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2025 NASCAR Cup Series

77th season of NASCAR Cup Series racing From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 NASCAR Cup Series
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The 2025 NASCAR Cup Series was the 77th season of NASCAR professional stock car racing in the United States and the 54th season of the modern-era Cup Series. Joey Logano of Team Penske entered the season as the defending 2024 NASCAR Cup Series champion.[1] The season started with the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium on February 2, and concluded at Phoenix Raceway on November 2, where Kyle Larson won the championship after finishing third at the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race.

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Kyle Larson, the 2025 champion.
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Denny Hamlin finished second in the standings.
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Chase Briscoe finished third in the standings.
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William Byron, the Regular Season Champion, finished fourth in the standings.
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Shane van Gisbergen, the 2025 NASCAR Rookie of the Year.
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Chevrolet won the manufacturers' championship.

The 2025 season was the first year under NASCAR's new TV deal that will last until 2031. This was also the first year since 2008 that Stewart–Haas Racing (now Haas Factory Team) did not have the ownership of Tony Stewart. Katherine Legge made her Cup Series debut as well. NASCAR held its first race outside the United States in 67 years with the 2025 Viva México 250.[2]

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Teams and drivers

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Chartered teams

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Non-chartered teams

Full schedule

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Limited schedule

Notes

  1. At Watkins Glen (race #24), Zilisch practiced and qualified the No. 87. However, due to his injury sustained the previous day, Trackhouse announced that they would withdraw the No. 87 from the race.[108]

Team changes

New teams/rebrands

Expansions

Closures

  • Stewart–Haas Racing shut down its operations at the conclusion of the 2024 season.[147]

Manufacturers

  • Chevrolet continued to field cars with the Camaro ZL1 body, but without the Camaro branding, as the manufacturer discontinued the car after 2023 with no direct replacement. Instead, the cars were branded as the "ZL1".[148]

Sponsorship

Driver changes

Moving teams

Moving between series

Retirement

  • Martin Truex Jr. retired from full-time competition at the conclusion of the 2024 season, vacating his No. 19 for Joe Gibbs Racing.[60]

Rookies

  • Shane van Gisbergen moved up to the Cup Series full-time after running in the Xfinity Series in 2024.[33]
  • Riley Herbst moved up to the Cup Series full-time after running in the Xfinity Series in 2024.[85]
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Rule changes

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Pre-season

Sources:[182][183][184]

  • A new "Open Exemption Provisional" rule has been introduced for the NASCAR Cup Series, allowing world-class drivers to compete in a race. These drivers will not earn race points, playoff points, prize money, or tiebreaker advantages based on their finishing position. However, they will retain the win, including the trophy and All-Star eligibility. The second-place finisher will receive first-place points but will not gain playoff points or playoff eligibility.
  • Vehicles on the Damaged Vehicle Policy (DVP) may drive to the garage or be towed there if necessary. A repair clock of 7 minutes (8 minutes for Atlanta) is activated for vehicles undergoing repairs on pit road. Once the clock expires, the vehicle must move to the garage to continue repairs but will not be disqualified from the race. If a vehicle cannot reach pit road due to damage or flat tires, it will be towed directly to the garage. Additionally, if a car leaves its pit box and the repair clock expires before it crosses the pit-out yellow line, a penalty will be assessed.
  • If a playoff waiver is granted for missing a race (exceptions to the forfeit of playoff points include medical reasons—driver medical, birth of a child, family emergency, etc.—and age restrictions), the driver will forfeit all current and future playoff points (earned prior to the playoffs) and will start the playoffs with a maximum of 2,000 points.
  • Rules violations by an OEM may result in a loss of manufacturer points, and/or loss of wind tunnel hours, and/or loss of RCFD runs. Penalties will be assessed for violations of the vehicle testing policy, wind tunnel policy, event roster, and code of conduct policy.
  • Suspensions resulting from technical penalties may be deferred, without appeal, to the next race following the penalty. All other suspensions take effect immediately.
  • An additional bonus point for the fastest lap in a points paying race event has been introduced. This does not apply to Daytona Duels.[185]

