Charlotte Motor Speedway

Discover the history of Charlotte Motor Speedway, including NASCAR race winners for the Cup, Xfinity, and Truck Series, detailed track facts, and a full gallery of past race images.

Charlotte Motor Speedway NASCAR Race History

CUP Race Winning Drivers

Jimmie Johnson

8

Jimmie Johnson
Kyle Larson

3

Kyle Larson
Martin Truex Jr

3

Martin Truex Jr
Brad Keselowski

2

Brad Keselowski
Christopher Bell

1

Christopher Bell
Ryan Blaney

1

Ryan Blaney
Kyle Busch

1

Kyle Busch
Austin Dillon

1

Austin Dillon
Chase Elliott

1

Chase Elliott
Denny Hamlin

1

Denny Hamlin
Joey Logano

1

Joey Logano
CUP RACES AT CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
DATE RACE WINNER # MAKE ST TEAM CREW CHIEF LAPS TIME
05-2024 Coca-Cola 600 Christopher Bell 20 Toyota 3 Joe Gibbs Racing Adam Stevens 249 03:02:07
05-2023 Coca-Cola 600 Ryan Blaney 12 Ford 8 Team Penske Jonathan Hassler 400 04:58:50
05-2022 Coca-Cola 600 Denny Hamlin 11 Toyota 1 Joe Gibbs Racing Sam McAulay 413 05:13:08
05-2021 Coca-Cola 600 Kyle Larson 5 Chevrolet 1 Hendrick Motorsports Cliff Daniels 400 03:58:45
05-2020 Alsco Uniforms 500 Chase Elliott 9 Chevrolet 19 Hendrick Motorsports Alan Gustafson 208 02:29:23
05-2020 Coca-Cola 600 Brad Keselowski 2 Ford 9 Team Penske Jeremy Bullins 405 04:29:55
05-2019 Coca-Cola 600 Martin Truex Jr 19 Toyota 14 Joe Gibbs Racing Cole Pearn 400 04:50:09
05-2019 Monster Energy NASCA… Kyle Larson 42 Chevrolet 18 -- -- 88 01:36:18
05-2019 Monster Energy Open Kyle Larson 42 Chevrolet 7 Chip Ganassi Racing Chad Johnston 62 01:00:44
05-2018 Coca-Cola 600 Kyle Busch 18 Toyota 1 Joe Gibbs Racing Adam Stevens 400 04:23:22
10-2017 Bank Of America 500 Martin Truex Jr 78 Toyota 17 Furniture Row Racing Cole Pearn 337 --
05-2017 Coca-Cola 600 Austin Dillon 3 Chevrolet 22 Richard Childress Racing Justin Alexander 400 --
10-2016 Bank Of America 500 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 11 Hendrick Motorsports Chad Knaus 334 --
05-2016 Coca-Cola 600 Martin Truex Jr 78 Toyota 1 -- Cole Pearn 400 --
10-2015 Bank of America 500 Joey Logano 22 Ford 3 Walter Czarnecki Todd Gordon 334 --
05-2015 Coca-Cola 600 Carl Edwards 19 Toyota 3 Joe Gibbs Racing Darian Grubb 400 --
10-2014 Bank of America 500 Kevin Harvick 4 Chevrolet 7 Stewart Haas Racing Rodney Childers 334 --
05-2014 Coca-Cola 600 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 1 -- Chad Knaus 400 --
10-2013 Bank of America 500 Brad Keselowski 2 Ford 23 Team Penske Paul Wolfe 334 --
05-2013 Coca-Cola 600 Kevin Harvick 29 Chevrolet 15 Richard Childress Racing Gil Martin 400 --
10-2012 Bank of America 500 Clint Bowyer 15 Toyota 4 Michael Waltrip Racing -- 334 --
05-2012 Coca-Cola 600 Kasey Kahne 5 Chevrolet 7 -- -- 400 --
10-2011 Bank of America 500 Matt Kenseth 17 Ford 2 -- -- 334 --
05-2011 Coca-Cola 600 Kevin Harvick 29 Chevrolet 28 Richard Childress Racing -- 402 --
10-2010 Bank of America 500 Jamie McMurray 1 Chevrolet 27 Dale Earnhardt Inc -- 334 --
05-2010 Coca-Cola 600 Kurt Busch 2 Dodge 2 Walter Czarnecki -- 400 --
10-2009 NASCAR Banking 500 O… Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 1 -- -- 334 --
05-2009 Coca-Cola 600 David Reutimann 00 Toyota 21 Michael Waltrip Racing -- 227 --
10-2008 Bank Of America 500 Jeff Burton 31 Chevrolet 4 Richard Childress Racing -- 334 --
05-2008 Coca Cola 600 Kasey Kahne 9 Dodge 2 Evernham Motorsports -- 400 --
10-2007 Bank Of America 500 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet 4 Hendrick Motorsports -- 337 --
05-2007 Coca Cola 600 Casey Mears 25 Chevrolet 16 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-2006 Bank Of America 500 Kasey Kahne 9 Dodge 2 Evernham Motorsports -- 334 --
05-2006 Coca-Cola 600 Kasey Kahne 9 Dodge 9 Evernham Motorsports -- 400 --
10-2005 UAW-GM Quality 500 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 3 -- -- 336 --
05-2005 Coca-Cola 600 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 5 -- -- 400 --
10-2004 UAW-GM Quality 500 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 9 Hendrick Motorsports -- 334 --
05-2004 Coca-Cola 600 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 1 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-2003 UAW-GM Quality 500 Tony Stewart 20 Chevrolet 6 Joe Gibbs Racing -- 334 --
05-2003 Coca-Cola 600 Jimmie Johnson 48 Chevrolet 37 Hendrick Motorsports -- 276 --
10-2002 UAW-GM Quality 500 Jamie McMurray 40 Dodge 5 Chip Ganassi Racing -- 334 --
05-2002 Coca-Cola Racing Fam… Mark Martin 6 Ford 25 -- -- 400 --
10-2001 UAW-GM Quality 500 Sterling Marlin 40 Dodge 13 Chip Ganassi Racing -- 334 --
05-2001 Coca-Cola 600 Jeff Burton 99 Ford 18 -- -- 400 --
10-2000 UAW-GM Quality 500 Bobby Labonte 18 Pontiac 2 Joe Gibbs Racing -- 334 --
05-2000 Coca-Cola 600 Matt Kenseth 17 Ford 21 -- -- 400 --
10-1999 UAW-GM Quality 500 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet 22 Hendrick Motorsports -- 334 --
05-1999 Coca-Cola 600 Jeff Burton 99 Ford 2 -- -- 400 --
10-1998 UAW-GM Quality 500 Mark Martin 6 Ford 2 -- -- 334 --
05-1998 Coca-Cola 600 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet 1 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-1997 UAW-GM Quality 500 Dale Jarrett 88 Ford 5 Yates Racing -- 334 --
05-1997 Coca-Cola 600 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet 1 Hendrick Motorsports -- 333 --
