Motorsports
The drivers who should be worrying about NASCAR Cup playoff hopes
13 races down, 13 races to go in the regular season for the NASCAR Cup Series. At the halfway point, there have been eight different winners with Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing [JGR] taking the lion’s share of victories. Those fortunate eight are William Byron [Hendrick], Kyle Larson [Hendrick], Christopher Bell [JGR], Denny Hamlin [JGR], […]

13 races down, 13 races to go in the regular season for the NASCAR Cup Series. At the halfway point, there have been eight different winners with Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing [JGR] taking the lion’s share of victories.
Those fortunate eight are William Byron [Hendrick], Kyle Larson [Hendrick], Christopher Bell [JGR], Denny Hamlin [JGR], Joey Logano [Penske], Austin Cindric [Penske], Josh Berry [Wood Brothers], and newly crowned Coca-Cola 600 winner Ross Chastain [Trackhouse].

Ross Chastain, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
But while these drivers are feeling secure, there are several others beginning to sweat. Looking closer at the standings, drivers like Chase Elliott, Tyler Reddick, and Ryan Blaney need not worry (yet). While they are winless, they do have a comfortable points margin over the cut-line. But as we’ve seen before, that could rapidly change should a few more drivers lower in the standings start grabbing wins.
Where things get more nerve-wracking is around the bubble, but there’s still no need to panic for these drivers at this time. Ryan Preece holds the 16th and final spot after taking into account the drivers beneath him who have already won, leaving on the hot seat. He is just six points ahead of his RFK Racing teammate Chris Buescher, who recently got 30 points back after a penalty appeal.
This remains an incredibly tight battle that will surely look a lot different around the cut-off race at Daytona, with eight winless drivers within 40 points of Preece. There is no margin for error right now with this group. But what about the drivers even deeper in the standings? It might be time to be a little bit worried, if not fully beginning to panic. Here’s a brief look at those drivers and their current situation:
Ty Gibbs: 25th, -50pts out

Ty Gibbs, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
Gibbs is still in a position to point his way in, but his season has left the No. 54 team scratching their heads. Unlike his JGR teammates, the speed just hasn’t been there. Bristol was a bright spot as he finished third, but he has eight finishes of 22nd or worse in the first 13 races as well. This comes as quite a surprise. Despite being winless in his first 100 Cup starts, Gibbs still made the playoffs last year.

Zane Smith, Front Row Motorsports Ford, Kyle Busch, Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, Joey Logano, Team Penske Ford
Photo by: Logan Riely / Getty Images
Smith is with a new team in 2025 and so far, he’s improving on last year’s performance. But that still puts him just 26th in the standings with a best finish of ninth. However, it was around this point last year when he started turning things around, so perhaps we’ve yet to see the best he has to offer in the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford. He did manage to earn a pole position at Talladega, so we know he has the speed when the series heads to superspeedways.

Erik Jones, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Toyota
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
Few expected Jones to be lagging behind his teammate in 2025, but like the two names we already went over, he is. Legacy Motor Club has been struggling for speed, but there is reason to be hopeful. Recent races have shown an uptick in performance, including a top five for Jones at Texas and a solid showing in the Coke 600. Maybe all is not lost, but they need to start making big gains, now.

Noah Gragson, Front Row Motorsports Ford
Photo by: Logan Riely / Getty Images
Gragson has been a bit like his FRM teammate Smith. The potential is there, but the execution is not. A top ten at COTA, a top five at Talladega, and another top ten at the Coke 600 show that they can put together strong races, and Gragson is a proven multi-time winner in the Xfinity Series. But the weeks when they’re off, they are very off, and that’s left him buried in the standings.

Justin Haley, Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
Photo by: Getty Images
Haley’s team just wants to go a few weeks without losing any more personnel. Crew chief Rodney Childers abruptly parted ways with Spire mid-season and they lost several (good) crew members to Hendrick Motorsports. While both of his Spire teammates have challenged for race wins, Haley has been falling behind and has recorded no finish higher than tenth. Around Gragson and Haley is where drivers and teams are likely less concerned about points at this point and are thinking more about how they can hit a home run and score a victory.

