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NASCAR

Chase Briscoe wins second straight Southern 500 in dominating fashion

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Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

DARLINGTON, S.C. (August 31, 2025) –Chase Briscoe was perfection in a world of mistakes, a no-funny-business driver in a comedy of errors.

And at the end of the final green-flag run on Sunday night at Darlington Raceway—after a 20-lap stint of unrelenting tension—Briscoe was a back-to-back winner of the Cook Out Southern 500 and a guaranteed participant in the Round of 12 in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

Briscoe led 309 of 367 laps and swept the first two stages, but he had to hold off a determined charge by Tyler Reddick after the race restarted on Lap 320. Reddick got close in the final 10 laps, driving beneath Briscoe entering Turn 3, but didn’t have the impetus necessary to complete a winning pass.

Briscoe crossed the finish line 0.408 seconds ahead of Reddick and 0.537 seconds ahead of non-Playoff driver Erik Jones in third to secure his second victory of the season, his second at the Lady in Black and the fourth of his career.

“Yeah, I think this is definitely what we’re capable of doing,” said Briscoe, who led Toyota drivers to their third 1-2-3-4 finish in NASCAR Cup history, the last coming at Bristol in 2017. “We haven’t been able to go out and dominate a race like that. The potential has been there from day one.

“So cool to win two Southern 500s in a row… A great way to start our Playoffs. That was a lot of fun.”

Briscoe is the first driver to win consecutive Southern 500s since Greg Biffle accomplished the feat in 2005 and 2006.

John Hunter Nemechek was fourth in his No. 42 LEGACY Motor Club Camry. Chevrolet driver AJ Allmendinger ran fifth, followed by Toyota drivers Bubba Wallace and Denny Hamlin, as Toyota placed six drivers in the top seven positions in a Cup race for the first time.

Driving from the outset with a tire mark on the driver’s side of his car—the result of a Lap 1 collision with Josh Berry—Reddick kept the pressure on Briscoe for the final 20 laps, but Briscoe didn’t buckle.

“We were better than he was on long runs,” Reddick said. “He could fire off a whole lot better. I think that was the difference tonight. I could get close. Yeah, I know we had a long run there, but it just unfortunately seemed like the last run, the balance wasn’t quite as good as it had been the rest of the night on the long run.

“All in all, a really solid night for points in the Playoffs. Really want to win here. It’s frustrating to finish second…”

With Briscoe already qualified for the Round of 12 with the victory, Reddick improved his position to 35 points above the elimination line.

If Briscoe had a night to remember, most of the other 15 Playoff drivers spent the evening recovering from mistakes—or failing to do so.

Wallace had a solid day in finishing sixth in the Playoff opener, ending the evening 21 points above the current elimination line with two races left in the Round of 16.

Hamlin, a four-time winner in the regular season, overcame a slow pit stop on Lap 154 and spent the rest of the race clawing his way back to seventh at the finish.

Playoff drivers Ross Chastain and Austin Cindric came home 11th and 12th, respectively. Chastain’s No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Camaro was the highest finishing Playoff Chevrolet, as all four Hendrick Motorsports drivers were outside the top 15.

Chase Elliott, the 2020 series champion, was the best of the Hendrick lot in 17th and heads for next Sunday’s race at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway just nine points above the elimination line.

Top-seeded Kyle Larson and teammate William Byron ran 19th and 21st, respectively, to hold third and fifth in the Playoff standings, but others weren’t as fortunate.

On the first lap of the race, The Lady in Black struck quickly, and Berry’s championship hopes took a nosedive.

Moments after taking the green flag in the third starting spot, Berry’s No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford broke loose beneath Tyler Reddick’s No. 45 Toyota in Turn 2.

After contact with Reddick’s car, Berry’s Mustang slammed into the outside wall, severely damaging the left rear and the undercarriage. After completing two laps, Berry drove his car to the garage for extensive repairs.

Berry returned to the track 119 laps down but finished last (38th) and fell to 16th in the Playoff standings, 19 points below the elimination line.

“The car bottomed out five or six times and just wrecked,” Berry said. “It was definitely unexpected. We didn’t really fight that too bad in practice. I saw a replay of it when I was sitting in the car while they were fixing it, and you could tell that it bottomed out four or five times, and you can’t save them when they’re like that.”

Alex Bowman was the next of the Playoff drivers to suffer brutal misfortune. Thanks to a malfunctioning air supply to the front tire changer’s pit gun, Bowman spent 40 seconds on pit road during his second green flag stop and was down a lap when pit stops cycled out.