10-1996 UAW-GM Quality 500 Terry Labonte 5 Chevrolet 16 Hendrick Motorsports -- 334 --
05-1996 Coca-Cola 600 Dale Jarrett 88 Ford 15 Yates Racing -- 400 --
10-1995 UAW-GM Quality 500 Mark Martin 6 Ford 5 -- -- 334 --
05-1995 Coca-Cola 600 Bobby Labonte 18 Chevrolet 2 Joe Gibbs Racing -- 400 --
10-1994 Mello Yello 500 Dale Jarrett 18 Chevrolet 22 Joe Gibbs Racing -- 334 --
05-1994 Coca-Cola 600 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevrolet 1 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-1993 Mello Yello 500 Ernie Irvan 28 Ford 2 Yates Racing -- 334 --
05-1993 Coca-Cola 600 Dale Earnhardt 3 Chevrolet 14 Richard Childress Racing -- 400 --
10-1992 Mello Yello 500 Mark Martin 6 Ford 4 -- -- 334 --
05-1992 Coca-Cola 600 Dale Earnhardt 3 Chevrolet 13 Richard Childress Racing -- 400 --
10-1991 Mello Yello 500 Geoff Bodine 11 Ford 6 -- -- 334 --
05-1991 Coca-Cola 600 Davey Allison 28 Ford 10 Yates Racing -- 400 --
10-1990 Mello Yello 500 Davey Allison 28 Ford 5 Yates Racing -- 334 --
05-1990 Coca-Cola 600 Rusty Wallace 27 Pontiac 9 Raymond Beadle -- 400 --
10-1989 All Pro Auto Parts 5… Ken Schrader 25 Chevrolet 2 Hendrick Motorsports -- 334 --
05-1989 Coca-Cola 600 Darrell Waltrip 17 Chevrolet 4 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-1988 Oakwood Homes 500 Rusty Wallace 27 Pontiac 3 Raymond Beadle -- 334 --
05-1988 Coca-Cola 600 Darrell Waltrip 17 Chevrolet 5 Hendrick Motorsports -- 400 --
10-1987 Oakwood Homes 500 Bill Elliott 9 Ford 7 -- -- 334 --
05-1987 Coca-Cola 600 Kyle Petty 21 Ford 7 Wood Brothers Racing -- 400 --
10-1986 Oakwood Homes 500 Dale Earnhardt 3 Chevrolet 3 Richard Childress Racing -- 334 --
05-1986 Coca-Cola 600 Dale Earnhardt 3 Chevrolet 3 Richard Childress Racing -- 400 --
10-1985 Miller High Life 500 Cale Yarborough 28 Ford 7 Harry Ranier -- 334 --
05-1985 Coca-Cola World 600 Darrell Waltrip 11 Chevrolet 4 -- -- 400 --
10-1984 Miller High Life 500 Bill Elliott 9 Ford 2 -- -- 334 --
05-1984 World 600 Bobby Allison 22 Buick 16 -- -- 400 --
10-1983 Miller High Life 500 Richard Petty 43 Pontiac 20 -- -- 334 --
05-1983 World 600 Neil Bonnett 75 Chevrolet 5 RahMoc Enterprises -- 400 --
10-1982 National 500 Harry Gant 33 Buick 1 -- -- 334 --
05-1982 World 600 Neil Bonnett 21 Ford 13 Wood Brothers Racing -- 400 --
10-1981 National 500 Darrell Waltrip 11 Buick 1 -- -- 334 --
05-1981 World 600 Bobby Allison 28 Buick 7 Harry Ranier -- 400 --
10-1980 National 500 Dale Earnhardt 2 Chevrolet 4 Rod Osterlund -- 334 --
05-1980 World 600 Benny Parsons 27 Chevrolet 6 -- -- 400 --
10-1979 NAPA National 500 Cale Yarborough 11 Chevrolet 4 -- -- 334 --
05-1979 World 600 Darrell Waltrip 88 Chevrolet 3 -- -- 400 --
10-1978 NAPA National 500 Bobby Allison 15 Ford 8 -- -- 334 --
05-1978 World 600 Darrell Waltrip 88 Chevrolet 17 -- -- 400 --
10-1977 NAPA National 500 Benny Parsons 72 Chevrolet 8 -- -- 334 --
05-1977 World 600 Richard Petty 43 Dodge 2 -- -- 400 --
10-1976 National 500 Donnie Allison 1 Chevrolet 15 -- -- 334 --
05-1976 World 600 David Pearson 21 Mercury 1 Wood Brothers Racing -- 400 --
10-1975 National 500 Richard Petty 43 Dodge 9 -- -- 334 --
05-1975 World 600 Richard Petty 43 Dodge 3 -- -- 400 --
10-1974 National 500 David Pearson 21 Mercury 1 Wood Brothers Racing -- 334 --
05-1974 World 600 David Pearson 21 Mercury 1 Wood Brothers Racing -- 400 --
10-1973 National 500 Cale Yarborough 11 Chevrolet 2 Richard Howard -- 334 --
05-1973 World 600 Buddy Baker 71 Dodge 1 Nord Krauskopf -- 400 --
10-1972 National 500 Bobby Allison 12 Chevrolet 4 Richard Howard -- 334 --
05-1972 World 600 Buddy Baker 11 Dodge 6 -- -- 400 --
10-1971 National 500 Bobby Allison 12 Mercury 3 Holman-Moody -- 238 --
05-1971 World 600 Bobby Allison 12 Mercury 2 Holman-Moody -- 400 --
10-1970 National 500 LeeRoy Yarbrough 98 Mercury 5 -- -- 334 --
05-1970 World 600 Donnie Allison 27 Ford 9 Banjo Matthews -- 400 --
10-1969 National 500 Donnie Allison 27 Ford 3 Banjo Matthews -- 334 --
05-1969 World 600 LeeRoy Yarbrough 98 Mercury 2 -- -- 400 --
10-1968 National 500 Charlie Glotzbach 6 Dodge 1 Cotton Owens -- 334 --
05-1968 World 600 Buddy Baker 3 Dodge 12 Ray Fox -- 255 --
10-1967 National 500 Buddy Baker 3 Dodge 4 Ray Fox -- 334 --
05-1967 World 600 Jim Paschal 14 Plymouth 10 Tom Friedkin -- 400 --
10-1966 National 500 LeeRoy Yarbrough 12 Dodge 17 Jon Thorne -- 334 --
05-1966 World 600 Marvin Panch 42 Plymouth 7 -- -- 400 --
10-1965 National 400 Fred Lorenzen 28 Ford 1 Holman-Moody -- 267 --
05-1965 World 600 Fred Lorenzen 28 Ford 1 Holman-Moody -- 400 --
10-1964 National 400 Fred Lorenzen 28 Ford 3 Holman-Moody -- 267 --
05-1964 World 600 Jim Paschal 41 Plymouth 12 -- -- 400 --
10-1963 National 400 Junior Johnson 3 Chevrolet 2 Ray Fox -- 267 --
06-1963 World 600 Fred Lorenzen 28 Ford 2 Holman-Moody -- 400 --
10-1962 National 400 Junior Johnson 3 Pontiac 3 Ray Fox -- 267 --
05-1962 World 600 Nelson Stacy 29 Ford 18 Holman-Moody -- 400 --
10-1961 National 400 Joe Weatherly 8 Pontiac 6 -- -- 267 --
05-1961 World 600 David Pearson 3 Pontiac 3 John Masoni -- 400 --
05-1961 World 600 Qualifier … Joe Weatherly 8 Pontiac 3 -- -- 67 --
05-1961 World 600 Qualifier … Richard Petty 43 Plymouth 7 -- -- 67 --
10-1960 National 400 Speedy Thompson 21 Ford 3 Wood Brothers Racing -- 267 --
06-1960 World 600 Joe Lee Johnson 89 Chevrolet 20 Paul McDuffie -- 400 --
Cup Race Recaps