Daniel Suarez, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Photo by: Sean Gardner / Getty Images
Suarez locked himself into the 2024 playoffs with a win in the second race of the year. He almost did something similar early this season, but lost out in a battle with Josh Berry for the Las Vegas win. Suarez has had brief moments of speed and Trackhouse just won the Coke 600 with his teammate Chastain, but the consistency isn’t there at all. Suarez hasn’t led more than 12 laps in any single race, and the four DNFs due to crashes haven’t helped either. He’s likely in a must-win mindset and he has some good opportunities coming up to do just that, but just as Chastain did one week ago, he will have to capitalize when those moments arrive.

Ty Dillon, Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
Photo by: James Gilbert / Getty Images
T. Dillon is nowhere near his veteran teammate AJ Allmendinger at Kaulig Racing, finishing no higher than 12th in any race this year. Dillon’s return to the Cup Series has been a struggle and winning a race in the Cup Series is something he is 0-258 in achieving. With the lack of speed that has plagued this No. 10 team, his only hope likely sits with the drafting races at Atlanta and Daytona.

Brad Keselowski, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford
Photo by: Chris Graythen – Getty Images
A true shocker. The 2012 NASCAR Cup Series champion made the playoffs last year and before a top-five finish in the Coke 600, Keselowski has been nowhere. Nine finishes of 26th or worse in the first 13 races, five DNFs due to crashes in what has been the worst season of his career. His teammates are battling around the bubble while Keselowski lags 100 points behind them. It’s a confusing situation as no one, including Keselowski, expected to see the No. 6 Ford in this position.

Shane van Gisbergen, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Photo by: James Gilbert / Getty Images
SVG is the lowest of the three Trackhouse drivers, but he is also leading the ROTY standings with his only rival just one point behind him. No one expected the three-time Supercars champion to come in and immediately find his way on ovals, but he wasn’t making any progress either … until recently. A 20th at Kansas and a 14th in the Coke 600 are his best oval finishes of the year, both coming in the last two races. He even earned pole position for the All-Star Open at North Wilkesboro. And as strange as it may sound, SVG likely has a better chance of making the playoffs than many of the drivers ahead of him. He’s a road racing ace and while he missed out on a win at COTA (finishing sixth), there are four more road courses left in the regular season. He is fully capable of winning all of them, and this Kiwi only needs one to shake up the entire playoff picture.

Riley Herbst, 23XI Racing Toyota
Photo by: Getty Images
Another rookie like SVG, also driving a newly created third team but for 23XI Racing. Unfortunately, he does not have the benefit of a track where he knows he can win like SVG. Herbst’s best result this year is 14th and he has been deep in the pack during most races. He has to win, but where can he make that happen?

Cole Custer, Haas Factory Team
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
We all knew 2025 would be a struggle for the Haas Factory Team. After Stewart-Haas Racing shut down, all that remains is a single-car effort with Custer behind the wheel. He has no finishes higher than 13th, and 11 of the first 13 races have seen him finish outside the top 20. And yet, he was also half-a-lap away from potentially winning the Daytona 500 when he crashed in the battle for the win. With how the rest of the season has gone, he surely has Daytona circled later this summer as perhaps his only chance to put Gene Haas into the playoffs.
Cody Ware: 36th, -200pts out

Cody Ware, Rick Ware Racing Ford; Cole Custer, Haas Factory Team Ford
Photo by: Christopher Trim Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
There’s no way to sugarcoat this. Ware is last among all full-time drivers, a full 75 points behind his nearest competition. Ware’s best finish is only 24th and nine of the first 13 races have seen him finish 30th or worse. While I’m tempted to say there’s no hope, that’s never truly the case in this championship format. Last year, Harrison Burton entered Race #25 of 26 at Daytona dead last among full-time drivers, and he went on to win the race.
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Motorsports
NASCAR adjusts Mexico City schedule due to travel woes
MEXICO CITY — Travel woes forced NASCAR to adjust its schedule of events at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City. NASCAR condensed the two Friday Xfinity Series practice sessions into one that will happen Saturday. They also moved the two Friday NASCAR Cup Series practice sessions to later in the day. The first NASCAR Mexico […]

