The official 2024 All-Star Race NASCAR CUP Series entry list features top NASCAR drivers set to compete at North Wilkesboro Speedway, highlighting the full lineup of race participants and teams.
Sunday, May 19th, 2024
North Wilkesboro Speedway, North Wilkesboro, NC
It’s a notable irony that Kyle Larson will be a primary focal point in this year’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway (Sunday, May 19 at 8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Among the 17 NASCAR Cup Series drivers already locked into the All-Star Race field and 20 others trying to ascend to the main event, Larson will be spending the least amount of time at the newly repaved 0.625-mile short track.
Former Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick, now a full-time analyst with FOX Sports, has agreed to practice and qualify Larson’s car as Larson practices and qualifies his McLaren IndyCar for the Indianapolis 500, preparing for the “double” with the Coca-Cola 600 on May 26.
The schedule at Indianapolis Motor Speedway will preclude Larson from competing at North Wilkesboro until Sunday—after Top 12, Last Chance and Fast Six qualifying concludes at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
If the weather and transportation cooperate, Larson will line up against the 19 other drivers in the NASCAR All-Star Race with significant milestones on the line.
Larson is the defending winner of the race, an event he dominated in its first appearance at revitalized North Wilkesboro last year by leading 145 of 200 laps. With a victory, he would join the back-to-back winners club that currently has two members—Davey Allison (1991-1992) and Jimmie Johnson (2012-2013).
With three victories in the NASCAR All-Star Race, Larson is the only full-time active driver with more than one. Another win would tie him with Johnson for most all-time.
Larson is taking the details of the commute between Indy and North Wilkesboro in stride.
“I’m not stressed out by logistics at all,” he said on Wednesday during a video interview with reporters. “I feel like we’ve got a good plan. Yeah, I feel like kind of ‘Tell me where to be, tell me when to get in the car, tell me which car I’m getting in,’ and we’ll go.”
The 17 drivers already eligible for the main event have qualified either by winning a race in 2023 or 2024, or by being a former All-Star winner racing full-time or a former NASCAR Cup champion racing full-time.
Two other spots go to the top two finishers in the NASCAR All-Star Open, which precedes the All-Star Race (Sunday, May 19 at 5:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The final berth in the main event goes to the winner of the Fan Vote.
Qualifying on Friday afternoon will set the field for a pair of heat races on Saturday, which will determine the starting order for the All-Star Race. The top qualifier on Friday earns the pole position for Heat No. 1.
If Larson is a focal point for the race, so are the tires that Goodyear is providing for the event. Each team will receive two sets each of faster “option” tires and more durable “prime” tires.
All drivers must start the All-Star Race on the option tires. There are planned cautions at approximately Lap 100 and Lap 150, which will give crew chiefs the possibility of using varying tire strategies.
All teams must execute four-tire pit stops during the Lap 100 “All-Star Caution.”
It was a study in domination and impeccable strategy.
Leading a NASCAR All-Star Race record 199 of 200 laps, pole winner Joey Logano kept Denny Hamlin and peripatetic Kyle Larson at bay on Sunday night in winning the 40thrunning of the event and collecting the $1-million top prize.
Running the entire race on softer option tires—and eschewing the more durable prime tires at repaved and revitalized North Wilkesboro Speedway—Logano beat runner-up Hamlin to the finish line by 0.636 seconds, with Chris Buescher passing Larson for third place on the next-to-last lap.
The All-Star Race victory was the second for Logano and the fifth for Team Penske, which also won with Kurt Busch (2010), Ryan Newman (2002) and Ryan Blaney (2022).
“A lot of fun when you’ve got a car this fast,” said Logano, who is winless in 13 NASCAR Cup Series points events this season.“The Shell/Pennzoil Mustang, it’s just so great to get in Victory Lane.
“All of our sponsors and everyone who stuck with us to get a win, it feels nice.It’s been a while.I wish it was for points, but a million bucks is still a lot of money, and I feel great about that.”
Though Logano spent the race at the front of the field, Larson drew his share of attention, too, as he shuttled between 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the historic 0.625-mile short track.
After qualifying fifth for next Sunday’s Indianapolis 500—the first leg of a planned double with the Coca-Cola 600 next Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway—Larson left Indy on a helicopter at 5:44 p.m.
After transferring to a private jet registered to HMS Holdings and arriving at Wilkes County Airport, Larson took a helicopter to nearby North Wilkesboro Speedway and landed on the track property at 7:15 p.m.—to loud applause from fans in the grandstands.
Larson started from the rear of the field because of a driver change, given that Kevin Harvick had qualified the No. 5 Chevrolet while Larson was at Indy.
During a planned caution at Lap 151, Larson pitted for option tires that had spent only one green-flag lap on his car and charged through the field from 10that the restart to challenge Hamlin for the runner-up spot before fading in the closing laps.
Larson ran out of steam, and Hamlin was frustrated by his inability to make a move on the race winner.
“I needed more of an advantage to pass, for sure,” Hamlin said. “I would run to him, and then you couldn’t pass. I would lose a little bit of air there, and I would try to give my car a break and then run to him again—just have to be so much faster to get around.
“Hats off to the track, NASCAR and Goodyear for giving (two tire choices) a try. Hopefully, we learned something here for future short tracks.”