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Christopher Bell wins rain-shortened Coca-Cola 600

A lightning delay that turned into a heavy rainstorm made a winner of Christopher Bell in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Not that Bell didn’t deserve the victory in the rain-shortened race, which NASCAR was forced to call after 249 of 400 laps were complete.

The driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota started third, led a race-high 90 laps and won the second stage of the 14th NASCAR Cup Series race of the season.

The decisive juncture in the Memorial Day weekend race came when Bell held off Darlington winner Brad Keselowski during a 10-lap run after a caution for Corey Lajoie’s spin in Turn 2 on Lap 229.

On the ensuing Lap 236 restart, Bell and Keselowski lined up side-by-side at the front of the field, with Bell prevailing and pulling out to a lead of roughly six car-lengths before NASCAR called the seventh caution for lightning in the area.

After the lightning came heavy rain, and though NASCAR attempted to dry the track when the rain subsided, heavy humidity thwarted efforts to do so in a timely manner.

As a result, Bell collected his second victory of the season, his first on the 1.5-mile Charlotte oval and the eighth of his career.

The victory was a welcome momentum shift for Bell, who had finished outside the top 10 in five of his previous six races.

“Man, it feels so good—to win or lose—just to have a great race to go off of,” Bell said. “A race where we led laps. We were able to pass cars. We lost the lead at times and were able to drive back to the lead.

“We had great pit stops. It was a team effort, and it was amazing to have a good race. Hopefully, this is something we can build on and get back to being more consistent.”

Keselowski, who posted his third runner-up finish of the season, was convinced he had the fastest car.

“We just didn’t have time for it to play out,” said the driver of the No. 2 Roush Fenway Keselowski Ford, who pressured Bell throughout the final 10-lap run before weather intervened.

Stage 1 winner William Byron ran third behind Bell and Keselowski, with Tyler Reddick and Denny Hamlin finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.

Pole winner Ty Gibbs finished sixth after leading 74 laps, including the first 42 of the race. Chase Elliott finished seventh, followed by Ross Chastain, Alex Bowman and Josh Berry.

After finishing 18th in his Indianapolis 500 debut, Kyle Larson arrived at Charlotte Motor Speedway just before weather forced the stoppage. Larson intended to take over his No. 5 Chevrolet from Justin Allgaier, who had started the race at Charlotte because the Indy 500 was delayed by rain.

Allgaier was running 13th when the race was called, and Larson never had a chance to drive the car.

Defending race winner and reigning series champion Ryan Blaney slammed the outside wall in the second stage and exited the event after 143 laps.

“We’ll have to look if I hit something or… I don’t know,” Blaney said. “I just went into (Turn) 3 getting up to speed and blew a tire and hit the fence. It’s an unfortunate end to our night. That sucks.

“We’re not even halfway and just wanting to work on your stuff all night. I thought we were getting it a little better here and there, but won’t get a shot.”

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Ryan Blaney breaks 59-race NASCAR Cup Series drought with Coca-Cola 600 win

Finally.

Breaking a 59-race drought in Monday’s rain-delayed Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Ryan Blaney gave team owner Roger Penske his first same-year sweep of IndyCar’s biggest race and NASCAR’s longest.

With a dominant No. 12 Team Penske Ford that gained long-run speed as the race progressed, Blaney led a race-high 163 of 400 laps and held off polesitter William Byron for his first victory on the 1.5-mile Charlotte oval and the eighth of his career.

A day after Josef Newgarden delivered Penske’s 19th Indianapolis 500 victory with a last-lap pass, Blaney won for the first time since taking the checkered flag at Daytona on Aug. 28, 2021.

“I might shed a tear,” said Blaney, clearly emotional during his post-race interview on the frontstretch. “I just was able to get the lead, and that car was so good that I could kind of bide my time a little bit and then we were able to drive off. I was hoping no caution, just because you never know.

“I know we had the car to do it, but restarts can be crazy… You start to get to feel like you can't win anymore when you don't win in a while. It kind of gets hard. So just super thankful to the 12 guys for believing in me…

“It’s just so cool. What a weekend with Newgarden and Roger winning at Indy and us winning the 600. I mean that’s just so cool. That kind of snaps our winless streak right there, and that’s even better.”

After a spate of cautions late in the race, Blaney led the field to green with 20 laps left and built a one-second lead over Byron before winning by .663 seconds. Martin Truex Jr. ran third ahead of 23XI Racing teammates Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick.

Blaney won the race’s third stage and is second in the NASCAR Cup Series standings, one point behind Ross Chastain, who finished 22nd.

Byron, who collected his eighth top-10 finish this season, pursued Blaney for the final 20 laps, but to no avail.

“We just needed a little bit,” said Byron, who led 91 laps and repeatedly regained the top spot from the No. 1 pit stall in a race that featured 16 cautions for 83 laps. “Really happy for Ryan. He really deserves it. He's a good dude. Cool to see him get a win…

“The car was great tonight. Just not quite good enough. Really proud of the effort. Pit crew was phenomenal on pit road. Those guys are just high energy, and that pit stall helps… Just proud of where our team is at. Just needed a little bit more.”