MEXICO CITY — Travel woes forced NASCAR to adjust its schedule of events at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City.
NASCAR condensed the two Friday Xfinity Series practice sessions into one that will happen Saturday. They also moved the two Friday NASCAR Cup Series practice sessions to later in the day. The first NASCAR Mexico Series race of the weekend will also take place at a different time Friday.
MORE: NASCAR TV schedule this weekend: Mexico City 2025
NASCAR shifted the schedule around after teams, like Haas Factory Team, had issues getting from Charlotte to Mexico City. HFT had an issue with their chartered flight and had to drive to Atlanta to catch a commercial flight instead.


Other teams, like DGM Racing, had engine issues with their plane and had to delay their plans.
This is the first time NASCAR has raced in Mexico since 2008 when the Xfinity Series raced at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez for the fourth and final time in its first run there. NASCAR’s top three national series, in general, haven’t raced outside of the United States since the Craftsman Truck Series went to Canadian Tire Motorsports Park, in Bowmanville, Ontario, in 2019.
MORE: NASCAR at Mexico City 2025: Odds and more info
Jonathan Fjeld is the co-owner of the The Racing Experts, LLC. He has been with TRE since 2010.
A Twin Valley, MN, native, Fjeld became a motorsports fan at just three years old (first race was the 2002 Pennsylvania 500). He worked as a contributor and writer for TRE from 2010-18. Since then, he has stepped up and covered 24 NASCAR race weekends and taken on a larger role with TRE. He became the co-owner and managing editor in 2023 and has guided the site to massive growth in that time.
Fjeld has covered a wide array of stories and moments over the years, including Kevin Harvick’s final Cup Series season, the first NASCAR national series disqualification in over 50 years, Shane van Gisbergen’s stunning win in Chicago and the first Cup Series race at Road America in 66 years – as well as up-and-coming drivers’ stories and stories from inside the sport, like the tech it takes for Hendrick Motorsports to remain a top-tier team.
Currently, he resides in Albuquerque, N.M., where he works for KOB 4, an NBC station. He works as a digital producer and does on-air reports. He loves spending time with friends and family, playing and listening to music, exploring new places, being outdoors, reading books and writing among other activities. You can email him at fjeldjonathan@gmail.com
Motorsports
NASCAR on Prime Travels South for First-Ever NASCAR Cup Series Race in Mexico City – Speedway Digest
NASCAR on Prime will once again make history, presenting the inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race from Mexico City at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez. This milestone comes just weeks after Prime Video’s historic debut of its first-ever Cup Series Race. Ahead of the event, host Danielle Trotta, alongside NASCAR Hall-of-Famer Carl Edwards and current Cup Series Driver […]

