MARTINSVILLE, Va. — William Byron picked a good time to pick up the first Martinsville Speedway pole position of his NASCAR Cup Series career, qualifying first in the starting lineup for what he is treating as a must-win race.
Byron, the 27-year-old driver of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet, is among six playoff contenders battling to claim the final two of four title-eligible spots for next weekend’s season finale at Phoenix Raceway. He turned a lap of 19.286 seconds (98.185 mph) in Saturday qualifying at Martinsville to nip Ty Gibbs’ Joe Gibbs Racing No. 54 Toyota by two thousandths of a second on the 0.526-mile oval, the shortest track on NASCAR’s current schedule.
Hendrick’s Kyle Larson qualified third, followed by Joey Logano in a Team Penske Ford and JGR’s Denny Hamlin as playoff drivers took four of the top five starting positions for Sunday’s 500-lap race.
Larson and JGR’s Christopher Bell, who qualified 12th, both are comfortably above the points cutline and could secure title shots at Phoenix via solid finishes at Martinsville.
Though there are 37 cars in the field Sunday, Larson and Bell essentially are in a match race with a championship berth for whoever scores the most points.
“You don’t want to spend too much focus on him, but the majority of it for sure revolves around Bell,” Larson said. “This year is a little bit simpler because there’s four guys that probably look at it as a must win, and then me and Bell just look at it as we have to outpoint each other, and we’re in. You know what you have to do, but it’s just going out there and doing it is the tough part.”
Byron, the winner of the past two editions of the season-opening Daytona 500, likely needs a win to be one of the final four contenders for the third consecutive year, and the two-time Martinsville winner positioned himself well with his third pole this season at a track where his previous best starting spot was third.
“It’s great; it’s not the race, though,” Byron said about the 16th pole of his Cup Series career and first in 26 races. “We’ve got a lot of work to do, but it feels nice. We usually struggle to qualify well here. Just excited for tomorrow. It’s a big challenge, and that’s what counts. After 500 laps, we’ll see how we are.”
Also in must-win territory are reigning Cup Series champion Logano, Hendrick’s Chase Elliott, who will start eighth, and Penske’s Ryan Blaney, who qualified a disappointing 31st in pursuit of his third consecutive victory in the third-round cutoff race at Martinsville.
Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota initially failed to start on its qualifying run and needed a push from several team members to get the engine fired. It’s at least the third mechanical problem during the playoffs for Hamlin, who had trouble with power steering at Kansas Speedway and a stuck throttle at Alabama’s Talladega Superspeedway.
The driver with 60 Cup Series wins but no season title on NASCAR’s top-tier circuit was optimistic he wouldn’t forfeit his Martinsville starting spot by making an unapproved adjustment before Sunday’s race.
“You’ve got to know what the problem is before you can fix it,” he said, “and I don’t think we know what the problem is.”
Hamlin could take solace in already having secured a title shot in Phoenix with his Oct. 12 victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. JGR teammate Chase Briscoe, who qualified ninth at Martinsville, joined Hamlin in the final four with his victory last Sunday at Talladega.
Blaney (+350) is favored by BetMGM Sportsbook ahead of Hamlin (+425), who won at Martinsville on March 30, Elliott (+650), Larson (+675) and Bell (+675).
Hendrick, JGR and Penske — the three organizations representing the eight playoff drivers — have combined to win the past 14 races at Martinsville.