The wreck that set up the final 20-lap green-flag run was one of the race’s most severe. Kyle Larson slid sideways and after a restart on Lap 375 and bounced off other front-running cars like a pinball. Collected in the wreck were Christopher Bell, who had shown early speed; Ty Gibbs; Joey Logano and Aric Almirola.

Just as significant was an accident on Lap 185 that knocked defending race winner Denny Hamlin and five-time most popular driver Chase Elliott out of the race.

After Hamlin crowded Elliott’s No. 9 Chevrolet into the outside wall, Elliott hooked Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota on the frontstretch. Hamlin’s car bounced off the wall after a brutal impact and collected Elliott’s Camaro on the rebound.

Both cars were damaged too severely to continue.

Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart were convinced Elliott turned Hamlin’s Camry in retaliation.

“It’s a tantrum and he shouldn’t be racing next week,” Hamlin said after exiting the infield care center. “Right-rear hooks are absolutely unacceptable. I don’t care. It is the same thing that Bubba Wallace did with Kyle Larson. Exact same. He shouldn’t be racing. It’s a tantrum.”

Elliott denied the incident was intentional on his part.

“No, like I said, once you hit the wall in these things, you can’t drive them anymore,” Elliott said. “So, no, just unfortunate circumstances.”

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Polesitter Denny Hamlin overcomes chaos to win wild Coca-Cola 600

Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway started with Denny Hamlin out front and ended with Denny Hamlin out front.

What happened in-between defied belief. And a driver who claims to thrive in chaos proved to be a man of his word.

Hamlin won the longest race in NASCAR history—619.5 miles—in two overtimes, beating Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch to the finish line by .014 seconds.

With the victory—the second this season and the 48th of his career—Hamlin now holds trophies in all three of NASCAR’s Crown Jewel races: the Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600 and Southern 500. Kevin Harvick is the only other active driver with all three titles.

Hamlin’s victory spoiled what could have been one of the most astonishing comebacks in racing history. Kyle Larson started from the rear in a repaired car, suffered three pit road penalties, a spin off Turn 4 and a fire in his pit stall but—miraculously—was leading the race on the next-to-last lap of regulation when Chase Briscoe spun underneath him while battling for the lead and caused the 17th caution of the night.

A wreck on the first attempt at overtime collected Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet and scrambled the running order, leaving Hamlin in the lead on four fresh tires.

“The first half (of the race) was a struggle for all of us,” said Larson, who finished ninth. “I was especially frustrated with myself. To rebound from that and have a shot to win there late was something to be proud of. Our team fought really hard. Happy with that.

“Briscoe was really good, that long run there. Wish we would have just been a little bit better so he never would have got to me, ultimately spin.”

After the second overtime restart, Hamlin and Busch battled side-by-side until Hamlin pulled ahead on Lap 412 of 413, 13 laps beyond the scheduled distance. Busch rallied but couldn’t get back to Hamlin’s bumper.

“It's so special,” Hamlin said. “It's the last big one that's not on my résumé. It meant so much.

“Man, we weren't very good all day. Just got ourselves in the right place at the right time. What a battle there!”

Hamlin, however, was far from the likely winner as the race unfolded. Daniel Suarez arguably had the fastest car. His Trackhouse Racing teammate, Ross Chastain, led 153 laps—more than any other driver. 

In the closing stages of regulation, it appeared for all the world that Larson and Briscoe would decide the outcome between them, until Briscoe spun as he was attempting to pass the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion to the inside.

But in the first attempt at overtime, Austin Dillon’s bold move on four fresh tires to Larson’s two went awry off Turn 4, damaging seven cars and setting up Hamlin’s win in the second overtime. 

That was merely the concluding chapter in a five-hour thriller.

On a night that already had seen a surfeit of breathtaking action, Suarez’s Chevrolet turned sideways on Lap 346 after contact with Briscoe’s Ford an ignited a four-car wreck that ended with Chris Buescher’s Ford barrel-rolling five times through the frontstretch infield and landing on its roof.

Buescher climbed from his car uninjured, but a strong run for the Roush Fenway Keselowski driver ended abruptly. So did a remarkable run from Suarez, who had led four times for 38 laps, only to lose spots on every pit stop, with the cars of Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin blocking his egress from pit road.

“I’m going to be a bit sore tomorrow,” Buescher said after an obligatory trip to the infield care center. “I haven’t been upside-down in a really long time. The team did a really nice job. We had great speed and had a chance at this thing, it just didn’t work out.”

The opening laps of the event were an omen of things to come.

How intense was the racing? Here’s a microcosm: The first lap ended in a dead heat, with Kurt Busch nosing ahead of Hamlin by less than one thousandth of a second. Racing side-by-side with Hamlin, Busch extended his lead to .004 seconds on Lap 2—roughly six inches.

A determined Hamlin regained the top spot on Lap 3, but only by .011 seconds. The opening action set the tone for the entire race, which produced 31 lead changes between 13 different drivers.

But what happened at the front of the field was multiplied exponentially by aggressive, close-quarters racing throughout the pack.

On Lap 192—eight laps short of the halfway point—the close-quarters competition ended badly. In the second turn after a restart following the 10th caution, Ryan Blaney’s No. 12 Ford hooked the apron with the left-front tire and spun sideways.

That misstep triggered a 13-car wreck that eliminated the contending cars of Blaney, Kurt Busch and William Byron. 

“I was tucked up tight behind the 8 (Tyler Reddick), and he was kind of lower than I thought on the frontstretch and kind of ran through the turf, and then got to (Turn) 1 and jerked right,” Blaney said after the wreck. 

“I think he was up behind the 99 (Suarez) and thinking he was going hit the apron, and I didn’t have time to kind of get right, and I just kind of hit the apron and got me loose. I hate that other cars got tore up.” 

That wreck wouldn’t be the last. By the end of the race, 17 pf the 37 cars that started the event already sat in the garage in various states of disrepair.

Kevin Harvick soldiered to a third-place finish, followed by Briscoe and Christopher Bell. Tyler Reddick, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Michael McDowell, Larson and Alex Bowman completed the top 10.

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Kyle Larson delivers record 269th Hendrick win in dominant run at Charlotte

In dominating fashion, Kyle Larson won NASCAR's longest race on Sunday night and in the process gave team owner Rick Hendrick a record 269th victory, most in NASCAR Cup Series history.

Larson's win in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway was the eighth of his career and his second of the season, guaranteeing the driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet a spot in the postseason Playoffs. By the time he crossed the finish line at the end of 400 laps, Larson held a 10.051-second lead over runner-up and teammate Chase Elliott.

