Motorsports
What drivers said at Charlotte after the Coke 600 won by Ross Chastain
Ross Chastain — First: “”That’s the dedication it takes from Trackhouse. There were people that had Saturdays off, and they came in for this Chevy. To drive on that final run and pass two cars that had been way better all night … Holy cow, we just won the World 600!” William Byron — Second: […]

Ross Chastain — First: “”That’s the dedication it takes from Trackhouse. There were people that had Saturdays off, and they came in for this Chevy. To drive on that final run and pass two cars that had been way better all night … Holy cow, we just won the World 600!”
William Byron — Second: “He was catching me, I was trying to just defend and was getting a little bit tight. Disappointning. Just to lead that many laps and such a great effort by our whole team, and I could have anticipated that last run better. Just sucks. We’ll just keep going and keep trying to put races together like that. It will be good in the long-term I guess, but I really wanted this one. Yeah, just a bummer, right? Try to learn from it. Yeah, it was tough there at the end. He was catching me, and I was trying to. Just not quite enough.”
Chase Briscoe — Fourth: “Yeah, on paper, started first and finished third, but there is a lot more to the story. We made it a lot harder 600 miles than we probably needed too. We just had that penalty early and it kind of put us behind. When you start from the front, you kind of set your car up for clean air, we didn’t anticipate 37th. It just took us forever to just slowly creep up on it. We were kind of out of adjustments. So overall, we were probably a third-place car, realistically – just wish we could have got some stage points. Overall, a good finish, I wouldn’t say it was a great night. Honestly, that is just been how our season has gone – we’ve gotten really good finishes, but we’ve not just had very good day. So, hopefully, we can put one of those all the way together here soon.”
AJ Allmendinger — Fourth: “The No. 16 Chevrolet was good all night. We ran inside the top-five, top-six through most of the race. We needed a little bit more to get to the next level, but I’m super proud of everyone at Kaulig Racing. We had a tough three weeks there, but it’s great to come back and show up with a lot of speed. I told Sgt. Nicole Gee that’s on the side of our race car, I told her family I was going to do everything I could to try to get them in victory lane. It was close! It meant a lot to be able to meet her family. We know what this day is truly about, so I’m proud I could give her a great ride. Almost got all of us to victory lane.”
Brad Keselowski — Fifth: “We had a really good car. We got mixed up in some of the different stuff in the midpoint of the race and just clawed our way out. I feel like if we could have got to the lead, we could have won the race. I wish it was a 700-mile race. You feel like you earned it. Some of these races you’re like, ‘I don’t know if I earned it.’ Today, we earned it. Just getting to the lead dictated so many things and we weren’t able to get there, but I think we had the effort to do it. By the end of the night, I thought we were one of the best cars, if not the best. I just wish it was a 700-mile race. We’ve been really competitive the last few weeks and I feel like it just hasn’t all come together and it still hasn’t all come together, but this car has got the speed to win the race and I need to go get it. This car was good enough to win. We just weren’t able to put all the dots together and some of that falls on me for sure.”
Chase Elliott — Sixth: ““We had a really good No. 9 Chevrolet. Pit road was amazing. We gained spots on pit road all day, but I would give them right back on the next restart. I just needed to be better. We were making really good pace right there in the end. I just gave up too much on the restarts.”
Michael McDowell — Seventh: “It was a great night for the No. 71 Chevrolet team. I was bummed out about my mistake there early on with missing the pit box. We had a lot of speed in our Chevrolet, so really thankful for everyone at Spire Motorsports. I hate it for Carson (Hocevar). He was up there racing for the win. Not sure what happened there, but it was unfortunate for them. I was thankful to get back up to the front after a long night. It was just a big mistake on my part. I’m thankful to get a top-10 and miss some of the wrecks there. I’m really proud of the speed we had. We’ll try to build some momentum here and head to Nashville (Superspeedway).”
Ryan Preece — Ninth: “Honestly, it felt like we were really good. We were really good compared to the competition the first 200, but I’ve got to figure out how to qualify better because we had a terrible pit selection with just the situation we were in. We kept going to 12th and then would drop to 28th and then drive forward again. Once we got there and the night cooled things off, I just got too loose for how good I was early and that was the difference. Ultimately, I’m happy with a ninth and we’re going to continue on. Ford is really lucky to have a guy like Brad on his team, and I’m really lucky to have him as an owner, as a driver, as somebody that I can lean on. He’s really been helpful, so it’s been a lot of fun and certainly we want that position. We want to be in position to win these races, but today was one of those days where we grinded it out and got a ninth.”
