third position, while Byron will start from fifth in the $1-million winner-take-all exhibition event.
Reddick, Austin Dillon, and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. were the three other drivers in addition to Keselowski, who chose not to pit at the competition caution in Heat Race 1. The decision didn’t work out for any of them.
Reddick would finish seventh, Dillon was eighth, and Stenhouse was tail-end of the field in ninth.
Fin
Car
Driver
Team
Status
1
6
Brad Keselowski
RFK Racing
Running
2
1
Ross Chastain
Trackhouse Racing
Running
3
24
William Byron
Hendrick Motorsports
Running
4
12
Ryan Blaney
Team Penske
Running
5
48
Alex Bowman
Hendrick Motorsports
Running
6
21
Josh Berry
Wood Brothers Racing
Running
7
45
Tyler Reddick
23XI Racing
Running
8
3
Austin Dillon
Richard Childress Racing
Running
9
47
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
HYAK Motorsports
Running
10
5
Kyle Larson
Hendrick Motorsports
Did Not Start
John K Harrelson | LAT Images for Toyota GAZOO Racing
Christopher Bell, like Keselowski, dominated Heat Race 2 from the pole position and took a win to secure the second-place starting spot for Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race.
Bell is excited at the prospect of beginning Sunday’s $1 million race with great track position, but he knows strategy and things of that nature will likely jumble the running order all race long in the NASCAR All-Star Race.
“Yeah, it seems like [track position] is really important. We have a really, really good Mobil 1 Camry, and it’s about as good as I could ask for right now. It’s handling really well, and seems like it’s really fast,” Bell said. “Got the track position to start. There’s going to be a lot of flipping track position throughout the course of the day tomorrow, and I would be really surprised if someone is able to just stay up front and lead the race.”
The driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota led 69 of 75 laps in Heat Race 2, but took a bit of a different path to the win than the driver of the No. 6 Ford Mustang Dark Horse.
Under the competition caution at Lap 30, Bell hit pit road and took right side tires, which won him the race off of pit road, but he would actually lose the lead of the race with the call.
Chase Briscoe and his crew chief James Small were the lone driver/crew chief combo that opted to go with the Brad Keselowski strategy from Heat Race 1, and remained on the track as the rest of the nine cars in the field came to pit road.
As a result, Briscoe inherited the lead, but the call didn’t pan out for Briscoe like it did for Keselowski, who won Heat Race 1.
Briscoe immediately lost the race lead to Bell on the restart, and on Lap 42, Briscoe was sent spinning after contact deep in the field as everyone was trying to get around Briscoe’s ultra-slow No. 19 Toyota.
Ultimately, Briscoe would go on to record a seventh-place finish in Heat Race 2.
As Briscoe was busy recovering from his spin, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Bell put his foot down on the floorboard, and pulled away from the competition as he won over Joey Logano by a margin of victory of 2.085 seconds.
After seeing one driver capture a Heat Race win on old tires, and another driver capturing a win with two fresh tires, it begs the question of whether pit road strategy will heavily factor into Sunday’s All-Star Race win.
Bell, who won Heat Race 2, thinks if someone is going to stay on track with old tires on Sunday, it will be critical to not relinquish the lead.
“Last year, I know it was a little bit different tire, but Joey [Logano] won the race by staying out. Blaney ran second by staying out. Larson maybe was third by pitting. And I was on the same strategy with Joey, and ended up finishing last,” Bell recalled. “So, it seems like if you stay out, you really, really need to keep the lead. And it seems like we saw the first thing in Heat Race 1.”
We’ll see how much of a difference tires play in Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race, but in Saturday’s Heat Races they seemed to truly matter for everyone other than Brad Keselowski, who was able to hang onto the lead on his older tires.
Finishing behind the top-two in Heat Race 2 were Chase Elliott in third, and Kyle Busch, who would end the race in fourth.