The 1-2 finish was the third straight for Hendrick Motorsports. Only third-place finisher Kyle Busch found a way to break up the HMS party, with Hendrick drivers William Byron and Alex Bowman running fourth and fifth, respectively.

Larson led 327 of the 400 laps, with his only real challenges coming from Elliott and Byron, who led 22 and 19 laps.

"It feels great to be that guy who helped Mr. H break that record finally," Larson said of the victory that broke a tie with Petty Enterprises for most wins in the series.

Larson signed on with Hendrick to start the 2021 season. The car he drove to victory Sunday night bore the same number as the Chevrolet Geoff Bodine piloted at Martinsville on April 29, 1984 to give Hendrick's fledgling—and struggling—organization the first of those 269 wins.

"It's been better than I ever could have imagined," Larson said of his first 15 races with HMS. "For us to lead as many laps as we've got this year (a series-best 1,105), to contend for as many wins as we have and now to get our second win in a crown-jewel event, too, it feels great.

"I'm just very lucky that Mr. H was able to put a deal (together) for me. It's just awesome. I'm living a dream, for sure."

NASCAR chairman and CEO Jim France was one of the first to congratulate Hendrick.

"I am proud to congratulate Rick Hendrick and all of Hendrick Motorsports on breaking the all-time wins record for a NASCAR Cup Series race team, long held by the legendary Petty Enterprises team," France said in a statement issued at the conclusion of the race.

"With nearly 40 years of excellence, Hendrick Motorsports has set the gold standard for race team success. Rick Hendrick has already cemented his legacy as a NASCAR Hall of Famer, and now adds another incredible accomplishment to an exemplary NASCAR career."

Larson started from the pole and swept the first three stages, but not without challenges from teammates Elliott and Byron.

In fact, in the green-flag run after the second stage break, Byron passed Larson for the lead on Lap 231. During the subsequent exchange of pit stops, however, Larson came in for service one lap earlier than Byron and was roughly one second faster on and off pit road than his teammate.

Larson built a lead of more than 2.5 seconds but spent more than 15 circuits trying to lap the No. 43 Chevrolet of Erik Jones, as Byron closed to his bumper.

"Make him work for it," Jones' spotter, Rick Carelli, radioed to his driver as he fought to stay on the lead lap, and Jones certainly followed those instructions.

But Larson finally passed the No. 43 Camaro and began to pull away from Byron before Ryan Newman slammed the outside wall to cause the fourth and final caution of the race on Lap 296. The stage ended under yellow, with Larson the winner.

Coincidentally, it was also Jones who pitted for fresh tires during the final run to the finish, returned to the track ahead of Larson, and helped Larson build his winning margin.

"I just towed with him for a while and stretched my lead out," said Larson, who for the second time in his career followed three straight runner-up finishes with a pole and a victory.

Austin Dillon ran sixth, followed by Denny Hamlin, Chris Buescher, Tyler Reddick and Kevin Harvick. Hamlin retained the series lead by 76 points over Larson and Byron, who are tied for second in the standings.

XFINITY Race Winning Drivers

Justin Allgaier

1

Justin Allgaier
AJ Allmendinger

1

AJ Allmendinger
Josh Berry

1

Josh Berry
Kyle Busch

1

Kyle Busch
Chase Elliott

1

Chase Elliott
Ty Gibbs

1

Ty Gibbs
Brad Keselowski

1

Brad Keselowski
Tyler Reddick

1

Tyler Reddick
XFINITY RACES AT CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY (My Xfinity data includes comprehensive coverage starting from the 2015 season.)
DATE RACE WINNER # MAKE ST TEAM CREW CHIEF LAPS TIME
05-2024 BetMGM 300 Chase Elliott 17 Chevrolet 30th Hendrick Motorsports Greg Ives 200 02:36:27
05-2023 Alsco Uniforms 300 Justin Allgaier 7 Chevrolet 1st JR Motorsports Jim Pohlman 200 02:26:54
05-2022 Alsco Uniforms 300 Josh Berry 8 Chevrolet 4th JR Motorsports Mike Bumgarner 200 02:33:07
05-2021 Alsco Uniforms 300 Ty Gibbs 54 Toyota 8th Joe Gibbs Racing Chris Gayle 200 02:39:57
05-2020 Alsco 300 Kyle Busch 54 Toyota 18th Joe Gibbs Racing Jacob Canter 203 02:43:30
09-2019 Drive for the Cure 2… AJ Allmendinger 10 Chevrolet 5th Kaulig Racing Lennie Chandler 67 02:06:30
05-2019 Alsco 300 Tyler Reddick 2 Chevrolet 3rd Richard Childress Racing Randall Burnett 200 02:42:37
05-2018 Alsco 300 Brad Keselowski 22 Ford 1st Team Penske Brian Wilson 204 02:49:04
10-2017 Drive for the Cure 3… -- -- -- -- -- -- 200 02:26:43
05-2017 Hisense 4K TV 300 -- -- -- -- -- -- 200 02:38:17
10-2016 Blue Cross Blue Shie… -- -- -- -- -- -- 200 02:05:23
05-2016 Hisense 4K TV 300 -- -- -- -- -- -- 206 02:41:54
10-2015 Drive for the Cure 3… -- -- -- -- -- -- 200 01:58:24
05-2015 Hisense 300 -- -- -- -- -- -- 200 02:08:44
Xfinity Race Recaps

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Strong strategic move puts Elliott in Victory Lane at Charlotte

With a masterpiece of strategy and modicum of good fortune, Chase Elliott won Saturday’s BetMGM 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in his first NASCAR Xfinity Series start of the season.

Saving a set of new tries for the final run in the 200-lap event at the 1.5-mile track, Elliott grabbed the lead after a Lap 183 restart and held it the rest of the way.

Driving a No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet with a paint scheme reminiscent of the signature look of the late Ricky Hendrick’s car, Elliott crossed the finish line 0.500 ahead of Brandon Jones, who recovered from early brake problems to finish second after pressing Elliott in the closing laps.

The victory was Elliott’s first at Charlotte and the sixth of his career. Jones finished ahead of two of his JR Motorsports teammates, Sammy Smith and Sam Mayer, in third and fourth, respectively.

Elliott started 30thafter a lackluster qualifying effort. After Riley Herbst crashed hard on the backstretch to cause the first of eight cautions, Elliott, Jesse Love, Anthony Alfredo and Kyle Sieg stayed on the track on old tires, saving a set of stickers for later in the race.

That call by crew chief Greg Ives proved to be the winning move. Though Elliott pitted on Lap 48 and fell to 26thin the running order for a restart on Lap 53, he regained the lost track position on new tires and was a factor near the front the rest of the way. An opportune caution on Lap 169 gave Elliott the chance to make full use of his final set of new tires.