NASCAR on Prime will once again make history, presenting the inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race from Mexico City at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez. This milestone comes just weeks after Prime Video’s historic debut of its first-ever Cup Series Race.
Ahead of the event, host Danielle Trotta, alongside NASCAR Hall-of-Famer Carl Edwards and current Cup Series Driver Corey LaJoie, present NASCAR Live from Mexico City, beginning at 2:00 PM ET. Joined by NASCAR on Prime analysts Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Letarte for select segments, the all-star announce crew gets fans excited with the following:
- Celebrity chef and Prime Sports contributor David Chang joins NASCAR on Prime for a tour of Mexico City’s famed food scene with LaJoie and Mexican Cup Series driver Daniel Suarez, who is in the #99 car on Sunday
- Letarte provides his weekly crew chief advice at the local pub with his puppet pals
- The crew celebrates Father’s Day, and recognizes some of the dads competing on Sunday
- We recount the legacy of Mexican racing legends Pedro and Ricardo Rodríguez, whose groundbreaking achievements paved the way for Mexico’s motorsport passion, now honored as NASCAR arrives at the circuit bearing their name
- Cup Series drivers Kyle Larson and Shane Van Gisbergenjoin the desk to preview the race
NASCAR’s first-ever Cup Series race in Mexico City is the fourth of five races that Prime Video will exclusively stream to conclude the first half of the season. Adam Alexander serves as race announcer alongside analysts Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Letarte in the booth, with Trevor Bayne, Kim Coon, and Marty Snider patrolling pit road. Danielle Trotta hosts Prime Video’s on-site studio coverage, joined by analysts Carl Edwards and Corey LaJoie.
Fans in the U.S. will be able to watch NASCAR live at home or on the go, and across hundreds of compatible devices, streaming from the web, or using the Prime Video app on smartphones, tablets, set-top boxes, game consoles, and connected TVs. For a complete list of compatible devices, visit amazon.com/howtostream. If you’re not a Prime member yet, join today or start a free 30-day trial.
NASCAR on Prime Remaining Cup Series Schedule (All times ET).
- Sunday, June 15: NASCAR Cup Series Racing from Mexico City at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez — 2:00 p.m.
- Sunday, June 22: NASCAR Cup Series Race at Pocono Raceway in Pennsylvania — 1:00 p.m.
Amazon Prime PR
Motorsports
NASCAR Betting Odds for Mexico City
NASCAR is going racing internationally for only the third time in NASCAR Cup Series history at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City for the second road course on the schedule. Through the Gears host Wyatt Watson gets you ready for race weekend with the best bets for Mexico City following a profit of 7.5 units […]

NASCAR is going racing internationally for only the third time in NASCAR Cup Series history at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City for the second road course on the schedule.
Through the Gears host Wyatt Watson gets you ready for race weekend with the best bets for Mexico City following a profit of 7.5 units from the Cup race at Michigan International Speedway thanks to the help of some successful prop picks.
Can the odds-on favorite Shane van Gisbergen (+375 odds) use his road course ability to get himself into the playoffs, or could a different road course ringer or the usual suspects take care of business?

Bringing the Heat: Jeff Hammond On What He’s Been Up To Lately
Also, Watson takes a quick look at Sunday night’s NTT IndyCar Series oval race at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway and shares his pick to win the race at the 1.25-mile oval.
Watch on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts. Follow Wyatt Watson on Twitter @WyattWRacing for any updates throughout the weekend.



Wyatt Watson has followed motorsports closely since 2007. He joined Frontstretch as a journalist in February 2023 after serving in the United States Navy for five years as an Electronic Technician Navigation working on submarines. Wyatt is one of Frontstretch‘s primary IndyCar correspondents, providing exclusive video content on site. He hosts Frontstretch‘s Through the Gears podcast and occasionally The Pit Straight.You can find Wyatt’s written work in columns such as Friday Faceoff and 2-Headed Monsteras well as exclusive IndyCar features. Wyatt also contributes to Frontstretch’s social media team, posting unique and engaging content for Frontstretch.
Wyatt Watson can be found on X @WyattWRacing
Motorsports
NASCAR hits travel snag while in Mexico City | News, Sports, Jobs
MEXICO CITY — Shane Van Gisbergen was buckled into his seat ready to head to Mexico City for NASCAR’s first international Cup Series race of the modern era when a loud “BOOM!” suddenly forced the pilot to abort takeoff. There was an engine issue with the chartered flight in North Carolina and Van Gisbergen and […]