The fireworks started early on Sunday. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. went up the middle to create a three-wide scenario mid-pack and angered Kyle Busch on the outside when the cars collided. Busch retaliated on Lap 2 and turned Stenhouse’s Chevrolet into the outside wall, eliminating Stenhouse from the race.
Stenhouse drove his damaged car to pit road, parked it in Busch’s stall and expressed his displeasure to Busch’s crew chief, Randall Burnett. After the race, Stenhouse vented his pent-up rage in a brief fistfight with Busch, which also involved crews from the two teams.
“At least we had an exciting fight in the end—something to talk about,” said Hamlin, always the curmudgeon.
Under the caution for Stenhouse’s wreck, five drivers—Logano, Tyler Reddick, Brad Keselowski, Buescher and Blaney—stayed on the track on the softer option tires, while the rest of the field came to pit road and switched to the prime tires.
Preserving track position proved to be the winning move for the No. 22 Team Penske Ford. When crew chief Paul Wolfe saw the car’s performance on the option tires, he chose not to change to primes at the 100-lap halfway break.
“Well, we did the first 100, so why wouldn’t it last the second 100?” agreed Logano.“That was our thought, so it was definitely an aggressive strategy, but it worked out good.”
Blaney came home fifth, followed by Bubba Wallace, Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Busch.
Toyota drivers Ty Gibbs and Wallace transferred into the main event by finishing first and second, respectively, in the 100-lap NASCAR All-Star Open.
For Gibbs, the victory was a cakewalk. Starting from the pole, the driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Camry led every lap and crossed the finish line 1.572 seconds ahead of Wallace, who had to hold off charging Josh Berry and Justin Haley to secure his spot in the show.
Berry was third in the Open, less than a half-second behind Wallace, with Haley trailing in fourth. Berry’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Noah Gragson, finished fifth but transferred into the All-Star Race by winning the Fan Vote.
“I can’t say enough about the fans,” Gragson said after learning he had been voted into the race.“They’re bad-ass.They keep us motivated each and every weekend to come out and do our jobs.
“When times aren’t great, the fans always pump us up and we feed off their energy.I appreciate everybody’s support and we’ve got 200 laps to go chase a million bucks.”
The chase came up short. Gragson started at the back of the 20-car field and finished 11th.
ENTRY | # | DRIVER | HOMETOWN | DOB | AGE | MAKE | SPONSOR | TEAM | CREW CHIEF |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 16 | AJ Allmendinger | Los Gatos, CA | Dec 16, 1981 | 42 | Chevrolet | LeafFilter / Campers Inn RV | Kaulig Racing | Travis Mack |
2 | 6 | Brad Keselowski | Auburn Hills, MI | Feb 12, 1984 | 40 | Ford | Nexlizet | RFK Racing | Matt McCall |
3 | 11 | Denny Hamlin | Chesterfield, VA | Nov 18, 1980 | 43 | Toyota | Mavis Tire | Joe Gibbs Racing | Chris Gabehart |
4 | 22 | Joey Logano | Middleton, CT | May 24, 1990 | 33 | Ford | Shell Pennzoil | Team Penske | Paul Wolfe |
5 | 8 | Kyle Busch | Las Vegas, NV | May 2, 1985 | 39 | Chevrolet | Lenovo | Richard Childress Racing | Randall Burnett |
6 | 19 | Martin Truex Jr | Mayetta, NJ | Jun 29, 1980 | 43 | Toyota | Bass Pro Shops | Joe Gibbs Racing | James Small |
7 | 34 | Michael McDowell | Phoenix, AZ | Dec 21, 1984 | 39 | Ford | Charlotte Knights | Front Row Motorsports | Travis Peterson |
8 | 47 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr | Olive Branch, MS | Oct 2, 1987 | 36 | Chevrolet | Kroger Health/Icy Hot | JTG Daugherty Racing | Mike Kelley |
9 | 5 | Kyle Larson | Sacremento, CA | Jul 31, 1992 | 31 | Chevrolet | HendrickCars.com | Hendrick Motorsports | Cliff Daniels |
10 | 12 | Ryan Blaney | High Point, NC | Dec 31, 1993 | 30 | Ford | Menards\Wrangler | Team Penske | Jonathan Hassler |
11 | 9 | Chase Elliott | Dawsonville, GA | Nov 28, 1995 | 28 | Chevrolet | NAPA Auto Parts | Hendrick Motorsports | Alan Gustafson |
12 | 17 | Chris Buescher | Prosper, TX | Oct 29, 1992 | 31 | Ford | Fastenal | RFK Racing | Scott Graves |
13 | 99 | Daniel Suarez | Monterrey, Mexico | Jan 7, 1992 | 32 | Chevrolet | Freeway Insurance | Trackhouse Racing | Matt Swiderski |
14 | 1 | Ross Chastain | Alva, FL | Dec 4, 1992 | 31 | Chevrolet | Busch Light Flannel | Trackhouse Racing | Phil Surgen |
15 | 24 | William Byron | Charlotte, NC | Nov 29, 1997 | 26 | Chevrolet | RaptorTough.com | Hendrick Motorsports | Rudy Fugle |
16 | 45 | Tyler Reddick | Corning, CA | Jan 11, 1996 | 28 | Toyota | The Beast Unleashed | 23XI Racing | Billy Scott |
17 | 20 | Christopher Bell | Norman, OK | Dec 16, 1994 | 29 | Toyota | Yahoo! | Joe Gibbs Racing | Adam Stevens |