“Greg made a good call, and I think ultimately that’s what won us the race,” Elliott said. “I felt like I needed a little bit with my balance to make as much pace as the 7 (Justin Allgaier) and a couple of those guys.

“Hats off to everybody at Hendrick Motorsports. Super special to win with the 17 on the car for the boss (Rick Hendrick) and (wife) Linda. It’s a great honor here with the Ricky Hendrick scheme. It means a lot to all of us to be a part of this whenever it runs.”

One by one, other contenders for the win fell by the wayside. Justin Allgaier won the first two stages in perhaps the fastest car in the race, but he sped on pit road during the Stage 2 break.

Allgaier’s race came to an end when he and pole winner Ty Gibbs crashed off Turn 4 after a restart on Lap 176. Reigning series champion Cole Custer and current Xfinity Series leader Austin Hill wrecked on the backstretch on Lap 184 after door-to-door contact a half-lap earlier.

A slow pit stop on Lap 170 cost Kyle Busch track position and relegated him to a sixth-place result behind fifth-place finisher AJ Allmendinger, who made a late-race charge on one-lap scuffed tires.

That left Jones to put the pressure on Elliott at the end, but the race ended before Jones could get closer than a half-second back.

“Talk about an up-and-down day and coming back from it,” said Jones, who had to replace brake fluid in his No. 9 Chevrolet during a long pit stop on Lap 76. “That was really fun to come from the back to the front, I think three or four times there.”

Ryan Sieg, Josh Williams, Gibbs and Noah Gragson completed the top 10. New Zealander Shane van Gisbergen was 15thin his first run on a 1.5-mile intermediate speedway.

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Justin Allgaier gets breakthrough NASCAR Xfinity win at Charlotte Motor Speedway

Saving fuel throughout a 66-lap green-flag run to the finish, Justin Allgaier collected his first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory of the season—and the first this year for JR Motorsports—in Monday’s twice-rain-delayed Alsco Uniforms 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Allgaier, the pole winner, beat runner-up John Hunter Nemechek to the finish line by 7.829 seconds, as the top three finishers—including third-place Cole Custer—stretched their fuel mileage from a Lap 135 restart to the end of the race.

Austin Hill and Ty Gibbs, both of whom pitted for fuel in the closing stages, claimed the fourth and fifth positions, respectively.

“I’m speechless, man,” said Allgaier, who led a race-high 83 laps. “I didn’t know how much to save. Just lucky we had enough… I just cannot say enough about (crew chief) Jim Pohlman, everybody on the No. 7 team.

“It’s not been for lack of speed this year. We’ve battled. Tonight, was kind of the opposite. We had to go slow to go fast.”

Nemechek led 57 laps, but Allgaier build a substantial lead at the end while conserving enough fuel to finish the race—and to do a celebratory burnout.

“We were racing each other pretty hard, and I burned my stuff up trying to get to him—and get around him,” Nemechek said. “I should have been a little more patient, I guess. But overall, really solid day. Good points day for us. I think that extends our points lead.”

In fact, Nemechek collected his fifth top-two finish of the season (with wins at Fontana and Martinsville) and holds a 10-point lead over Hill in the series standings.

But Allgaier and Nemechek might not have been left to battle for the win, had a radio issue not adversely affected Gibbs’ winning chances.

The driver of the No. 19 Toyota, who won last year’s Xfinity championship before graduating to the NASCAR Cup Series, led 52 laps and swept the first two stages of the race. But an extended pit stop, during which Gibbs’ crew changed his steering wheel (which housed a faulty radio button) dropped him to the rear of the field for a restart on Lap 98. That ended Gibbs’ challenge for the win.

Parker Retzlaff ran sixth, followed by Jeb Burton, Carson Hocevar, Jeb Burton and Sammy Smith.

The race was delayed from Saturday by rain and restarted on Monday morning. But rain intervened again after the completion of the first stage, delaying the finish until after the running of the Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR Cup Series race, won by Ryan Blaney.

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Josh Berry dominates at Charlotte on banner day for JR Motorsports

When Josh Berry crossed the finish line at Charlotte Motor Speedway—giving JR Motorsports its first NASCAR Xfinity Series win at its home track—second-place Ty Gibbs was just reaching the 200-foot-long Speedway TV screen television on the backstretch.

After JRM teammate Justin Allgaier scraped the outside wall for the second time and had to pit during the final 81-lap green-flag run, Berry won Saturday’s Alsco Uniforms 300 by an astonishing 18.039 seconds over Gibbs.

But the race wasn’t that lopsided before Allgaier had to bring his No. 7 Chevrolet to pit road on Lap 186 of 200. 

True, Berry and Allgaier were racing in a different zip code from the rest of the field, but their battle was intense until Allgaier nicked the wall on Lap 178 and hit the Turn 2 barrier even harder eight laps later. 

With Allgaier out of the picture, Berry enjoyed a pleasure cruise for the remaining 14 laps and finished three-quarters of a mile ahead of Gibbs. 

“Man, it’s so amazing,” Berry said. “This car was so good. (Crew chief) Mike (Bumgarner) and this whole group works so hard. We’ve been getting better every week. I think the sky is the limit as we continue to learn about each other and keep getting better.

“That was a battle with Justin. It always is with us. We always seem to run good at the same places and always have to race each other. He slipped up in (Turn) 1—and I got loose, too, and it all worked out.”

In fact, JR Motorsports, co-owned by NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr., enjoyed another banner day from green flag to checkered flag. Sam Mayer started from the pole position and finished third. Berry won the first stage and Allgaier the second, giving JRM its 10th consecutive stage victory—extending the series record established last week at Kansas Speedway.

Five drivers led laps on Saturday—four of them from JRM. Berry led a race-high 89 circuits, followed by 63 for Allgaier, 36 for Noah Gragson and two for Mayer. Gragson dropped off the lead lap with a cylinder down, but, with power seemingly restored, he recovered to finish fourth.

Berry won for the second time this season and the fourth time in his career. JRM has won four of the last five Xfinity Series races.

“I think everybody knew that this was going to be a good benchmark for our organization, and I think I speak for everybody in saying that we exceeded expectations,” Berry said.

Ryan Preece came home fifth in the top Ford, with Daniel Hemric, Allgaier, Sheldon Creed, Trevor Bayne and Myatt Snider completing the top 10.

Allgaier had the lead on Lap 163 after a full cycle of green-flag pit stops, and he held it until Berry beat him to the stripe by .022 seconds on Lap 176. Allgaier regained the top spot on Lap 177 but scraped the wall for the first time a lap later.

“We tried to put on a show for the fans,” Allgaier said. “I don’t know if you can drive any harder. At one point we were literally barreling off into Turn 1 harder than we did in qualifying.