In-season

  • The OEP was adjusted: if there are more than 40 cars, the field will automatically expand to 41, and the team requesting the provisional may use it regardless of qualifying position.[186]
  • If a vehicle is serviced in another team's pit stall, it will receive a penalty based on the reason for service: a flag status penalty (restart at the tail of the field or pass-through) for safety issues, or a potential lap(s) penalty for competition adjustments.[187]
  • Just before the Brickyard 400, NASCAR introduced a new rule: it may, at its sole discretion, limit the number of race entries to 40. In such cases, open teams will be selected based on the team owner points standings.[188]
    • Four open teams will be eligible for starting grid positions based on the fastest single lap speed posted to each open team's vehicle in the first qualifying round.[188]
    • Up to six open teams will be eligible for starting grid positions based on the highest ranked team owner points standings.[188]
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Changes

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New TV deal

In 2025 NASCAR started the first year of a 7 year TV deal lasting until 2031. In this deal Fox will broadcast twelve races (including the Clash, Daytona Duels, and All-Star Race), while NBC will broadcast fourteen races. Amazon and TNT will broadcast five races each.[189] In addition, the season marked the debut of NASCAR's In-Season Challenge, which was won by Ty Gibbs.[190]

Ownership changes

This is the first season without Tony Stewart's ownership of Stewart–Haas Racing since 2008.[191] Gene Haas, the other co-owner of SHR, announced he would retain the team and rebrand it as Haas Factory Team for 2025.[38] This is also the first season without 2017 champion Martin Truex Jr. as a full-time driver since 2005, as he announced his retirement from full-time racing on June 14, 2024.[60] This is also the first season since 2015 to have more than forty cars in a race with the new Open Exemption Provisional rule.[182]

New charter

The 2025 season is the first under the new charter agreement, which limits teams to a maximum of three charters. Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing, which have four charters each, are grandfathered in the new agreement.[192]

Drivers making Cup Series debuts

Katherine Legge made her Cup Series debut in March at the Shriners Children's 500, making her the first woman to compete in the Cup Series since Danica Patrick in the 2018 Daytona 500.[94] Legge also competed at Mexico City, Chicago, Sonoma, Indianapolis, Watkins Glen, and Las Vegas.[95][96][97]

Connor Zilisch also made his Cup Series debut, running races at Austin, Charlotte, and Atlanta.[193] Zilisch was also scheduled to run Watkins Glen, but sustained a broken collarbone after falling from his car after winning the Xfinity race the previous day, forcing his car to withdraw from the race.[194]

Jesse Love made his Cup Series debut at Bristol for his team, Richard Childress Racing.[104] Love additionally competed at Texas, Kansas, Indianapolis, and Richmond, split between RCR and Beard Motorsports.[89][105]

After competing in the preliminaries for the exhibition Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, modified racing driver Burt Myers made his official Cup Series debut at Martinsville.[107]

Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Hélio Castroneves made his Cup Series debut in the Daytona 500.[115] Castroneves made the field with the new Open Exemption Provisional rule, making the race the first since 2015 to have more than 40 cars.

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Schedule

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The 2025 schedule was released on August 29, 2024, and consists of 30 oval races, 5 road course races, one street track race, and 4 non-championship races to be held on ovals.[195] The start times were announced on November 13.[196]

Bolded races indicate an event generally known as a Crown Jewel race.

 O  Oval track
 R  Road course
 S  Street course

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Confirmed schedule changes

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Season summary

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Preseason

Exhibition: Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium

Chase Elliott secured the pole position for the 200-lap race featuring a 23-car field with notable drivers such as Austin Dillon, Zane Smith, and Ty Gibbs failing to qualify. Elliott dominated the race, leading 171 laps, winning the race and earning his first career Clash win.[208]

Exhibition: The Duel at Daytona

In the first duel, Bubba Wallace clinched victory in the 60-lap race, which featured a 23-car field. Notably, drivers such as Zane Smith and Chase Briscoe failed to finish the race. Wallace led 21 laps, securing the win and earning 10 points.[209]

In the second duel, Austin Cindric started from the pole position in a 23-car field. The race concluded dramatically when a caution was called just before the finish line, leading NASCAR to declare Cindric the winner over Erik Jones, as he was ahead at the time of the caution.[210]