Noah Gragson — 10th: “I felt like we had a really good Ford Mustang Dark Horse, but at the end of Stage 3, I was too short in the pit box and screwed us as a team. We really ran up in the top eight pretty much all night. I felt like our car was pretty strong and got set back to start that fourth stage. We were the last car on the lead lap, so to drive back up through the field and finish in the top 10 feels really good.”
Erik Jones — 13th: “Honestly, we just dealt with the same issues pretty much all race long. Just consistently way too tight and couldn’t seem to get it better with any of the adjustments we made. It was still a solid day thought to finish 13th after some issues throughout the race. This is the longest race of the season, and a big success is just surviving it. We did just that and walked away with some things we can work on for next week at Nashville.”
Shane van Gisbergen — 14th: “We’ve just been chipping away the last few weeks; getting better and better. I feel like we’ve just been growing in confidence. We’ve been a bit under the radar, but we had some good pace there. Unfortunately when Daniel (Suarez) and Ryan (Blaney) wrecked, I had to go across the infield, and it damaged something underneath and we were really tight. There were about five of them jumping on the front splitter to get it back down, but it wasn’t quite the same. A lot of the cars we finished behind, we were better than them, but it was promising.”
Kyle Busch — 15th: “I feel like a broken record saying another difficult night for our No. 8 Chevrolet team. The weekend started out with a steering issue. We got the pump changed and were able to make a qualifying lap but had to change the rack and go to the rear for the start of the race on Sunday. We were tight in dirty air. Crew chief Randall Burnett made some changes and got it running better when I heard a loud pop. Something broke, and we’re still not sure what it was. From that point on, we were just out of it. We tried a strategy call late in the race, but we had an issue on pit road so we weren’t really able to capitalize on that. I want to thank the family of Fireman Jeffrey M Svoboda for allowing us to honor him this weekend.”
Denny Hamlin — 16th: “You can’t change the results, so you’re going to have to live with it. They’re the pros. I’m not a pit guy. I tried to do everything I could. We had a great car, fun battling up front. Heck of a battle there. Would have liked to have seen it through and unfortunately didn’t get enough gas in it and had to come back in.”
Joey Logano — 17th: “: “It was a grind it out day for our 22 team, for sure. I’m proud of the way we continued to make our Ford competitive as the night went on and just kept making progress on it.”
Ty Dillon — 19th: “I honestly think that was probably the worst result we could have got for the car that we had. We had it really fast Chevrolet, so that’s the positive, but everything that could go wrong on pit road went wrong. It’s frustrating, we’ve got to get it cleaned up. We can all work better, including myself, to clean it up. We just didn’t catch a break at the end either with the lucky dog and no caution, but still happy with our speed.”
Austin Dillon — 20th: “We had a really solid Chevrolet tonight at Charlotte Motor Speedway. I’m proud of this RCR team for all the work they did after practice and qualifying on Saturday to give us something competitive for tonight. Crew chief Richard Boswell made great calls to keep up with the adjustments on our Chevy, and we had a car capable of running in the top five. Unfortunately, it came down to fuel mileage at the end and we ran out with two laps to go while running 10th. Disappointed, but overall, we had a solid car and our handling tonight was an improvement over where we’ve been the last few races. I want to thank Bass Pro Shops and Winchester for everything they do for our military and allowing us to honor our heroes this weekend with a patriotic paint scheme. It meant a lot to be able to race with United States Army Staff Sergeant Sean Gregory Landrus on our windshield header and John A. Morris above the door.”
Connor Zilisch — 23rd: “It was a really long day. My goal was to come in and run all the laps, and we did that. Finishing 23rd isn’t horrible. Probably better than I was expecting. We got some damage when Jimmie (Johnson) had an issue and spun into us, and that kind of hurt us for the rest of the day. I felt like we were actually pretty good during the first stage and we were making up ground. But nonetheless, really proud of Trackhouse Racing. It’s so cool to see Ross (Chastain) win such a big race, and I’m very thankful to be able to get this opportunity to run in the Cup Series again with Red Bull and Trackhouse Racing.”
Cody Ware — 25th: “I feel like today was a day where we can start building our momentum. It was a hard fought 600 miles but we were there at the end. I’m just thankful for the crew to build me such a fast Ford Mustang Dark Horse today and we’ll be able to take this 25th place finish and hopefully get a better qualifying draw for Nashville and start to build some momentum. I’m really happy with it. I’m worn out and exhausted and ready to get some sleep and start prepping for Nashville.”