“I thought we were going to be OK there and battle it out again (after the first contact with the wall), but unfortunately, my right rear started to go flat.”

TRUCKS Race Winning Drivers

Kyle Busch

2

Kyle Busch
Ross Chastain

1

Ross Chastain
Matt Crafton

1

Matt Crafton
Chase Elliott

1

Chase Elliott
John Hunter Nemechek

1

John Hunter Nemechek
Ben Rhodes

1

Ben Rhodes
Nicholas Sanchez

1

Nicholas Sanchez
Johnny Sauter

1

Johnny Sauter
TRUCK RACES AT CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY (My Truck data includes comprehensive coverage starting from the 2015 season.)
DATE RACE WINNER # MAKE ST TEAM CREW CHIEF LAPS TIME
05-2024 NC Education Lottery… Nicholas Sanchez 2 Chevrolet 16th Rev Racing Bono Manion 134 01:45:40
05-2023 NC Education Lottery… Ben Rhodes 99 Ford 19th ThorSport Racing Jeriod Prince 134 01:43:10
05-2022 NC Education Lottery… Ross Chastain 41 Chevrolet 5th Niece Motorsports Cody Efaw 143 01:42:17
05-2021 North Carolina Educa… John Hunter Nemechek 4 Toyota 4th Kyle Busch Motorsports Eric Phillips 134 01:45:29
05-2020 North Carolina Educa… Chase Elliott 24 Chevrolet 26th GMS Racing Charles Denike 134 01:47:42
05-2019 North Carolina Educa… Kyle Busch 51 Toyota 8th Kyle Busch Motorsports Rudy Fugle 134 01:44:53
05-2018 North Carolina Educa… Johnny Sauter 21 Chevrolet 1st GMS Racing Joe Shear 134 01:47:02
05-2017 North Carolina Educa… Kyle Busch 51 Toyota 4th -- Bono Manion 134 01:49:32
05-2016 North Carolina Educa… Matt Crafton 88 Toyota 17th ThorSport Racing Carl Joiner 134 01:25:01
05-2015 NC Education Lottery… Kasey Kahne 00 Chevrolet 1st -- Joe Shear 139 01:37:01
Truck Race Recaps

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Nick Sanchez triumphs at Charlotte for second NASCAR Truck Series win

Nick Sanchez showed what an opportunist can do when the right moment presents itself.

Taking advantage of fresh tires and a quick pit stop, Sanchez charged from the 10thposition on a restart with nine laps left in Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway and held off Corey Heim to win his second NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race of the season — and of his career.

Sanchez crossed the finish line 0.507 seconds ahead of Heim, who fell just short after two snafus on pit relegated him to the runner-up position — temporarily. Sanchez collects a $50,000 bonus as the winner of the first Triple Truck Challenge event of the season.

After the race, Heim’s troubles multiplied when inspectors found three lug nuts not safe and secure on his No. 11 Toyota, resulting in a disqualification that promoted Stewart Friesen to the runner-up position.

“It’s awesome — my No. 2 Gainbridge Chevrolet,” said Sanchez, who qualified 16thfor the 11thTruck Series race of the season. “What can I say more about this (Rev Racing) team? We started off bad. It didn’t affect us. We went to work. We put ourselves in position when it mattered most.

“This is for Chris Showalter, my car chief. Birthday today, 700thtruck start. This is for him, and it’s great to get number two.”

Remarkably, Showalter has been a part of the series for every race since its inception in 1995.

Sanchez led only the final nine laps. Heim led 72 before the penalty and Christian Eckes 37.

After dominating the first two stages of the race, Heim dropped to 27thunder caution for Matt Crafton’s collision with then outside wall on Lap 79 when the jack malfunctioned and failed to lift his No. 11 Toyota.

Heim roared through the field to fifth before Chase Purdy slammed the Turn 2 wall to cause the fifth caution. Like Sanchez, Heim pitted for fresh tires, but a problem with the lug nuts on the right rear wheel cost him valuable time — and ultimately cost him dearly with the disqualification.

Grant Enfinger was credited with third, followed by Matt Mills, Ben Rhodes and Jake Garcia.

Eckes, who entered the race as the series leader, started from the rear after contact from Kaden Honeycutt’s Chevrolet during practice damaged his No. 19 Chevy and prevented him from making a qualifying run.

That was just the start of Eckes’ problems. Alternator issues kept him on pit road for extended stops during the stage breaks and relegated him to starting spots of 28thand 27thfor the second and final stages, respectively.

But Eckes recovered to take the lead after staying out for a restart on Lap 88, and he was still in front — albeit close on fuel — when the caution for Purdy’s accident slowed the field. Eschewing a pit stop for new tires under the final caution, Eckes slipped to 10that the finish.

Honeycutt, who won Stage 1 after Heim’s penalty and finished third in Stage 2, also went to the rear after leaving his pit stall during the second stage break with a fuel dump can still attached to the input valve of his truck.

Despite the setback, Honeycutt had enough speed in his Chevrolet to recover to seventh at the finish. Connor Mosack, Dean Thompson and Eckes completed the top 10.

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Late charge gives Ben Rhodes NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series win at Charlotte Motor Speedway

Grabbing the lead from Carson Hocevar after a restart on Lap 111 of 134, Ben Rhodes pulled away to win Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Rhodes, the ninth different winner in 11 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races this season, also collected a $50,000 bonus for winning the first of three events in the Triple Truck Challenge, a bonus program that could mean $500,000 for a driver who can sweep all three.

“I didn’t think we were that good in practice,” said Rhodes, who beat runner-up Corey Heim to the checkered flag by 2.398 seconds, as Heim, third-place Dean Thompson and Carson Hocevar battled for the second spot over the last 24 laps.

“I didn’t qualify the best, and here it came to life at night… Oh, man, I had so much fun. This is so much fun. Charlotte is a track that we come to—ThorSport Racing, we’re based in Sandusky, Ohio—we come to the North Carolina guys’ house, and we like to win.”

The victory was Rhodes’ first of the season, his first at Charlotte and the seventh of his career. In addition to the Triple Truck Challenge bonus, Rhodes is locked into the CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Playoffs.

“The whole season is so hard to put together,” Rhodes said. “It’s unbelievably hard, and it’s only gotten more difficult over the years…. A championship being locked in, I’ll take that. The last three races have been so unbelievably hard on my team. We’ve been wrecked in the last three and haven’t had very good showings because of it.

“So I’ll take the points—thank you.”

Hocevar held the lead for the Lap 111 restart but was trapped in the middle of a three-wide situation and dropped to sixth in the running order. Heim took second and Thompson third, while Hocevar rallied and swapped the third position with Thompson before finishing fourth.