On Lap 93 of the first stage, Briscoe passed Bowman to put the No. 48 Chevrolet two laps in arrears. After three wave-arounds, Bowman finally returned to the lead lap as the beneficiary under caution at the end of Stage 2 (Lap 230).

The driver of the No. 48 Chevrolet couldn’t hold his position in the final stage and finished the race two laps down in 31st, tied with Berry in the standings.

Christopher Bell’s Toyota collided on pit road with the Chevrolet of non-Playoff driver Carson Hocevar on Lap 54. With the handling of his car destroyed, Bell finished 29th, two laps down, and fell to 10th in the Playoff standings, 11 points above the cut line.

Road course titan Shane van Gisbergen was burned by an inopportune caution after running long before pitting in the final stage and finished 32nd, spending most of the 22 Playoff points he earned with four wins during the regular season.

Van Gisbergen is 12th in the standings, just three points ahead of 20th-place finisher Joey Logano, the first driver below the elimination line. Richmond winner Austin Dillon came home 23rd and is 14th on the Playoff grid, eight points behind van Gisbergen.

NASCAR

Steve Phelps decides to step away from NASCAR

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Photo: Getty Images

By Holly Cain
NASCAR Wire Service

NASCAR announced Tuesday that Steve Phelps will be leaving his position as Commissioner of the stock car sanctioning body after a two-decade long career in the sport’s executive leadership.

The decision was Phelps’ and NASCAR leaders offered the 63-year old Vermont-native praise for the legacy and accomplishments he leaves behind over a long career of guiding the sport – noting “a legacy of leadership and a strategic vision that delivered significant growth and lasting innovation, championed equity and social justice initiatives, and created industry-wide opportunities for all stakeholders.”

Phelps held the helm of the sport through a modern-era time of both great challenges – such as navigating the COVID pandemic – and noted triumphs, such as a broader international presence and multi-billion-dollar media rights agreements.

“As a lifelong race fan, it gives me immense pride to have served as NASCAR’s first Commissioner and to lead our great sport through so many incredible challenges, opportunities and firsts over my 20 years,’’ Phelps said.

“Our sport is built on the passion of our fans, the dedication of our teams and partners and the commitment of our wonderful employees. It has been an honor to help synthesize the enthusiasm of long-standing NASCAR stakeholders and that of new entrants to our ecosystem, such as media partners, auto manufacturers, track operators and incredible racing talent.”

Among Phelps’ legacies as a leader is what many in the sport consider a “transformational” new schedule in NASCAR’s big leagues, from the holding the annual “Clash” preseason feature at California’s famed Los Angeles Coliseum to adding races again at some of NASCAR’s favored venerable facilities such as North Wilkesboro (N.C.) Speedway and Raleigh’s Bowman Gray Stadium to adding first-time street races in Chicago and this year in San Diego, as well as bringing NASCAR internationally to a well-received event in Mexico City last season.

Among the highlights under Phelps’ tenure, NASCAR completed its merger with International Speedway Corporation (ISC) in 2019 and launched the Next Gen race car in 2022 – only the seventh new car in the sport’s history. He is also credited with leading the sport’s outreach to new fans and of course, securing a long-term media rights deal, and overseeing the sport’s innovative charter agreements.

“Steve will forever be remembered as one of NASCAR’s most impactful leaders,” NASCAR Chairman and CEO Jim France said, calling it an “honor” to work alongside Phelps.

“For decades he has worked tirelessly to thrill fans, support team and execute a vision for the sport that has treated us all to some of the greatest moments in our nearly 80-year history,” France said.

Phelps thanked the France family, colleagues, friends and fans for playing an “important and motivational role in my career” said he plans to “embark on new pursuits in sports and other industries.”

The reigning NASCAR Cup Series championship Hendrick Motorsports organization released a statement thanking Phelps for his ‘leadership and dedication to NASCAR” noting he “helped our sport navigate opportunities, challenges and periods of significant change while positioning it for the future.”

No successor to Phelps has been named and in a statement announcing Phelps planned departure, NASCAR said, “there are no immediate plans to replace the Commissioner role or to seek outside leadership as the administration of his responsibilities will be delegated internally through NASCAR’s President and executive leadership team.”

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NASCAR

Kyle Larson takes Cup title as Ryan Blaney wins shocker in Sonoran Desert

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Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

AVONDALE, AZ — When William Byron hit the Turn 3 wall with bone-jarring impact on Lap 310 of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race, the gut punch it delivered to Denny Hamlin was exponentially more painful.

The resulting caution and strategic call by crew chief Cliff Daniels allowed Kyle Larson to snatch the Cup Series championship from Hamlin without leading a lap at Phoenix Raceway.