MEXICO CITY — Shane Van Gisbergen was buckled into his seat ready to head to Mexico City for NASCAR’s first international Cup Series race of the modern era when a loud “BOOM!” suddenly forced the pilot to abort takeoff.
There was an engine issue with the chartered flight in North Carolina and Van Gisbergen and most of Trackhouse Racing suddenly found themselves stranded. In fact, two NASCAR charters had issues Thursday that delayed the arrivals of crew members and drivers for at least five teams.
They all arrived safely Friday morning — some teams drove to Atlanta to catch commercial flights — while others awaited a new morning charter.
“Yeah, it wasn’t real fun. Yesterday was a long day,” Van Gisbergen said once in Mexico City. “Pretty scary when the plane launched itself on take-off. They stopped and were trying to just get another plane. And then it was first thing this morning, so early start this morning. I think we got up at 3:30 a.m. at home and got on an early flight down here.”
It was a bumpy start to the first points-paying Cup Series race outside the United States as the entire Friday schedule had to be revamped to accommodate the stranded teams. And, with team personnel missing for some organizations, reinforcements were called in to help: the communications director for Trackhouse had to help unload the team cars off the haulers.
The trucks came directly from last Sunday’s race in Michigan and arrived at the Mexico City track on Thursday.
“Due to two aircraft issues that grounded multiple race teams in Charlotte, N.C., on Thursday, NASCAR has adjusted the on-track schedule for this weekend’s activities at Mexico City’s Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez,” NASCAR said in a statement.
NASCAR delayed Friday’s originally planned Cup Series practice to later in the afternoon. NASCAR also pushed all Xfinity Series practice sessions from Friday to Saturday. And, the first of two NASCAR Mexico Series races were moved to early Friday instead of their late Friday schedule.
The Xfinity Series will lose some practice time, with just one 50-minute session on Saturday morning, right before qualifying. There are other slight adjustments as well, but Cup teams will not lose any practice.
Van Gisbergen was rolling with the delay.
“You can’t predict that kind of stuff happening. There’s so many moving parts,” he said. “Everyone’s down here now. I think it’s all the important people, I guess, needed for (Friday), so I think they’ve done a good job salvaging it.
“I guess it’s a big deal when you think about it, but I’m not really too fussed about it,” he continued. “I’m already focused on (racing). Obviously not ideal, but it happened and we fixed it.”
Truex gets a shot
It’s been 11 years since Ryan Truex raced in the Cup Series but he gets another start Sunday as the replacement for Denny Hamlin in Mexico City.
Truex is a reserve driver for Joe Gibbs Racing and has been in a holding pattern the last three weeks as Hamlin awaited the birth of his son. Hamlin didn’t have to get out of the car at Nashville or Michigan, but the baby finally arrived Wednesday and Hamlin opted to skip this weekend to care for his family of five.
Truex got the call the same evening to wheel the high-profile No. 11 Toyota. The younger brother of former Cup Series champion Martin Truex Jr. has 26 career Cup starts, but none since 2014.
Martin Truex won an Xfinity Series race in 2005 in Mexico City, something he reminded his younger brother of when he told him he got the call.
“I texted him this week when I found out, and he said, ‘You know, the Truexes are 1-for-1 in Mexico,’ so no pressure,” Ryan Truex said Friday. “I’m glad he could throw that at me.”
Hamlin, a three-time winner this year, requested and was granted a waiver by NASCAR officials to retain his eligibility for the Cup Series Playoffs.
Truex does have recent seat time as the 33-year-old was a fill-in option in practice for Tyler Reddick of fellow Toyota team 23XI Racing during Coca-Cola 600 practice. Still, the waiting game to see if he was needed and getting ready for an international trip has been a whirlwind.
“It’s been a crazy few weeks — especially since Charlotte, I’ve been on standby,” he said. “I’m glad it is at a track where I can practice and have time and know what to do to. It has been kind of chaotic getting here and putting all of that together, but I’m just grateful for the experience and grateful to be here.”
Motorsports
NASCAR’s first Cup Series race outside US hits travel snags to Mexico City – News-Herald
By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press MEXICO CITY — Shane Van Gisbergen was buckled into his seat ready to head to Mexico City for NASCAR’s first international Cup Series race of the modern era when a loud “BOOM!” suddenly forced the pilot to abort takeoff. There was an engine issue with the chartered flight in […]