Regular season

Round 1: Daytona 500

William Byron overtook pole-sitter Chase Briscoe early before the race was red flagged on lap 11 for a weather delay in the area. After nearly 4 hours under the red flag, involving 2 red flags, the race promptly resumed. Joey Logano won the first stage, but had engine issues that forced him to the back of the pack. Ross Chastain got turned and collected Shane van Gisbergen, Martin Truex Jr., Josh Berry, and Hélio Castroneves while Ryan Blaney edged out Austin Cindric and won the second stage. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. made contact with Logano and collected Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott, Noah Gragson, and Todd Gilliland. With 5 laps to go, as the field entered the backstretch, Cole Custer turned Christopher Bell into the wall, resulting in Ryan Preece flipping mid-air, resulting in overtime. On the final lap, Custer made contact with Denny Hamlin and caused a huge wreck as Byron snuck his way through and held off Tyler Reddick and Jimmie Johnson to win his second consecutive Daytona 500, becoming the fifth driver in history to do so. This was the 10th Daytona 500 win for Hendrick Motorsports, surpassing Petty Enterprises for the most all-time by a race team.[211]

Round 2: Ambetter Health 400

Ryan Blaney scored the pole for the race. Josh Berry won the first stage and Kyle Larson won the second stage, his first stage win on a drafting track. On lap 150, Chase Elliott, Brad Keselowski and Corey LaJoie were in a wreck, sending both Keselowski and LaJoie out. On lap 184, a wreck with Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Noah Gragson, Daniel Suárez, Ty Gibbs, Cody Ware, Cole Custer, and J. J. Yeley occurred sending them all out of the race. With 4 laps to go, as the field entered the backstretch, Larson hit Austin Cindric and William Byron resulting in overtime. On the final lap, Berry, Justin Haley and Ryan Preece collided on the backstretch with caution being deployed just when Christopher Bell snuck his way through Carson Hocevar and Larson to win his first Atlanta race.[212]

Round 3: EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix

Tyler Reddick scored the pole for the race. Bubba Wallace won the first stage, his first on a road course and after Shane van Gisbergen pitted, Ryan Preece won the second stage, his first stage win since the 2023 Martinsville spring race. Christopher Bell ended up winning the race, after an intense battle between Kyle Busch, William Byron, and Reddick.[213] 18-year-old Connor Zilisch made his Cup Series debut with Trackhouse Racing, but was involved in a wreck with teammate Daniel Suárez.[214]

Round 4: Shriners Children's 500

William Byron won the pole. Byron won the first stage and Christopher Bell won the second stage. On lap 99, Brad Keselowski, Carson Hocevar, Riley Herbst, Justin Haley, Chase Briscoe, Austin Dillon, and Cole Custer, and Shane van Gisbergen were involved in a huge pile-up, sending them all out. Bell would end up getting his third consecutive win, becoming the first to do so since Kyle Larson in 2021, and the first since the debut of the Next Gen car.[215]

Round 5: Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube

Michael McDowell won the pole, marking the first pole won by Spire Motorsports. Austin Cindric won the first stage and Kyle Larson won the second stage. Josh Berry won the race, after battling Daniel Suárez to earn his first career win in the Cup Series and the 101st career win for the Wood Brothers.[216]

Round 6: Straight Talk Wireless 400

Alex Bowman won the pole. Ryan Blaney won the first stage and Denny Hamlin won the second stage. On Lap 207, after leading 124 laps, Blaney's engine blew up, ending his day early. After overtaking teammate Alex Bowman with less than 10 to go, Kyle Larson claimed his 30th career win. In an attempt to perform a weekend sweep, Larson ended up getting a win in the Truck Series race 2 days earlier, however came up just short of a victory during the Xfinity Series race.[217]

Round 7: Cook Out 400

Christopher Bell won the pole. Joey Logano won the first stage and Denny Hamlin won the second stage. Hamlin would end up leading 274 laps en route to his first win of 2025.[218]

Round 8: Goodyear 400

William Byron won the pole. Byron dominated early, leading the opening 243 laps and sweeping the stages. It was the most laps Byron has ever led in a single race. After a late-race caution with 4 laps to go, Denny Hamlin took the lead after pit stops. On the ensuing green-white-checkered restart, he held off Byron and Christopher Bell to win for the second straight week.[219]

