Breaking down NASCAR’s playoff picture with just 10 regular-season races left

Who’s in, who’s on the edge and who needs to win a race to make NASCAR’s playoffs.

Going into the race weekend at Nashville Superspeedway for Sunday’s Ally 400, the NASCAR Cup Series has just 10 of 26 regular-season races remaining, which means only 10 more chances for drivers to win a race and lock themselves into the playoffs, starting in September.

After a rare off-weekend, NASCAR is headed to Nashville before taking on Chicago’s street course race in a new event, followed by races at Atlanta Motor Speedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Pocono Raceway and Richmond Raceway to close out the month.

If a driver wins at least one of the 26 regular-season races, they secure their spot in the 10-race playoffs culminating in a winner-take-all championship race at Phoenix Raceway in November. If there are fewer than 16 different race winners in the regular season, the rest of the playoff field is determined by points.

RELATED: Daytona International Speedway might host Jaguars games, even though it probably shouldn’t

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With the season’s first 16 races in the books, Martin Truex Jr. is at the top of the regular-season standings, and the regular-season winner gets a 15-point bonus headed into the playoffs.

Notably absent from the current projected playoff picture is 2020 champ Chase Elliott, who’s recent suspension and injury have kept him sidelined for seven races. At 27th in the regular-season standings, he’ll likely have to win a race to make the postseason at this point.

So with 10 races remaining before the playoffs, here’s a look at the top-20 drivers in the regular-season standings, along with their projected playoff rank and points.

F1 23 review: A small evolution for the Formula 1 racing series

F1 23 might only feature a few small tweaks to the racing game formula, but its story mode and deep simulation make it enjoyable nonetheless

F1 23 barely needs an introduction for Formula 1 fans. If you played the racing game’s 2022 version, you already know basically what to expect. Just as with other annual series such as FIFA, these new, full-priced releases usually only have small tweaks with each new entry – sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. F1 23 is no different, though most of it is for the better – even if there really isn’t that much evolution on display.

F1 23 turns back to its simul-arcade formula that defined the series in years gone by. It’s approachable for everyone, but a dense system of assists, preferences, and customizations means you can turn it into something very like an authentic simulator if you prefer more depth.

Whatever your choice, F1 23 is as much of a pleasure to drive as ever, both with controllers and with a steering wheel. The single-seaters handle corners with impressive smoothness, and it’s so easy to feel like you’re naturally driving a real car.

While new features are, admittedly, sparse, it seems evident that Codemasters put all the feedback from the past racing season to good use. Just touching curbs with the floor of your car means you can lose control for a split second and even risk spinning out. That’s something teams and drivers learned the hard way in 2022, with a few notable examples being Schumacher’s crashes in Jeddah and Monaco.

Curbs have always been a controversial feature in F1 games, and they probably still will be in F1 23. While Codemasters has smoothed out the issue over time, there’s a strange, new phenomenon now. Go full throttle, and you’ll see your car spin out in the middle of turns – but only in what seems like pre-determined parts of certain tracks.

Codemasters told GLHF this comes as part of the new traction control system, where the default setting is equivalent to the medium setting in F1 22. Wear and compounds supposedly play a role in these interactions as well, but we’ve seen it happen even in time trials with just five percent degradation. The way you lose the rear end feels a bit too scripted as well.

In short, curbs and traction will probably be another point of contention, but the new tracks are excellent. F1 23 comes with two new tracks, Las Vegas and Qatar. The new U.S. circuit, which won’t debut until late in the season, has a central section that is vaguely reminiscent of Singapore and Miami.

All of them are designed with the new generation of Formula 1 cars in mind – lots of quick turns and fast straights as you flash across the Strip at 350km/h, and that should make overtaking much easier under DRS. It’s pretty easy to learn and master, with the exception of turns seven and eight.

Losail has been a MotoGP staple for decades. It looks a lot like Bahrain, with the three very fast turns in quick succession as the highlight. It’s got everything we love in a track: You race fast, it’s approachable, and it still requires agency.

Story mode Braking Point 2 is back after being notably absent in 2022. One standout new feature is a management component, complete with difficult choices and consequences. The game does a decent job at taking note of your decisions as well – at least until the narrative takes over.