Larson finished third behind race winner Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski to claim his second title in NASCAR’s top division and the 15th for team owner Rick Hendrick as the highest finisher among the Championship 4 drivers—Hamlin, Byron and Chase Briscoe.

It was the 15th Cup championship for team owner Rick Hendrick, and it came with a major plot twist in the final stage.

With the scheduled 312 laps winding down, Hamlin led Byron by nearly three seconds and appeared headed for the first Cup title in his 20 full-time seasons behind the wheel of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

In dominating fashion, Hamlin led seven times for 207 laps. Though he battled a balky clutch and rallied from a flat left-rear tire after winning the second stage, he failed to win the championship for the fifth time under the elimination Playoff format.

Instead, it was Larson who went to Victory Lane to receive the Bill France Cup, almost in disbelief.

“Honestly, I can’t believe it,” Larson said. “Like, we didn’t lead a lap today. Somehow won the championship. I mean, really, I’m just speechless. I can’t believe it. We had an average car at best.”

After Byron’s wreck, which sent the race to overtime, Daniels opted for two right-side tires for the second straight pit stop. Hamlin pitted from the lead and took fresh rubber on all four corners.

But with Keselowski, Ryan Preece and Alex Bowman staying out on older tires, and Blaney, Larson, Joey Logano, Josh Berry, Kyle Busch and Chase Elliott taking right sides only, Hamlin lined up 10th for the overtime restart—five spots behind Larson—and chose the bottom row for the final run.

From the outside lane, Larson charged through the first two corners and maintained a gap between his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and Hamlin’s Camry. On the final lap, Hamlin lost momentum on the bottom in Turns 1 and 2 and couldn’t recover.

He finished sixth, as Blaney edged Keselowski by 0.097 seconds for the race win.

Larson got the confidence he needed on the first two-tire call under caution on Lap 281. He restarted second beside Briscoe and was able to maintain fifth place before Byron hit the wall.

“We had the right front go down (earlier), lost a lap,” Larson said. “Got saved by the caution. Did the wave-around. Was really bad that run. We took two tires. I was like, “Oh, God, here we go. We’re going to go to the back now.’

“It had a lot more grip than I anticipated. We got lucky with the final caution. I was really hoping we were going to take two again. I felt like I learned a lot on that restart, bombing (Turns) 1 and 2 really hard. Thought I could do the same thing if we got another one.

“Just unbelievable. What a year by this Hendrick Motorsports (team). Cliff Daniels, everybody, his leadership, his complete leadership just showed that whole race. Keeping us all motivated. Always having a plan. All of that. That’s just the story of our season.

“Again, just unbelievable. I cannot believe it. This is insane.”

Doubtless, Hamlin would agree. He and his team brought the fastest car to Phoenix and executed a near-flawless race. The clutch issue and flat left-rear tire were challenges the No.11 team overcame without panicking.

But the championship eluded Hamlin once again.

“Did the best I could,” Hamlin said. “Everything I really prepared for happened today. I felt like we responded. Even losing track position at one point, just battling back. Did really well on restarts. Hadn’t been good on restarts for the bulk of the year.

“Yeah, the team brought a great championship car. I felt like I drove it just right up until two laps to go. Yeah, this is the part that stinks…

“Golly, in this moment I never want to race a car ever again,” Hamlin said with a wry smile. “I mean, my fun meter is pegged.”

Blaney’s win was almost an afterthought, but it also was tantalizingly close to a second championship for the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford. Blaney finished second to Byron in a must-win situation last Sunday at Martinsville Speedway—one spot away from qualifying for the Championship 4.

“It’s just cool to end it on a good note,” Blaney said. “It’s just cool, and obviously we had a fast car all day. Those other guys (Hamlin and Byron) were just kind of faster getting going, and I could never retain the lead.

“Those guys were just really good, and it took my car a while to come in, but it was a really good call for two (tires) there and keeping track position. I got a decent restart, and I was able to kind of roll the bottom in (Turns) 3 and 4 and eke the 6 (Keselowski) out at the line.”

Byron, who finished 33rd after leading 52 laps and winning the first stage, expressed sympathy for Hamlin, even though the Lap 310 accident gave his teammate the chance to win the title.

“I’m just super bummed that it was a caution, obviously,” Byron said. “I hate that. Hate it for Denny. I hate it for the 11 team.

“I’m happy for Kyle, for Mr. Hendrick, they deserve it. Yeah, it stinks, right? I don’t know, three laps to go, I’m thinking, ‘Let me get to the end.’

“I felt something funny off of two, thought it might be a flat. I thought at the time if it’s left rear, you can kind of get back. It just went straight into (Turn) 3. Laid down on the right rear, went straight (into the wall). I hate that.”