Round 9: Food City 500

Alex Bowman won the pole. Kyle Larson swept the stages, and led 411 laps en route to his second consecutive win at Bristol. Larson attempted to sweep the weekend again, winning the Xfinity Series race the previous day, but came up just short with a 2nd place in the Truck Series race.[220]

Round 10: Jack Link's 500

Zane Smith won his first career pole. On lap 43, Brad Keselowski, who made contact with Kyle Busch, would end up collecting former teammate Ryan Blaney after attempting to pit, ending his and Blaney's day early. Kyle Larson won the first stage and Bubba Wallace won the second stage. Austin Cindric would win the race, edging out Ryan Preece by 0.022 seconds for the 29th closest finish in NASCAR history.[221] Preece and Joey Logano were disqualified after post race inspection.[222]

Round 11: Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY

Carson Hocevar won his first career pole. Denny Hamlin's car caught on fire, ending stage one early, with Austin Cindric winning the stage. Chris Buescher caused a debris caution ending stage two early, with Kyle Larson winning the stage. After a caution filled event, Joey Logano won the race in overtime.[223]

Round 12: AdventHealth 400

Kyle Larson won the pole. Larson dominated the race, leading 221 laps, sweeping the stages, and setting the fastest lap. Larson ended up winning the race and winning his second consecutive Kansas spring race, also winning the 2024 AdventHealth 400.[224]

Exhibition: NASCAR All-Star Race

Shane van Gisbergen won the pole for the Open, while Brad Keselowski and Christopher Bell won their heat races on Saturday, earning the pole and second-place starting positions for the main event, respectively.[225] Carson Hocevar won the Open race, with John Hunter Nemechek finishing second, and Noah Gragson advancing as the fan vote winner. All three transferred into Sunday night's main event.[226]

In the early laps, Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano battled for position, with Joey Logano eventually taking the lead and controlling much of the race. When the "Promoter's Caution" came out on lap 216, the field split on pit strategy. Five drivers, including race leader Logano, stayed out on older tires. On the restart, Bell who had taken two fresh tires and restarted sixth, used the tire advantage to pass the five drivers that stayed out and secure his first All-Star Race victory.[227]

Round 13: Coca-Cola 600

Chase Briscoe won the pole. Duels sparked within the stages late, however William Byron swept all three stages, the first time a driver swept all three stages since the 2021 race. Byron led the race late, however, Ross Chastain passed Byron with 6 laps to go and won his first career Coca-Cola 600, coming from 40th place.[228]

Round 14: Cracker Barrel 400

Chase Briscoe won the pole.[229] Denny Hamlin won the first stage. Ryan Blaney won the second stage. Blaney dominated the last stage and won the race, earning his first victory of the season.[230]

Round 15: FireKeepers Casino 400

Chase Briscoe won his third consecutive pole. Chris Buescher won the first stage. On lap 67, Alex Bowman hit the outside wall hard, sending out the red flag, and ending his day early. William Byron won the second stage. After an intense battle between Denny Hamlin, Ty Gibbs and Byron, involving clear air and fuel mileage, Hamlin took the lead with 4 laps to go and won the race, days before his third child was born,[231] and his first victory at Michigan since 2011.[232]

Round 16: Viva México 250

In the first international race for NASCAR since 1958, Shane van Gisbergen won the pole. After the race started, a caution quickly flew for rain, NASCAR then allowed teams to use wet weather tires. Ryan Preece won the first stage, and van Gisbergen won the second stage. van Gisbergen dominated the race, leading 60 laps, and won, getting his first win since the 2023 Grant Park 220.[233]

Round 17: The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA

Denny Hamlin won the pole. Hamlin led every lap of stage one, and Chase Briscoe won the second stage. Briscoe held off a speedy Hamlin to get his first win of the season, as well as his first win with Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota.[234]

Round 18: Quaker State 400 available at Walmart

Joey Logano won the pole, with Ford sweeping the top eight spots. Austin Cindric won the first stage, and Tyler Reddick won the second stage by .001 seconds over Chase Elliott. A large wreck on Lap 69 damaged 22 cars, taking out several leaders. Elliott won the race on a last lap pass of Brad Keselowski, ending his 44-race winless streak.[235]