John Hunter Nemechek — 27th: “We had a fast No. 42 Toyota Camry for Stage 1 and 2, we just got behind, losing track position, and got stuck. We ended up getting loose there at the end and got into the fence. Promising day, solid speed, just not the result that we want.”
Austin Cindric — 31st: “It’s a bit of a shame. I thought we had a solid run going, but I got a little too free and popped the fence. I was trying to be patient all night and still didn’t quite get it. I thought we had enough speed to sneak a top 10 in there tonight, but overall it was a difficult evening and I’m proud of the hustle from the guys to be able to finish the race.”
Kyle Larson — 37th: “I saw smoke and I tried to get left through the infield and I just didn’t get far enough left. I got tagged and it ended our night. Just a bummer of a day all around. I just got super loose into turn three out of nowhere early in the race. I caught the wall and got some toe damage. I thought the No. 5 Chevrolet team did a great job in getting us back to where we were somewhat comfortable there the last 200 laps. We just needed to kind of chip away at it and I thought we could still end up OK. Just not the day that I wanted, but huge thanks to Rick and Linda Hendrick, all of Hendrick Motorsports, Arrow McLaren, Chevrolet, everybody involved in making the day memorable. It’s just unfortunate, but hopefully we can run it back someday.”
Ryan Blaney — 38th: “It was three-wide and tight getting off the corner. I thought I was kind of high enough as I could go, and it seems like, I don’t know if it was just a big squeeze, a couple of us bounced off each other – just tight off (Turn) 4. The first caution set us back and then finally got close to the top 10, but now we’re gonna go home early. It’s one of those things.”
Zane Smith — 39th: “We got a little behind on adjustments and were racing with guys that are just a little sketchier. Unfortunately, I just got tight and tried to slide up in front of (Shane van Gisbergen) and got a little free and then just got finished off by him. It’s unfortunate because we had a really good car until our halfway break. All in all, we’ve been fast this year and we just need to keep it going.”
Motorsports
NASCAR qualifying results for Atlanta: Bowman, Larson lead Hendrick Motorsports in starting lineup
HAMPTON, Ga. – The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the second time in 2025. Even without practice, the Hendrick Motorsports crew showed impressive speed on track during qualifying. Despite a twice-delayed qualifying session, the full field logged laps to set the starting lineup for Saturday’s race. Alex Bowman led the Hendrick […]

HAMPTON, Ga. – The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the second time in 2025.
Even without practice, the Hendrick Motorsports crew showed impressive speed on track during qualifying.
Despite a twice-delayed qualifying session, the full field logged laps to set the starting lineup for Saturday’s race.
Alex Bowman led the Hendrick Motorsports contingent with a lap of 31.203 seconds to earn the ninth spot on the starting grid. That was good enough to edge teammate Kyle Larson by two spots.
Rounding out the organization’s cars, Chase Elliott will fire off from the 15th spot with William Byron starting 18th.
RELATED: Check out the paint schemes for this weekend
Byron has a pair of wins at Atlanta and is one of only two drivers with multiple victories at the track since its repave ahead of the 2022 season. Elliott also has a victory at his home track to go with eight top 10s.
Larson turned in his best Atlanta finish with a third-place showing in the spring and has led 458 laps there, the most of any track in which he has yet to win. Bowman came home fifth in last fall’s race at the 1.54-mile quad-oval.
RELATED: Atlanta Motor Speedway driver averages
This week is not only the first week of the NASCAR In-Season Challenge, but it also marks the first of five races to be broadcasted on TNT. Be sure to catch the event tomorrow night at 7 p.m. ET.