The story evolves through multiple perspectives, giving us a look at the Formula 1 world through the lens of three characters. It’s a welcome addition that lends more variety to both the storytelling and gameplay, even though some characters – especially F1 2021‘s protagonist Aiden Jackson – end up losing some of their screen time.

Given the usual lack of narrative in simulator games such as this one, it’s nice to see how Braking Point creates a proper in-game universe, one where you get to see familiar faces return and others show themselves in a different light.

The scenario-based structure remains the same, although the difficulty feels a bit too low. You always end up completing both the main and bonus objectives with ease, which takes the urgency out of customization options. Settings to tweak difficulty would’ve been appreciated.

Elsewhere, the narrative connects that in-game universe with the real world surprisingly well. Emails and news throw in anecdotes from F1 history, for example, along with reports from the contemporary scene, and it goes a long way in making the world feel grounded and real. It’s quite rare to see an officially licensed game deal with themes such as billionaire sponsors, or the controversial legacy of motorsport, with such frankness.

We were surprised to see that Time Trial is much more than just a hub: it comes with a full package of challenges to play both in single and multiplayer mode, and it’s set up for rotating content focusing on the current Grand Prix. F1 World is based on a standalone progression, allowing you to upgrade your car and your team with unexpected depth while racing in series such as European GPs or in scenarios where you need an exciting comeback in the rain

It’s a brilliant blend of the Braking Point scenario-based experience and the management component of career mode – so much so that one could wonder if this could overshadow the two modes it draws inspiration from. On the other hand, the Hot Lap experience introduced last year is scaled down to just a playlist in F1 World.

One of the biggest issues with F1 World is it comes with way too many currencies, with different currencies for money or stuff you specifically need to upgrade parts and team members. I quickly stopped caring about the post-event screen detailing all that I had earned.

The mode comes with a huge variety of objectives, similar to bounties and challenges in a game like Destiny, and are even meant to be claimed in a dedicated menu as if you’re playing a free-to-play game. This is where the long-term engagement comes in, although some tasks might be a touch too obscure.

Licenses are borrowed from multiplayer, and almost remind me of Gran Turismo. It’s a nice progression system, even though you have to go through a FUT-like curve where you’ll be asked to spend the first few hours playing against a very weak AI. On top of that, we lost progress twice for reasons we still don’t understand. Not fun.

F1 23 has few standout innovations compared to previous games, but ot dpes come along with a genuine revolution in the sport.  F1 World is good, even with its confusing range of currencies, and will only get better, while the rest of game remains a fun and authentic simul-arcade experience and a solid starting point for those willing to learn how to play with a steering wheel.

Version tested: PC

F1 23 technical breakdown

F1 23 features a warm color palette that makes cars even more vibrant and is a perfect fit for the setting, especially the night races in Vegas and Qatar. We played the PC version on an ultrawide monitor, running the game up to 144fps at a 2560x1080p resolution, and it’s as smooth as the 2022 game on a RTX 3080. Ray-tracing is a heavy lift as you’d expect, though, and it brings the framerate down to 70-80fps. It still feels consistent and smooth, so if you want the extra bells and whistles, it’s worth the compromise. Codemasters packed in more visual details than ever, including tires graining and blistering that you’ll notice with wear. 

Written by Paolo Sirio on behalf of GLHF

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Daytona International Speedway might host Jaguars games, even though it probably shouldn’t

Florida’s most famous race track wants to host the Jaguars if they’re displaced by new stadium construction.

The Jacksonville Jaguars may soon need a temporary home if TIAA Bank Stadium begins extensive renovations to bring a home venue steeped in 1995 into the 21st century. That construction is slated to take place before the team’s current lease runs out in 2029 and is ultimately subject to the approval of Jacksonville’s city council thanks to extensive public funding. It if happens, it could leave the team homeless for up to two seasons.

That means the Jaguars may need a temporary place to call their own. And while London is always happy to host for a game each season, that’s not a proper fix. Team owner Shad Khan is in the market for local venues capable of holding 50,000-plus fans as his resurgent team sets its sights on a Super Bowl.

So how about grandstands that seats more than 100,000?

Officials at Daytona International Speedway — NASCAR’s mammoth 2.5-mile Florida track — have pitched their venue as a potential host despite being a 90-mile drive south and, famously, not being a football stadium.