Round 19: Grant Park 165

Shane van Gisbergen won the pole. On lap 2, Carson Hocevar hit the inside barrier of turn 9, causing an early red flag, as well as collecting many cars. Michael McDowell won the first stage, giving Spire Motorsports their first stage win, and Ryan Blaney won the second stage. Shane van Gisbergen won the race, continuing his success at the Street Race, also winning the previous day's Xfinity race and sweeping the weekend. van Gisbergen also made history, becoming the winningest non-American driver in the Cup Series.[236]

Round 20: Toyota/Save Mart 350

Shane van Gisbergen won his second consecutive pole. Ross Chastain won stage one, and van Gisbergen won stage 2. Van Gisbergen once again dominated on a road course, winning the race and going back to back.[237]

Round 21: Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400

Chase Elliott won the pole after both practice and qualifying were canceled. Elliott won the first stage and Christopher Bell won the second stage. Late in the final stage, rain caused a red flag for about an hour. Denny Hamlin held off teammate Chase Briscoe for his second consecutive win at Dover.[238]

Round 22: Brickyard 400

Chase Briscoe won the pole, with Toyota sweeping the first five spots. Briscoe made history for becoming the first Indiana native to win the pole for the race, as well as becoming the first driver to win poles for the Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600, and Brickyard 400 in the same season.[239] Briscoe won the first stage, and Ryan Blaney won the second stage. After rain halted the race for around 30 minutes, Bubba Wallace had enough fuel to hold off Kyle Larson to get his first Crown Jewel win, becoming the first African-American to win a major race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He also snapped a 100-race winless streak dating back to the 2022 Hollywood Casino 400.[240]

Round 23: Iowa Corn 350 powered by Ethanol

Chase Briscoe won his second consecutive pole. Brad Keselowski swept the stages, the first time he swept both stages in a race since the 2017 First Data 500. After many cautions and a long green flag run, William Byron won the race after saving enough fuel.[241]

Round 24: Go Bowling at The Glen

Ryan Blaney won the pole. Prior to this race, Connor Zilisch was supposed to race. However, due to his injury sustained the previous day, Trackhouse Racing announced that they would withdraw the No. 87 from the race.[108] Defending race winner Chris Buescher won the first stage and Blaney won the second stage. Shane van Gisbergen won the race, surpassing Tony Stewart and Jimmie Johnson for most wins in a season by a rookie with 4 wins.[242]

Round 25: Cook Out 400

Ryan Preece won the pole. Tyler Reddick won the first stage, and Bubba Wallace won the second stage. On Lap 198, an 11-car wreck in turns 3 and 4 took Chase Elliott and Justin Haley out of the race early. During the final stage, Austin Dillon and Ryan Blaney traded the lead several times. Dillon pulled away after the final pit stop and won the race, making his first trip to the Playoffs since 2022.[243]

Round 26: Coke Zero Sugar 400

Ryan Blaney won the pole after qualifying was canceled. Kyle Larson won the first stage, and Ross Chastain won the second stage. Within the final laps, playoff upsets such as Erik Jones, Daniel Suárez, Justin Haley, and Cole Custer were all in the front during the final laps. However, Blaney overtook Custer on the backstretch of the final lap, giving him his second win of the season and second win at Daytona as Tyler Reddick and Alex Bowman clinched the final two playoff spots.[244]

Playoffs

Round 27: Cook Out Southern 500

Denny Hamlin won the pole. On Lap 1, Josh Berry slid his car into Tyler Reddick and caused a multi-car wreck. Chase Briscoe swept the stages, the first time he accomplished said feat in his career. Briscoe dominated the race, leading 309 laps. A hard-charging Reddick came close to passing him off the last turn of the last lap, but Briscoe managed to hold on, defending his win from last year and becoming the first back-to-back Southern 500 winner since Greg Biffle in 2005 and 2006.[245]

Round 28: Enjoy Illinois 300 presented by TicketSmarter

Denny Hamlin won the pole. Chase Briscoe won the first stage, and Bubba Wallace won the second stage. Hamlin dominated the last half of the day, leading 75 laps and winning the race. This was the 200th win for Toyota in the NASCAR Cup Series.[246]