Promoter’s Caution could add random layer of chaos in NASCAR All-Star Race
The fate of the NASCAR All-Star Race largely rests on the whims of Marcus Smith, who is giving few hints about how he’ll deploy a new “Promoter’s Caution.” It’s the latest goofy gimmick in an event defined by annual format changes designed to goose the competition in the name of fender-banging fireworks. At a randomly […]
The fate of the NASCAR All-Star Race largely rests on the whims of Marcus Smith, who is giving few hints about how he’ll deploy a new “Promoter’s Caution.”
It’s the latest goofy gimmick in an event defined by annual format changes designed to goose the competition in the name of fender-banging fireworks. At a randomly selected point Sunday night during the first 220 of 250 laps at North Wilkesboro Speedway, a yellow flag will fly and possibly wipe out a big lead while bunching the field for a race-altering restart.
The decision on when to throw the yellow rests solely with Smith, the president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports, which owns the 0.625-mile track in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina.
“I’ll have a very special mystery guest with a little All-Star Race history of his own to help me out when it’s time to drop the yellow,” Smith said. “Hopefully, we’ll create a little chaos for the teams and some fun for the fans at the same time.”
It’s an attempt to restore some luster to the All-Star Race, which has lost touch with its no-holds-barred origins. The past two events at North Wilkesboro produced runaway victories for Kyle Larson and Joey Logano, who led 199 of 200 laps in 2024.
The most memorable event last year came after the race when Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Kyle Busch engaged in fisticuffs after tangling for a mid-pack position. It was a far cry from the furious last-lap battles that once sent an All-Star Race winner to the emergency room (Davey Allison sustained a concussion in 1992 after crashing from contact with Kyle Petty at the checkered flag).
The Promoter’s Caution won’t guarantee a slam-bang ending, but it’s in the vein of an exhibition race with $1 million but no points at stake. While other pro sports have struggled to keep all-star events relevant, Cup Series drivers pride themselves on competing as hard as they would in a race with championship implications — and sometimes harder.
“The All Star Race is not just another race,” Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell said. “Everybody is more aggressive than a normal Sunday Cup race. Everyone has that win it or wear it attitude, and it races differently because of that.”
A sense of resignation from the All-Star Race’s annual format overhauls also makes it easier to accept the inanity of a random yellow.
“I have a hard enough time keeping up with all of the different format stuff,” Team Penske’s Austin Cindric said. “It doesn’t really bother me that much that we’re going to have a Promoter’s Caution because, unless I’m the caution, I can’t control it in any way. It’s just the racing gods, but maybe they’re on earth this time.”
Though its timing could cost him a win, Logano is fine with the Promoter’s Caution because “the All-Star Race presents the opportunity to try things outside of the box.
“I don’t think we should have a Promoter’s Caution in points-paying events,” he said. “But in this case, we do something different. It’s something everyone can talk about. And I just don’t know what they’re going to do. Are they going to put Marcus in the flag stand, and he’s just going to throw a yellow flag?”
The son of late NASCAR Hall of Famer Bruton Smith, who once lobbied for random yellows as the most bombastic promoter in Cup history, is coy about how the Promoter’s Caution will be unveiled.
“I’ve had no shortage of NASCAR experts from inside and outside of the garage giving me advice on what to do,” Marcus Smith said. “I’ve got a couple of scenarios in mind depending on what’s happening with the race. Or I could just go spur of the moment with my gut.”
Christopher Bell (+350) is the BetMGM Sportsbook favorite, followed by pole-sitter Brad Keselowski (+600), Logano (+650), two-time defending Daytona 500 winner William Byron (+700) and Denny Hamlin (+800). Kyle Larson, who will start last after missing practice and qualifying while attempting to make the Indy 500, is listed at +1000. … Keselowski and Bell were the winners Saturday of the two 75-lap heat races that set the starting lineup for the All-Star Race. Keselowski already was guaranteed the top starting spot for Sunday night’s main event after qualifying on the pole position Friday. Bell will start second Sunday, followed by Ross Chastain, Logano and Byron. … After sitting essentially dormant for more than 35 years, North Wilkesboro Speedway is playing host to its third consecutive All-Star Race since a $20 million makeover. Keselowski wants to move a points race from Charlotte Motor Speedway’s “Roval” layout to North Wilkesboro Speedway and shift the All-Star Race back to Charlotte’s 1.5-mile oval (the host from 1987-2019). “This needs to be a points racetrack,” Keselowski said of North Wilkesboro. “I’m very strong about the Roval has got to go.”