“Daytona International Speedway is a world-renowned sports and entertainment venue and hosts a full schedule of events each year,” Kelleher said in a statement released June 10. “As good neighbors in the Florida sports community, DIS will be speaking with the Jacksonville Jaguars to see if we can assist them with their potential upcoming facility needs around our scheduled events.”

Per the Daytona Beach News-Journal, the team’s top choices are the University of Florida’s Ben Hill Griffin Stadium or Orlando’s Camping World Stadium, though neither is a perfect fit. Each would be at least a 90-minute drive from the team’s current Jacksonville home. But team president Frank Lamping isn’t ruling out the home of the Daytona 500.

“It would be an interesting solution but would also require significant investment in terms of infrastructure,” Lamping told VenuesNow. “It can accommodate a big crowd. It would be a little wonky, but it’s worth considering.”

“Wonky” is a bit of an understatement. Hosting at a 2.5-mile tri-oval means many of the available seats would be trying to watch the Jags from a different building in downtown Jacksonville. Here’s what it looked like from the boxes when Bristol Motor Speedway — a significantly smaller (0.533 miles) oval track — hosted a college football showdown between Tennessee and Virginia Tech in 2016.

That’s before getting to the infrastructure of locker rooms, lights and putting together an entire NFL football field in the infield. As SB Nation pointed out in 2016, that’s *a lot.*

So yeah, Daytona is a fun idea whose execution would be considerably more difficult than hosting games at one of the other football stadiums without a two-hour radius of Jacksonville. And, again, this all relies on the Jaguars’ construction plans and the approval of public funds (which, aside, subsidizing costs for a team owner worth $11.6 billion is generally a bad idea for taxpayers!).

There are a lot of moving parts to consider before declaring Florida’s most famous racetrack a temporary NFL home field. But Daytona is officially in the mix, even if nothing is officially happening at this point. We’re only several arduous steps away from being able to sit three quarters of a mile from the 50-yard line at a Jags game.

Indy 500 fan whose car was damaged by a flying tire is getting a new one from Penske Entertainment

A tire from Felix Rosenqvist’s car flew off into the crowd during the Indy 500 and hit a parked car.

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Sunday’s Indianapolis 500, particularly the final 20 laps, was filled with drama, tension and some terrifying crashes, including when a tire from Felix Rosenqvist’s car flew off into the crowd and hit a parked car.

Rosenqvist made contact with the outside wall at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and spun out as a result. With traffic coming around the track, Kyle Kirkwood hit Rosenqvist’s skidding car, causing the tire to shoot out toward the grandstands. Kirkwood then slammed into the wall, flipped upside down and slid down the track.

Thankfully, no one was injured from the tire soaring above fans’ heads — though one spectator was treated for minor injuries from flying debris not related to the tire. But it hit a parked car, damaging the front left side.

MORE INDY 500: Indy 500 winner Josef Newgarden on his thrilling last-lap pass and ‘Top Gun-style’ celebration

And now, as the IndyStar reported Wednesday, the owner of the damaged (passenger) car, Robin Matthews, is getting a replacement from Penske Entertainment, which owns Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the IndyCar Series, per a track spokesperson.

More from the IndyStar:

“I didn’t see it come down,” said Matthews, a racing fan from Indianapolis. “I came down and they said, ‘Robin, it’s your car!’ I thought, ‘No.’ I thought somebody was pranking me. It’s a car. It’s fine.”

For racing fans who know anything about Roger Penske and the “Penske Way,” a new car for Matthews is hardly a surprise.

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Indy 500 winner Josef Newgarden on his thrilling last-lap pass and ‘Top Gun-style’ celebration

“I couldn’t have scripted it better for us to be able to have a green-flag finish,” Indy 500 champ Josef Newgarden told For The Win.

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More than a decade after his first time out, Josef Newgarden finally became an Indianapolis 500 champion Sunday, winning the 107th running of the iconic race.

Following three red-flag pauses in the final 15 laps of the 500-mile race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Newgarden and Marcus Ericsson, the 2022 Indy 500 champ, battled it out off a one-lap restart shootout. Newgarden surged past Ericsson on the backstretch for the lead and ultimately the victory in a thrilling final lap. Winning a record 19th Indy 500 for Team Penske, the No. 2 Chevrolet driver edged Ericsson by 0.0974 seconds for the fourth-closest finish in the race’s history.