By Jenna Fryer
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — Shane Van Gisbergen was buckled into his seat ready to head to Mexico City for NASCAR’s first international Cup Series race of the modern era when a loud “BOOM!” suddenly forced the pilot to abort takeoff.
There was an engine issue with the chartered flight in North Carolina and Van Gisbergen and most of Trackhouse Racing suddenly found themselves stranded. In fact, two NASCAR charters had issues Thursday that delayed the arrivals of crew members and drivers for at least five teams.
They all arrived safely Friday morning — some teams drove to Atlanta to catch commercial flights — while others awaited a new morning charter.
“Yeah, it wasn’t real fun. Yesterday was a long day,” Van Gisbergen said once in Mexico City. “Pretty scary when the plane launched itself on take-off. They stopped and were trying to just get another plane. And then it was first thing this morning, so early start this morning. I think we got up at 3:30 a.m. at home and got on an early flight down here.”
It was a bumpy start to the first points-paying Cup Series race outside the United States as the entire Friday schedule had to be revamped to accommodate the stranded teams. And, with team personnel missing for some organizations, reinforcements were called in to help: the communications director for Trackhouse had to help unload the team cars off the haulers.
The trucks came directly from last Sunday’s race in Michigan and arrived at the Mexico City track on Thursday.
“Due to two aircraft issues that grounded multiple race teams in Charlotte, N.C., on Thursday, NASCAR has adjusted the on-track schedule for this weekend’s activities at Mexico City’s Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez,” NASCAR said in a statement.
NASCAR delayed Friday’s originally planned Cup Series practice to later in the afternoon. NASCAR also pushed all Xfinity Series practice sessions from Friday to Saturday. And, the first of two NASCAR Mexico Series races were moved to early Friday instead of their late Friday schedule.
The Xfinity Series will lose some practice time, with just one 50-minute session on Saturday morning, right before qualifying. There are other slight adjustments as well, but Cup teams will not lose any practice.
Van Gisbergen was rolling with the delay.
“You can’t predict that kind of stuff happening. There’s so many moving parts,” he said. “Everyone’s down here now. I think it’s all the important people, I guess, needed for (Friday) , so I think they’ve done a good job salvaging it.
“I guess it’s a big deal when you think about it, but I’m not really too fussed about it,” he continued. “I’m already focused on (racing). Obviously not ideal, but it happened and we fixed it.”
Elevation training
NASCAR drivers will face one of the biggest challenges of their career racing at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, which sits at an elevation of nearly 7,500 feet. The next highest track on the Cup circuit in terms of elevation is Las Vegas Motor Speedway at about 2,000 feet above sea level.
To prepare its drivers for the altitude, Toyota launched a comprehensive training program months ago that had its drivers wearing a mask that simulates less oxygen while training and even sleeping in a hypoxic tent.
Reddick was among those who slept in a tent to adjust to the higher altitude and mitigate potential symptoms of altitude sickness.
“One side effect of it is my wife hasn’t been super happy about me sleeping in a hypoxic environment especially at the later stages of her pregnancy,” said Reddick, whose wife delivered the couple’s second child May 25.
The tent idea was devised after JGR driver Christopher Bell asked Toyota what would be done to help maintain maximum performance in the high altitude.
“We started that early in the season just talking and getting a plan together, making sure we’re prepared for it,” Bell said. “I’m proud of everyone at Toyota, the Toyota Performance Center. Caitlin Quinn has really headed up the department of physical fitness and made sure we’re ready for this challenge. Hopefully, the Toyota drivers are the ones that are succeeding.”
The program was devised by Caitlin Quinn, director of performance for the Toyota Performance Center in Mooresville, North Carolina. She was a strength coach at Florida State University before joining Toyota Performance Center.
Quinn helped drivers learn to perform in a lower oxygen environment when they’re resting, as well as exercise in an environment with less oxygen. Toyota enclosed a space in its center with a bicycle inside it for drivers to ride in a lower oxygen setting.
Quinn said Toyota starting implementing those programs about eight weeks ago for drivers.
“It is different sleeping in a hypoxic environment,” Reddick said. “I’ve noted the changes so far, and I’m excited to see what it’s going to be like.”
Originally Published:
Motorsports
Todd Gilliland, Michael McDowell Pace Cup Practices from Mexico City
When the NASCAR Cup Series field begins tackling the road courses – especially on brand-new circuits – there are destined to be some interesting characters at the top of the speed charts in practice. That’s exactly what transpired during Friday’s two individual practice sessions at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City, when Michael McDowell (Spire […]