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AP Auto Racing Writer Jenna Fryer in Indianapolis contributed to this report.
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AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
Dale Earnhardt Jr. reacts to ‘big night’ for CARS Tour at North Wilkesboro Speedway
Tonight was a big one for Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his CARS Tour Late Model Stock series. A fantastic night of racing at North Wilkesboro. Landen Lewis gets the win, and while JR Motorsports didn’t do great, Earnhardt seems pleased with the overall product. CARS Tour co-owners Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kevin Harvick both had […]
Tonight was a big one for Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his CARS Tour Late Model Stock series. A fantastic night of racing at North Wilkesboro. Landen Lewis gets the win, and while JR Motorsports didn’t do great, Earnhardt seems pleased with the overall product.
CARS Tour co-owners Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kevin Harvick both had drivers in this race tonight. Both were also calling the race from the FOX Sports broadcast booth along with FloRacing’s Eric Brennan.
Changed out of his suit and into his street clothes, Dale Jr. put out a message for fans. He is beyond thankful for all of the support for his short track series.
“Hey everybody. Just getting wrapped up here after the CARS Tour race at North Wilkesboro and reading some of the feedback on social media,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said in a selfie video on social media. “I hope that you, if you watched the race I hope you enjoyed it. It was a big, big night for the CARS Tour. We’re very proud and it’s something we’re very, very passionate about. Just an incredible night.
“So, hope everybody enjoyed the broadcast. I had a lot of fun being part of it. But I think the world of this series and its drivers and teams, and I asked everybody to support it this weekend, and if you did, I just wanted to jump on here real quick and say, big thanks, from all of us.”
The race was a little sloppy at first. That is possibly due to the Cup Series tire rubber that was laid down on the track in practice and qualifying. A few CARS Tour drivers and the broadcast booth noted as much. Once the Hoosier Tires started to put rubber down, it was smooth sailing. Well, mostly.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is passionate about stock car racing. That passion is taking the CARS Tour to new heights every year.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. back in the broadcast booth
For NASCAR fans who have missed hearing Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his excited voice in the booth, tonight was a nice amuse-bouche. A little appetizer for what we are going to get this summer, starting next week at Charlotte.
The Coca-Cola 600 will be Dale Jr.’s debut on Prime Video. He will be in the broadcast booth with Adam Alexander and Steve Letarte. This is going to be a fun 10-race schedule from Prime Video to TNT Sports.
CARS Tour has now raced on FS1 for the first time. When can we get more of that? Motorsports in general are continuing to grow in the 2020s. There is a lot of interest in motorsports again, and the CARS Tour is a perfect late-night series to have on TV. If the right partner comes along.
For now, FloRacing has the rights to CARS Tour races. FloRacing was working together with FOX Sports on tonight’s broadcast and have continued to grow their partnership with the TV network. Would you watch the CARS Tour regularly on FS1 or FS2?
Kyle Larson hopes to stay in winning form at All-Star Race – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions
After a strong run at Kansas Speedway led to another NASCAR Cup Series victory, Kyle Larson continues to be one of the two top racers of the season thus far. The season is one-third over entering this weekend’s All-Star Race, and the Hendrick Motorsports driver has already won three times, tying him with Joe Gibbs […]
After a strong run at Kansas Speedway led to another NASCAR Cup Series victory, Kyle Larson continues to be one of the two top racers of the season thus far.