Here is a look at the starting lineup below:
NASCAR qualifying today
- Joey Logano, No. 22, 30.979
- Josh Berry, No. 21, 30.979
- Ryan Blaney, No. 12, 30.983
- Austin Cindric, No. 2, 31.037
- Ryan Preece, No. 60, 31.13
- Brad Keselowski, No. 6, 31.153
- Cole Custer, No. 41, 31.155
- Zane Smith, No. 38, 31.16
- Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Chevrolet, 31.203
- Chase Briscoe, No. 19, 31.21
- Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, 31.237
- Austin Dillon, No. 3, 31.242
- Chris Buescher, No. 17, 31.247
- Ty Dillon, No. 10, 31.265
- Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA/CHOA Chevrolet, 31.284
- Ty Gibbs, No. 54, 31.298
- Todd Gilliland, No. 34, 31.302
- William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet, 31.31
- John Hunter Nemechek, No. 42, 31.315
- Riley Herbst, No. 35, 31.315
- AJ Allmendinger, No. 16, 31.329
- Justin Haley, No. 7, 31.329
- Tyler Reddick, No. 45, 31.331
- Bubba Wallace, No. 23, 31.353
- Corey LaJoie, No. 01, 31.356
- Erik Jones, No. 43, 31.358
- Noah Gragson, No. 4, 31.376
- Christopher Bell, No. 20, 31.405
- Kyle Busch, No. 8, 31.407
- Carson Hocevar, No. 77, 31.409
- Daniel Suarez, No. 99, 31.446
- Michael McDowell, No. 71, 31.462
- Denny Hamlin, No. 11, 31.463
- Ross Chastain, No. 1, 31.484
- Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88, 31.485
- Connor Zilisch, No. 87, 31.5
- Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47, 31.537
- B.J. McLeod, No. 78, 31.55
- Cody Ware, No. 51, 31.564
- David Starr, No. 66, 34.113
Where is NASCAR racing this weekend?
The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series are back at Atlanta Motor Speedway while the Truck and ARCA Series venture out to Lime Rock Park.
Where is Atlanta Motor Speedway?
Atlanta Motor Speedway is located in Hampton, Georgia.
Where is Lime Rock Park?
Lime Rock Park is located in Lakeville, Connecticut.
RELATED: How does Hendrick Motorsports stack up for the in-season tournament?
What time is the NASCAR race on today?
(All times listed in eastern time)
Friday, June 27
- 7:30 p.m. – Xfinity Series race, CW
Saturday, June 28
- 9:30 a.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series qualifying, FS1
- 1 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, FOX
- 4 – ARCA race, FS2
- 7 – Cup Series race, TNT
NASCAR in season tournament bracket
- Matchup 1 – Denny Hamlin (1) vs. Ty Dillon (32)
- Matchup 2 – Kyle Busch (16) vs. Brad Keselowski (17)
- Matchup 3 – Bubba Wallace (9) vs. Daniel Suarez (24)
- Matchup 4 – Alex Bowman (8) vs. Joey Logano (25)
- Matchup 5 – Christopher Bell (4) vs. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (29)
- Matchup 6 – Ross Chastain (13) vs. Erik Jones (20)
- Matchup 7 – John Hunter Nemechek (12) vs. Josh Berry (21)
- Matchup 8 – Chase Elliott (5) vs. Austin Dillon (28)
- Matchup 9 – Chase Briscoe (2) vs. Noah Gragson (31)
- Matchup 10 – Ryan Preece (15) vs. William Byron (18)
- Matchup 11 – Kyle Larson (10) vs. Tyler Reddick (23)
- Matchup 12 – Ryan Blaney (7) vs. Carson Hocevar (26)
- Matchup 13 – Chris Buescher (3) vs. Todd Gilliland (30)
- Matchup 14 – Zane Smith (14) vs. Austin Cindric (19)
- Matchup 15 – Michael McDowell (11) vs. AJ Allmendinger (22)
- Matchup 16 – Ty Gibbs (6) vs. Justin Haley (27)
Motorsports
19th Annual Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals June 26-29 in Norwalk
The four-day event is part of the Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series. NORWALK, Ohio — The 19th Annual Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals is set to bring high-speed action to Summit Motorsports Park in Norwalk from June 26-29. The four-day event is part of the Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series and features competition […]

The four-day event is part of the Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series.
NORWALK, Ohio — The 19th Annual Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals is set to bring high-speed action to Summit Motorsports Park in Norwalk from June 26-29.
The four-day event is part of the Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series and features competition across several major categories, including Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock and Pro Stock Motorcycle. Additional classes include the Flexjet NHRA Factory Stock Showdown, Holley EFI NHRA Factory X, and the GETTRX Pro Stock NHRA All-Star Callout.
Racing began Thursday with sportsman qualifying. Professional qualifying is taking place Friday and continues into Saturday.
Final eliminations and championship rounds are scheduled for Sunday, following driver introductions and pre-race festivities.
Fans can also access the pit area throughout the weekend, where teams work on vehicles between rounds.
Premium ticket options are available through the Top Eliminator Club, which includes seating and meals. General tickets are on sale now through Summit Motorsports Park’s website or by calling 419-668-5555.