Round 29: Bass Pro Shops Night Race

A. J. Allmendinger won the pole, his first pole since the 2015 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen. Ryan Blaney won the first stage after a side-by-side finish with Ty Gibbs. Gibbs won the second stage. During the third stage, Goodyear allowed teams an extra set for the race, as the race had been plagued with tire issues. After an intense final stage, with drivers playing playoff spoiler, such as Zane Smith, Carson Hocevar, and Corey Heim, Christopher Bell won the race as Alex Bowman, Austin Dillon, Shane van Gisbergen, and Josh Berry were eliminated from the playoffs.[247]

Round 30: Mobil 1 301

Joey Logano won the pole. Ryan Blaney won the first stage, and Logano won the second stage. Around lap 110, Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell were battling their JGR teammate Ty Gibbs; on lap 111, Hamlin got impatient with Gibbs and spun him.[248] Blaney won the race.[249]

Round 31: Hollywood Casino 400

Chase Briscoe won the pole. Denny Hamlin swept the stages. On lap 268, Zane Smith flipped his car, also causing overtime. Bubba Wallace was in contention to win, but on the last lap, he and Hamlin made contact, allowing Chase Elliott to slip by and steal the win, claiming his first multi-win season since 2022.[250]

Round 32: Bank of America Roval 400

Tyler Reddick won the pole. Shane van Gisbergen won the first stage, and Ryan Blaney won the second stage. During stage 3, Ross Chastain and Joey Logano fought over the last remaining spot in the Round of 8. Logano had the tiebreaker and advanced once they both crossed the finish line. Van Gisbergen dominated the race, earning his fifth consecutive win on a road course.[251]

Round 33: South Point 400

Denny Hamlin won the pole. William Byron won the first stage, and Kyle Larson won the second stage. Hamlin passed Chase Briscoe with 4 laps to go in the race and earned his 60th career win, tying him with Kevin Harvick for 10th all-time. Hamlin clinched his first Championship 4 appearance since 2021 and his first Championship 4 appearance in the Next-Gen car.[252]

Round 34: YellaWood 500

Michael McDowell won the pole. Chase Elliott wrecked out early in a multi-car crash, while Ty Gibbs won stage 1, and Chase Briscoe won stage 2. Kyle Larson lead at the white flag but ran out of fuel down the backstretch. Chase Briscoe won the race, and clinched his first Championship 4 berth, and first with Joe Gibbs Racing.[253]

Round 35: Xfinity 500

William Byron won the pole and swept the stages. Byron dominated the race, Ryan Blaney put up a fight after a late race caution, but could not prevail, as Byron won. Both he and Kyle Larson made the Championship 4.[254]

Round 36: NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race

Denny Hamlin won the pole. William Byron won the first stage, and Hamlin won the second stage. Hamlin dominated majority of the race, coming as close as 3 laps to go before becoming a Champion. However, a late race caution caused by Byron cutting a tire and hitting the wall diminished his lead. Restarting in overtime Kyle Larson took advantage by taking 2 tires on the ensuing pit stop while Hamlin took 4, prompting Larson to gain track position over him. Ryan Blaney passed Brad Keselowski and held off both him and Larson to get his first win at Phoenix, while Larson won his 2nd Championship, and first since 2021.[255]

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Results and standings

Race results

More information No., Race ...
  1. The Daytona 500 was originally scheduled to start at 2:30 pm but was moved up to 1:30 pm due to a forecast for potential inclement weather.[197]
  2. Blaney and Logano both led 27 laps.

Drivers' championship

(Key) Bold – Pole position awarded by time. Italics – Pole position set by competition-based formula. * – Most laps led. F – Fastest lap. 1 – Stage 1 winner. 2 – Stage 2 winner. 3 – Stage 3 winner.[N 1]1–10 - Regular season top 10 finishers.
. – Eliminated after Round of 16 . – Eliminated after Round of 12 . – Eliminated after Round of 8

More information Pos., Driver ...
Notes
  1. Stage 3 Winner only for the Coca-Cola 600

Manufacturers' championship

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References

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