The season is one-third over entering this weekend’s All-Star Race, and the Hendrick Motorsports driver has already won three times, tying him with Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell for the series lead. Throw in a pair of wins by JGR’s Denny Hamlin, and those three hotshots account for eight of the 12 checkered flags.
From an organizational standpoint, it runs even deeper: While JGR leads the series with five wins, HMS has been triumphant four times (counting William Byron’s Daytona 500 win) and Team Penske accounts for two victories (Austin Cindric, Joey Logano).
The lone outlier is Josh Berry’s Las Vegas win for Wood Brothers Racing — who have a technical alliance with Penske through Ford — meaning essentially three racing stables have scored all 12 victories so far.
That type of domination is evident in Larson, who will look to win the NASCAR All-Star Race on Sunday night for the second time in the sport’s third race since returning to North Wilkesboro Speedway in the mountains of North Wilkesboro, N.C.
In the 2023 exhibition race, Larson drove from the back of the field and led 145 laps, blazing his way around the reborn, historic short track and beating runner-up Bubba Wallace by 4.537 seconds in the 200-lap event.
The Elk Grove, Calif., native joined elite company with his third win in the non-points race, having previously prevailed in 2019 and 2021. He tied Dale Earnhardt (1987, 1990, 1993) and Jeff Gordon (1995, 1997, 2001) with three All-Star wins. Jimmie Johnson has won four times (2003, 2006, 2012, 2013).
When it comes to dominating North Wilkesboro’s five-eighths-of-a-mile layout, nobody did it better than Logano a year ago when he earned the pole, led all but one of 200 in his No. 22 Ford and ousted Hamlin by 0.636 seconds in the 40th annual race.
Mired in a terrible 2024, Logano had been winless through 13 points races and used the momentum to start a run to his third championship.
In practice on Friday, Tyler Reddick topped the charts with a lap of 18.198 seconds (123.640 mph) to beat Chase Elliott and Wallace as drivers shook down their cars in long runs before their qualifying efforts.
Qualifying consisted of three laps with drivers pitting on the second time around for four tires and fuel before turning a final circuit.
Sporting the purple and gold colors of East Carolina University, RFK Racing’s Brad Keselowski put his No. 6 Ford on the pole with a combined time of 1:27.362. Bell’s No. 20 Toyota was runner-up at 1:28.252.
“It’s one thing I’ve never done in my career,” Keselowski, who is 33rd in points, said of his pole-winning showing in the $1 million payday race. “Total team effort. Pit crew and team gave me a rock-solid car and a rock-solid pit stop … and I nailed the lap.”
The 2012 Cup title winner will have the pole for both a heat race on Saturday and the 200-lap main event on Sunday.
The Spire Motorsports crew of Michael McDowell’s No. 71 Chevrolet won the $100,000 Mechanix Wear Pit Crew Challenge for the fastest stop during qualifying, 12.587 seconds.
Brad Keselowski, Christopher Bell win NASCAR All-Star heats
After Brad Keselowski earned pole position in qualifying on Friday, the rest of the grid was determined by a pair of heat races on Saturday. To put it simply, Heat #1 results decide the inside row for the All-Star Race while Heat #2 results decide the outside row with ten drivers in each heat. On […]
After Brad Keselowski earned pole position in qualifying on Friday, the rest of the grid was determined by a pair of heat races on Saturday. To put it simply, Heat #1 results decide the inside row for the All-Star Race while Heat #2 results decide the outside row with ten drivers in each heat.
On Sunday, the 18 drivers who are not yet locked into the All-Star Race will take part in their own race with the top-two finishers from the ‘Open’ advancing into the main event. Now for a breakdown of Saturday’s heat races:
Heat #1
Brad Keselowski, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford
Photo by: David Jensen / Getty Images
It’s been a difficult and at times nightmarish season for Keselowski, but the weekend at North Wilkesboro has offered him some relief. He held off all challengers to win the first heat race of the night, even though a couple of drivers got very close in trying to snatch the top spot away.