More information can be found HERE.
Motorsports
NASCAR Cup Series Quaker State 400 Available at…
Both Logano and Berry clocked in at 30.979 seconds around the EchoPark Speedway. With current placement in the NASCAR Cup Series points standings serving as the tiebreaker, Logano. claimed the pole award for the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart. Logano and Berry led a Ford lockout of the first four rows on the grid. […]
Motorsports
Atlanta Cup starting lineup: Joey Logano wins pole as Fords dominate qualifying
HAMPTON, Ga. — Joey Logano will start on the pole for Saturday night’s Cup race at EchoPark Speedway, as Fords took the top eight spots in the 40-car field. He claimed the top starting spot with a lap of 178.960 mph. It is Logano’s first pole of the season and 32nd of his Cup career. […]

HAMPTON, Ga. — Joey Logano will start on the pole for Saturday night’s Cup race at EchoPark Speedway, as Fords took the top eight spots in the 40-car field.
He claimed the top starting spot with a lap of 178.960 mph. It is Logano’s first pole of the season and 32nd of his Cup career.
For the second Atlanta race in a row, Team Penske and its affiliate, Wood Brothers Racing, grabbed the top four starting positions.
NASCAR’s Driver Ambassador Program rewards drivers for their promotion of the sport.
Josh Berry, who drives for the Wood Brothers, will start next to Logano on the front row. Berry posted the same lap time as Logano but Logano got the pole because ties are broken by car owner points. Logano’s car ranks higher than Berry’s car in the owner standings.
Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney will start third after a lap of 178.937 mph, and teammate Austin Cindric qualified fourth with a lap of 178.626 mph. Ryan Preece, who drives for RFK Racing, qualified fifth at 178.092.
He was followed by teammate Brad Keselowski (177.960 mph), Cole Custer (177.949) and Zane Smith (177.920). Alex Bowman (177.675) will start ninth as the top Chevrolet in qualifying. Pocono winner Chase Briscoe qualified 10th with a lap of 177.635 mph and is the top Toyota.
The green flag for Saturday’s race is scheduled to wave at 7:19 p.m. ET on TNT and TruTV
Motorsports
Kyle Larson’s car chief ejected after two inspection failures at Atlanta
In pre-qualifying inspection at EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta), most of the 40-car field made it through the process without issue. However, the same cannot be said for Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 5 Chevrolet of Kyle Larson. Larson’s car failed inspection twice, finally passing on the third attempt. They narrowly avoided having to a serve a […]

In pre-qualifying inspection at EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta), most of the 40-car field made it through the process without issue. However, the same cannot be said for Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 5 Chevrolet of Kyle Larson.
Larson’s car failed inspection twice, finally passing on the third attempt. They narrowly avoided having to a serve a pass-through penalty, but the two inspection failures will still result in some penalties for the team.
First, Larson’s car chief Jesse Saunders has been ejected and will not be able to be present at the track for the remainder of the race weekend. They have also lose their pit stall selection, meaning they will get whatever stall is left after the rest of the field picks.
There were no other reported issues. However, qualifying was shortened to one round due to some weather that passed through the area and a lightning delay that pushed the session another 30 minutes from its scheduled start time. Larson will be the 36th driver out on track. Since the reconfiguration, Larson’s best qualifying effort at Atlanta is third. He timed in 17th for the race here earlier this year.
Hendrick Motorsports was also penalized following last weekend’s NASCAR Xfinity race at Pocono after an issue was found with the No. 17 HMS Chevrolet driven by Chase Elliott. The part-time entry was fined $40,000, docked some points and the crew chief was suspended for three races.
In this article
Nick DeGroot
NASCAR Cup
Kyle Larson
Hendrick Motorsports
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Motorsports
Everything to Know About NASCAR Driver Christopher Bell
While Christopher Bell still looks like he’s getting ready for that pesky, third-period geometry test, his youthful countenance – don’t you dare say baby-face – is, as many new and veteran drivers alike have found out first-hand, merely a mask. How to Watch Catch up on past episodes of Race For The Championship on Peacock […]

While Christopher Bell still looks like he’s getting ready for that pesky, third-period geometry test, his youthful countenance – don’t you dare say baby-face – is, as many new and veteran drivers alike have found out first-hand, merely a mask.
