Daytona Motor Mouths: William Byron makes it to gas station in Iowa
Ken and Chris review William Byron’s Iowa win and Bristol’s MLB Speedway Classic, present a Jeff Gordon show-and-tell and preview Watkins Glen.
Connor Zilisch is a thin, fair-skinned 19-year-old who hardly looks the part of Clint Eastwood or Gary Cooper, galloping into town to help the locals fend off a bully.
But he just might be the savior for a big group of NASCAR racers who seem helpless in their efforts to keep Shane van Gisbergen out of victory lane at a road course.
As mentioned around here a few weeks back, help is on the way at Watkins Glen.
Zilisch, having a great season in the Xfinity Series driving for Junior Earnhardt, was also given a handful of Cup dates this year. Those races will presumably help him prep for 2026, when he’s expected to take over for Daniel Suarez at Trackhouse Racing, which is fielding Connor Z’s No. 87 Chevy this weekend.
Yep, the same Trackhouse Racing that employs van Gisbergen. The roles were reversed a few weeks ago at Sonoma when SVG moonlighted in Xfinity as Zilisch’s teammate. Connor Z, who grew up road-racin’, did what the Cup boys haven’t done lately — he got ahead of SVG and held him off during a spirited final lap.
It’s possible Sunday could turn into a two-car breakaway — sort of like Gary Cooper and Lee Van Cleef settling things on the dusty edge of a worried town. Less firepower, we trust, but much more horsepower.
Two for the show at Watkins Glen
+130: Shane van Gisbergen
+475: Connor Zilisch
Entering the last three Cup Series road races — Mexico, Chicago and Sonoma — SVG was the favorite, and his odds have steadily gotten stronger: from +300 to +180 to +145 to this week’s crazy-low +130. Those are the kinds of odds you’d see for Scottie Scheffler to win his Thursday Night Men’s League back home.
NASCAR’s local town-folk, including Kyle Larson and defending Watkins Glen winner
+1100: Kyle Larson
+1200: Christopher Bell, William Byron
+1400: Michael McDowell, Chase Elliott
+1600: Tyler Reddick
+1750: Chris Buescher
Buescher survived an SVG battle to win at The Glen last year and hasn’t won since. He hasn’t been horrible, however, and sits high enough in points that he’s probably playoff-safe without a win these next few weeks. Probably safe. A repeat win Sunday would erase that word.
Remember Dinger the Ringer? We found him
+2000: AJ Allmendinger, Chase Briscoe
+2250: Ty Gibbs, Ross Chastain
+2500: Kyle Busch
+3000: Carson Hocevar
+4000: Alex Bowman
+5000: Joey Logano
Allmendinger must look at SVG and Connor Z and think, “That used to be ME!” AJ was always the guy on the fringes who bowed up and gave ’em hell on road courses. He contends frequently and has won three road races in Cup and a boatload in Xfinity. He’s still capable, by the way, and probably shouldn’t be this far down the odds pylon.
Denny Hamlin hits the road, finds no love in betting odds
+6000: Ryan Blaney, Austin Cindric
+7500: Denny Hamlin, Ryan Preece
+10000: Brad Keselowski
+15000: Bubba Wallace
+20000: Todd Gilliland
Hamlin isn’t riding his road-course acumen to the NASCAR Hall of Fame. But keep in mind, just two years ago, he won the pole and finished second at Watkins Glen, which has been the one road course where he’s made some hay.
Katherine Legge would pay well for a top 10. Is it possible?
+25000: Zane Smith, Josh Berry, Erik Jones, John Hunter Nemechek, Cole Custer, Noah Gragson, Justin Haley
+50000: Riley Herbst, Austin Dillon, Ricky Stenhouse, Ty Dillon
+100000: Katherine Legge, JJ Yeley, Cody Ware, Josh Bilicki
As of late-week, Legge was sitting at +4000 for a top-10 finish Sunday. Yep, $100 will get you four grand, while proper math translates that to $400 for a bet of just $10. She’s a veteran road-racer, and with five Cup races now under her belt, a certain comfort level should be growing. Good grief, if nothing else, it’s worth a buck to possibly win 40 more.
— Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com