When the planned competition caution flew in the middle of the race, Keselowski stayed out while Ross Chastain and several others pitted, taking on a set of fresh sticker tires. Those drivers quickly charged through the field with Chastain drawing even with Keselowski in a fierce battle for the race lead. However, the tires ultimately overheated while running the bottom and he was left defending the runner-up spot for the remainder of the race.
He battled back-and-forth with William Byron and Ryan Blaney as the three drivers fought over the spot that would determine who starts third in the All-Star Race on Sunday. Chastain held on over Byron by just a nose while Blaney finished fourth and Alex Bowman fifth.
Josh Berry was sixth, Tyler Reddick seventh, Austin Dillon eighth, and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. ninth. Kyle Larson’s car did not take part in the heat race since its driver was busy qualifying for the Indianapolis 500 today. So, Larson will come from the last row of the grid on Sunday, which he also did one year ago.
“It doesn’t hurt,” said Keselowski after the win. “It’s been a good two days for everyone on this #6 crew … It’s good to be starting up front with this Ford Mustang. To be running fast, this is fun.”
Speaking about the tire difference, Keselowski added: “Those guys who put tires on were really hard to hold off. I had the preferred groove and just tried to use it to my advantage. We’ll see if that’s the case tomorrow.
Heat #2
Christopher Bell, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Photo by: David Jensen / Getty Images
Christopher Bell was in control of the second heat race from start-to-finish and no one was able to mount a real challenge against him. During the competition caution, nearly the entire field pitted for fresh rubber with most taking four, but Bell took two right-sides instead and narrowly avoided his tire changer on the way out.
Chase Briscoe was the lone driver who rolled the dice and chose to stay out. He inherited the race lead, but it did not last long as he quickly faded through the field. However, he could not get out of the way quick enough, spinning after contact from Daniel Suarez and hitting the door of Denny Hamlin.
This was the only incident of the entire night as Bell set sail for the remainder of the race, taking the win over Joey Logano and Chase Elliott. Kyle Busch and Chris Buescher filled out the rest of the top five while the remainder of the top ten was as follows: Suarez, Briscoe, Austin Cindric, Harrison Burton, Hamlin.
“Maybe the Mobil 1 Camry is a million-dollar Camry,” smiled Bell after the win, guaranteeing him the outside of the front row. “It’s feeling really good. I knew yesterday in practice that if they could get some rear grip in it, I felt like I had a lot of car potential. The guys did an amazing job on just making the car better overnight and it was really refreshing to get out there and just cruise those first 30 laps. Then, I didn’t know how it was going to work with having Joey [Logano] right behind me, but this thing was on rails. I’m really happy and excited about the opportunity tomorrow.”
All-Star Race lineup
Pos.
Driver
Team
1
Brad Keselowski
RFK Racing
2
Christopher Bell
Joe Gibbs Racing
3
Ross Chastain
Trackhouse Racing Team
4
Joey Logano
Team Penske
5
William Byron
Hendrick Motorsports
6
Chase Elliott
Hendrick Motorsports
7
Ryan Blaney
Team Penske
8
Kyle Busch
Richard Childress Racing
9
Alex Bowman
Hendrick Motorsports
10
Chris Buescher
RFK Racing
11
Josh Berry
Wood Brothers Racing
12
Daniel Suarez
Trackhouse Racing Team
13
Tyler Reddick
23XI Racing
14
Chase Briscoe
Joe Gibbs Racing
15
Austin Dillon
Richard Childress Racing
16
Austin Cindric
Team Penske
17
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Hyak Motorsports
18
Harrison Burton
Rick Ware Racing
19
Kyle Larson
Hendrick Motorsports
20
Denny Hamlin
Joe Gibbs Racing
21
OPEN RACE WINNER
OPEN RACE WINNER
22
OPEN RACE RUNNER-UP
OPEN RACE RUNNER-UP
23
FAN VOTE WINNER
FAN VOTE WINNER
In this article
Nick DeGroot
NASCAR Cup
Brad Keselowski
Christopher Bell
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