Like Sun Tzu’s first lesson in The Art of War, Bell’s disarming smile and easy-going nature help deceive his adversaries, lulling them to think the JGR driver doesn’t pose a threat. Surely his success is just a fluke, right? But don’t be fooled into thinking anything other than the fact: the 30-year-old talent is every bit of a bona fide Championship contender. And with four wins already to his name in 2025, including three consecutive victories plus the All-Star race’s $1 million purse, he’s putting the rest of the NASCAR Cup Series on notice this year.
Who is Christopher Bell?
Born December 16, 1994, in Norman, Oklahoma, Bell felt an immediate magnetism to racing. At just three years old, he was captivated watching local speedsters burn rubber, and in two years, he was inquiring about technical racing elements – the kind of head-scratchers an older teenager or even an adult would ask, reports The Oklahoman. A year later, he was making a name for himself at I-44 Speedway, and before his 10th birthday, Bell was crisscrossing the Sooner State, fueled by an endless supply of his mom’s hotel nachos as he staked his claim on dirt tracks in Tulsa, Claremore, and Fort Cobb to name a few.
By the time he was 12, Bell had found his raison d’être and told his father that he planned to “race cars for a living.” Though easier said than done, getting his hands around the wheel of a midget car proved to be a lynchpin moment for Bell’s career because it paved the way for him to get recognized by Keith Kunz Motorsports. As his relationship crystalized with the Indiana-based outfit, he replaced current Cup Series superstar Kyle Larson, and his success there eventually led to him signing with Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2015 to race in the Craftsman Truck Series. Two years later, Bell took home the grand prize, winning the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
Christopher Bell’s Xfinity and Cup Series history
Following his second of three consecutive Chili Bowl series wins in 2018, Bell made the leap into competing full-time in the Xfinity Series with Joe Gibbs Racing. After becoming the first driver to win three races in a row since Dale Earnhardt Jr. accomplished the feat in 1999, Bell went on to set the Xfinity Series rookie win record with six victories. Buoyed by strong performances, he made it to the championship but finished 11th, dropping him to fourth in points in his inaugural season.
Bell followed up that success by finishing third overall in the Xfinity Series in 2019, which provided Leavine Family Racing enough confidence to offer him a Cup Series car in 2020. His debut season yielded only two top-5 and seven top-10 finishes but, more importantly, he scored a new ride with Joe Gibbs Racing, driving the No. 20 for the former NFL Super Bowl-winning coach. That year, while still refining his calculated yet aggressive driving style, Bell became the first Oklahoma native to win in NASCAR’s top flight and just the 35th driver to score victories in all three main series.
No stranger to must-win situations, Bell’s heroics during the Charlotte Roval race in 2022 powered him to the Round of 8, and he advanced to the finale in Phoenix after another must-win victory at Martinsville. While he ultimately came up short in the high desert, he did finish third to mark a career best.
Despite only scoring a pair of wins the subsequent year, Bell motored through the playoffs, narrowly winning at Homestead to punch his Championship 4 ticket. Still, a mechanical failure with his brakes derailed any dream of hosting the Bill France Cup at the end of the Phoenix finale that year. In 2024, he slightly improved by increasing his wins to four, but he again fell short of ultimate glory, finishing fifth in the overall standings.
While “Must-Win” Bell is always a threat in the playoffs, his trifecta of consecutive wins this season and visible confidence after eclipsing Joey Logano in the final 10 laps of the 2025 All-Star race now have many wondering if this truly is the year he gets over the hump and the Christopher Bell Era begins.
What kind of car does Christopher Bell drive?
Christopher Bell currently drives the No. 20 Camry XSE for Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) in the NASCAR Cup Series, and he competes part-time in the Xfinity Series, piloting the No. 19 Toyota GR Supra for JGR and the No. 24 Toyota GR Supra for Sam Hunt Racing.
Bell currently lives on the luxurious Lake Norman in Mooresville, North Carolina, with his wife of five years, Morgan. Though it’s unknown what sort of vehicular fleet awaits Bell when he returns from triumphing on the track, the Cup Series star does keep one very special ride inside his house: his winning car from his first Chili Bowl Championship.
The NASCAR Cup Series makes it way to USA Network on August 3 with the Iowa Corn 350 Powered by Ethanol. Coverage then shifts to NBC on August 23 for the Coke Zero Sugar 400. The remainder of the post-season will air on USA Network except for the final two playoff races and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship in Phoenix, Arizona, which will air on NBC. To find out more, please check local listings and the Cup Series schedule.
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