“Me and the 42 (Hocevar) and the 5 (Thompson) were probably the best trucks,” said Heim, who led a race-high 49 laps and held off Hocevar to win the first stage. “But the 99 (Rhodes) just came along really strong, and once we got to second on the restart where the 42 got put in the middle there, I really thought we had a shot at it.

“But it just proves that clean air is king here, but I feel like if I did a better job of getting by as soon as possible rather than waiting on a run, we might have had a better opportunity.”

Notes: Thompson’s third-place finish was a career-best… Hocevar led 43 laps and won the seconds stage by 5.746 seconds over Heim… Rhodes, the 2021 series champion, led 37 laps—25 in the final run to the finish… The final two Triple Truck Challenge races are scheduled for World Wide Technology Raceway on June 3 and Nashville Superspeedway on June 23.

By Reid Spencer - NASCAR Wire Service

Ross Chastain triumphs at Charlotte after Late wreck KOs Carson Hocevar

When fate dealt Carson Hocevar another heartache Friday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Niece Motorsport teammate Ross Chastain took full advantage—with a serendipitous push from Grant Enfinger.

On the final lap of the second overtime in the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series contest, Chastain raced side-by-side on the backstretch with John Hunter Nemechek, before the timely push from Enfinger propelled him forward and enabled him to clear Nemechek’s No. 4 Toyota.

Chastain crossed the finish line .102 seconds ahead of Enfinger, with Nemechek running third, .413 seconds behind the race winner.

When he climbed out of his No. 41 Chevrolet on the frontstretch, however, Chastain could talk only of Hocevar, who dominated the event, only to see it slip away after a devastating late caution.

“I hate it so much for Carson,” said Chastain, who won for the first time this season, the first time at Charlotte and the fourth time in his career. “I didn’t give him the push he needed to win (on the first attempt at overtime)… Man, I’m so proud of Carson Hocevar.

“I’ll say that over and over. That guy’s a future star. He’s such a goofy kid, but I love him. He learns so quick.”

Hocevar, who lost the lead four laps short of the finish and ran second at Bristol’s Dirt Track in April, learned a painful lesson on Friday night after leading a race-high 57 laps. 

He held an advantage that had stabilized at slightly more than six seconds when Jesse Little’s Chevrolet broke loose over the bumps in Turn 3 and carried Tyler Ankrum Toyota into the outside wall.

The 19-year-old Hocevar chose the inside lane for the final restart, and Ryan Preece, in the outside lane, nosed ahead past the start/finish line when Chastain spun his tires and failed to provide Hocevar with a push.

Running beside Preece on Lap 136 in the first attempt at overtime, Hocevar lost control and slid up the track into Preece’s No. 17 Ford, damaging both vehicles. 

“A dumbass move by myself,” acknowledged Hocevar, who climbed from his No. 42 Chevrolet after the race and sat on the pavement, his head between his hands. “It sucks. I mean I tried really hard—I tried too hard.

“I didn’t get a good restart. I tried too hard, tried to wash (Preece) up and just crashed myself. I feel like just crying.”

Preece finished 11th after pitting with a flat tire—thanks to the wreck. He didn’t mince words on pit lane.

“Don’t wreck the guy on the outside of you trying to win your first race,” Preece said pointedly. “Don’t do it.”

After finishing second, Enfinger feels he has an IOU from Chastain.

“I’m glad to push my buddy Ross to a win,” Enfinger said. “In my book, he owes me one.”

Christian Eckes ran fourth, followed by Zane Smith, who led 52 laps and won the first stage. Tanner Gray, Kyle Busch, Chandler Smith, Stewart Friesen and Ben Rhodes completed the top 10. 

Rhodes won Stage 2 by staying out on old tires and catching an opportune caution when Matt Mills crashed with Jack Wood in Turn 4 three laps short of the send of the 30-lap stage.

Ultimately, Hocevar came home 16th, the last driver on the lead lap. Mexican driver Max Gutierrez finished 26th in his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut.

Charlotte Motor Speedway
5555 Concord Pkwy. South Concord, NC, 28027 800-455-FANS

Website

Charlotte Motor Speedway aerial
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Charlotte Motor Speedway seating
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Charlotte Facts
  • Backstretch Banking: 5-degrees
  • Backstretch Length: 1,360 feet
  • Frontstretch Banking: 5-degrees
  • Frontstretch Length: 1,952.8 feet
  • Surface: Asphalt
  • Turns 1 & 2 Banking: 24-degrees
  • Turns 1 & 2 Length: 2,400 feet
  • Turns 1 & 2 Radius: 685 feet
  • Turns 3 & 4 Banking: 24-degrees
  • Turns 3 & 4 Length: 2,040 feet
  • Turns 3 & 4 Radius: 625 feet
Charlotte Trivia
  • Construction began on Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1959.
  • Fireball Roberts won the inaugural Busch Pole Award at Charlotte Motor Speedway (World 600) in 1960 with a speed of 133.904 mph.
  • In 1961, there were two 100-mile qualifying points races held the week before the May race. The first six fall races at Charlotte were 400-mile events (1960-65).
  • In 2018, the Charlotte Motor Speedway introduced the road course configuration (ROVAL) and in the process relinquished the track’s second event on the oval configuration effectively creating a new road course track on the schedule - the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course (ROVAL).
  • The track name changed from Charlotte Motor Speedway to Lowe's Motor Speedway in 1999. It changed back to Charlotte Motor Speedway for the 2010 season.
  • The track was re-paved again before the 2006 season.
  • The track was repaved midseason in 1994.
  • The track's first NASCAR Cup Series race was held on June 19, 1960 and won by Joe Lee Johnson in a Chevrolet.
Charlotte Image Gallery

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Charlotte History

Charlotte Motor Speedway, formerly Lowe's Motor Speedway, is a motorsports complex located in Concord, North Carolina 13 mi (21 km) from Charlotte. The complex features a 1.5 mi (2.4 km) quad oval track that hosts NASCAR racing including the prestigious Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day weekend, the NASCAR All-Star Race, and the Bank of America Roval 400. The speedway was built in 1959 by Bruton Smith and is considered the home track for NASCAR with many race teams located in the Charlotte area. The track is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports, Inc. (SMI) with Marcus G. Smith (son of Bruton Smith) as track president.

The 2,000 acres (810 ha) complex also features a state-of-the-art quarter mile (0.40 km) drag racing strip, ZMAX Dragway. It is the only all-concrete, four-lane drag strip in the United States and hosts NHRA events. Alongside the drag strip is a state-of-the-art clay oval that hosts dirt racing including the World of Outlaws finals among other popular racing events.

Source: Wikipedia