When the NASCAR Cup Series field begins tackling the road courses – especially on brand-new circuits – there are destined to be some interesting characters at the top of the speed charts in practice.
That’s exactly what transpired during Friday’s two individual practice sessions at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City, when Michael McDowell (Spire Motorsports) and Todd Gilliland (Front Row Motorsports) led the way for the 37-driver NASCAR Cup Series field.
McDowell led the first (and longest) practice session of the afternoon in Mexico City, as drivers and teams got up to speed with the 2.42-mile road course. The native of Avondale, Arizona laid down a lap time of 94.024 seconds, which equates to an average speed of 92.657 seconds.
The No. 71 B’laster Products Chevrolet turned 19 total laps in the 50-minute session, with the 14th circuit around Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez providing the chart-topping lap time.
McDowell is a two-time NASCAR Cup Series race-winner, the most recent of which came at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in the Summer of 2023, when the 40-year-old driver was still competing for Front Row Motorsports.
“It was a lot of fun,” McDowell said after the opening practice. “You always have a plan and you are going to try and execute your plan just right, and then you get out there and it’s a little bit different and you still have to find that rhythm and find that groove.”
Holding down the second and third-place spots in the opening practice session were Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Chase Briscoe and Ty Gibbs, whose lap times were just over a tenth of a second off of McDowell’s pace.
Austin Cindric, one of the series’ strongest road course drivers, was fourth quickest, while 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson completed the top-five.
Chris Buescher, winner of last September’s event at Watkins Glen International, was sixth-place overall in the session, with Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Shane Van Gisbergen, and Todd Gilliland completing the top-10.
Despite there being numerous smaller mistakes throughout the course of the practice sessions on Friday, the only major incident came at the expense of Noah Gragson and the No. 4 Front Row Motorsports team.
Gragson was in line behind William Byron and Justin Haley when the driver of the Long John Silver’s-sponsored entry locked up the brakes heading into Turn 1, slapping the outside wall and causing extensive damage to his vehicle.
Front Row Motorsports has determined that Gragson will go to a backup car. While Gragson had his major struggles in the opening practice session, it was his teammate Todd Gilliland, in a similarly designed Long John Silver’s entry, that paced the final practice session.
Gilliland put down the fastest lap of the weekend, so far, maneuvering around the circuit in 93.496 seconds, which equates to an average speed of 93.180mph.
“Hopefully, I can just keep it between the walls of the racetrack and keep it on the blacktop,” Gilliland said after final practice. “That’s always my goal when we come to a road course, but we’ve had some good speed when we come to road courses, so it feels good to be in the ballgame with our Long John Silver’s Ford Mustang.”
Ross Chastain was second-quickest in the session, with Ty Gibbs, Ryan Blaney, and Chris Buescher completing the top-five. Ryan Preece, Austin Cindric, Joey Logano, Daniel Suarez, and Shane Van Gisbergen completed the top-10.
Ryan Truex, who is subbing for Denny Hamlin this weekend in Mexico City, struggled to get up to speed in practice on Friday, ranking 36th and 35th in each respective practice, sitting anywhere from 1.75 to two seconds off the pace.
Qualifying for the Viva Mexico 250 at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez will take place on Saturday at 2:05 pm ET on Prime Video, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
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