Briscoe rallied from flat tires twice on Sunday, restarted 15th in overtime and finished 18th.

In a race that featured nine cautions for 65 laps, Logano finished fourth, followed by Busch and Hamlin. Berry, Michael McDowell, Preece, Elliott and Christopher Bell completed the top 10.

Blaney led 20 laps in securing his fourth win of the season and the 17th of his career. The win was his first at Phoenix after three straight runner-up finishes in the Championship Race. In 2023, however, second place was good enough to earn Blaney his only series title to date.

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NASCAR

NASCAR settles lawsuit with race teams, grants form of “evergreen” charters

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By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Moments after Judge Kenneth D. Bell announced a settlement agreement and dismissed the jury Thursday in the case of “23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports v. NASCAR,” the healing already had begun.

NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell was smiling as he slapped Michael Jordan on the back. The co-owner of 23XI, one of the plaintiffs in the case, smiled back and the two men—adversaries in the antitrust litigation just a day earlier—talked pleasantly for a moment.

In a joint statement issued after the settlement was reached, NASCAR and the two race teams indicated that a form of evergreen charters, a major issue during the trial, would become a reality.

“As a condition of the settlement agreement, NASCAR will issue an amendment to existing charter holders detailing the updated terms for signature, which will include a form of ‘evergreen’ charters, subject to mutual agreement,” according to the statement. “The financial terms of the settlement are confidential and will not be released.”

After negotiations that lasted two-and-a-half years, 13 NASCAR Cup Series teams signed the 2025 charter agreement. Front Row and 23XI did not and ultimately filed the antitrust litigation that went to trial on Dec. 1.

Under Wednesday’s settlement, 23XI and Front Row will retain their charters.

Roughly 40 minutes after Bell thanked the jury for its service and told the nine jurors that the trial was over, the opposing parties stood together on the Western District of North Carolina courthouse steps to talk about the settlement.

“Like two competitors, obviously we try to get as much done in each other’s favor,” Jordan said, “but I think, collectively, and I don’t think (NASCAR chairman and CEO) Jim (France) was any opposite of me, the fans have always been the best solution to this whole problem and to the sport itself.

“The only way—and I’ve said this from day one—the only way this sport’s going to grow is that we have to find some synergy between the two entities. I think we’ve gotten to that point. Unfortunately, it took 16 months to get here, but I think level heads have got us to this point to where we can actually work together and grow the sport.

“I’m very proud about that, and I think Jim feels the same.”

“I do feel the same,” France responded. “We can get back to focusing on what we really love, and that’s racing. We’ve spent a lot of time not really focused on that so much as we need to be.

“I feel like we’ve made a very good decision here together, and we have a big opportunity to keep growing the sport. We’ve got (23XI co-owner) Denny Hamlin getting ready to go for a championship, and we need to focus on what we all love.”

Asked what the impetus was that brought the parties to agreement on the ninth day of the trial, Jordan replied, “Level heads. In all honesty, when you get to the finish line sometimes, you have to think not just for yourself, but you’ve got to think about the sport as a whole.

“And I think both parties got to that point, and we realized that we could have an opportunity to settle this, and we dove in and we actually did it. Unfortunately, it took us that long, but we got here, and that’s all that matters.”

Though he didn’t discuss specifics of the agreement, Hamlin clearly was pleased with the result.

“I feel like everything within this settlement is going to grow the sport,” Hamlin said. “And it’s going to be better for everyone—no doubt about it.”

Early Thursday morning, it was clear that the ninth session of the trial would not be like the preceding eight. The video screens that display court documents on either side of the courtroom were nowhere to be seen.

Plaintiffs lead attorney Jeffrey Kessler huddled with Hamlin, Jordan, Front Row owner Bob Jenkins and 23XI co-owner Curtis Polk on the left side of the courtroom. Soon thereafter, NASCAR outside counsel John Stephenson conferred with France and NASCAR executive vice chair Lesa France Kennedy.

Later, Bell entered the courtroom, called for the jurors and immediately dismissed them after telling them, “We need an hour so we can save you several hours.”

The resolution took longer than that, as lawyers for the parties prepared the settlement agreement.

Finally, NASCAR outside counsel Lawrence E. Buterman produced the document, and Bell began to read.

“Have the parties agreed to settle all issues before the jury?” Bell asked. The respective lawyers affirmed the agreement.

Bell then summoned the jurors for the final time, thanked them for their service and told them the case was over.

Bell concluded with the statement that “I wish we could’ve done this two months ago (during a settlement conference). I believe this is great for NASCAR, great for the future of NASCAR, great for the entity of NASCAR, great for the teams and ultimately great for the fans.”

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