For The Win spoke with Newgarden on Tuesday after his Indy 500 victory about his late-race strategy, adding to the Team Penske legacy and his “Top Gun-style” celebration.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

NASCAR official on why Chase Elliott was suspended for 1 race for wrecking Denny Hamlin

“It was an intentional act by Chase [Elliott] in our opinion.”

Welcome to FTW’s NASCAR Feud of the Week, where we provide a detailed breakdown of the latest absurd, funny and sometimes legitimate controversies and issues within the racing world.

Following an incident Monday in NASCAR’s rain-delayed Coca-Cola 600, the governing body dealt Chase Elliott a one-race suspension for intentionally wrecking Denny Hamlin.

Nearly halfway through NASCAR’s longest race and “crown jewel” event — which Ryan Blaney ultimately won — Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet appeared to deliberately turn into Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

Coming out of Turn 4 on Lap 186 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Hamlin squeezed Elliott up the track, and the No. 9 car brushed the wall. Elliott seemingly turned into Hamlin, causing the No. 11 to crash head-on into the frontstretch wall.

NASCAR officials reviewed race data and ruled that Elliott intentionally wrecked Hamlin, and the behavioral penalty was announced Tuesday afternoon.

“In the heat of the battle, things happen,” Elton Sawyer, NASCAR’s senior vice president of competition, said on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio following the suspension announcement. “[B]ut drivers needs to understand you have to handle that in a completely different way than hooking someone in the right rear and putting them in harm’s way.”

Hendrick Motorsports responded with a statement saying it would not appeal the penalty and noted Corey LaJoie, who normally drives for Spire Motorsports, will fill in for Elliott this weekend at World Wide Technology Raceway. The team also said it will submit for a waiver to keep Elliott eligible for the playoffs in the fall.

Sawyer further explained on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio:

“We arrived at a one-race suspension for Chase. We take this very seriously in the fact that the incident that happened off Turn 4, again after looking at all the available resources — in-car camera, data, SMT, which basically gives us steering, gives us throttle, gives us braking — it was an intentional act by Chase in our opinion and our view after reviewing all the available resources there.

“We have great racing on our race tracks. We have some of the most phenomenal athletes that are driving these cars, and in the heat of the battle, things happen. But they have to learn to react in a different way.”

The situation between Elliott and Hamlin is similar to an incident last season at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. In October 2022, NASCAR determined Bubba Wallace intentionally turned into Kyle Larson, and similarly, Wallace was suspended for a single race.

When asked what convinced NASCAR that Elliott’s dangerous contact was intentional, Sawyer continued:

“Watching the optics of it, immediately from the towers, like wow, that looked like a hard left-hand turn into the right-rear quarter of [Hamlin], which obviously turned the [No.] 11 into the front straightaway wall there head-on. Again, as we did last night [and] again this morning early throughout the day, you start looking at the data. There was some conversation about maybe a broken toe link on the right rear.

“And as you look through all that, nothing gave us the indication that on that particular contact with the fourth-turn wall … that anything was broke by looking at the steering, looking at in-car camera, hand position on steering wheel and the way the steering wheel was turned hard to the left, it just supported what the optics were. And again, that’s why we landed on the penalty we did.”

After the incident, Hamlin was understandably fuming. He pointed to the previous incident between Wallace and Larson, saying:

“It’s a tantrum, and he shouldn’t be racing next week. 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.”

Monday, Elliott said he wasn’t retaliating against Hamlin and added:

“The No. 11 ran us up into the fence there. Once you tear the right-side off these things, it’s kind of over.”

13 magnificent photos of Josef Newgarden’s Indy 500 victory milk celebration

Josef Newgarden’s milk bath after winning the 2023 Indy 500 was absolutely magnificent.

Josef Newgarden’s first-ever Indianapolis 500 victory was as hard-fought as they come.

After battling through three red flags thanks to some incredibly scary crashes in the final 17 laps, Newgarden overtook the 2022 Indy 500 winner Marcus Ericsson on the final lap to secure the victory. Newgarden was then able to out-duel Ericsson in the final stretch to win his first career Indy 500.

Fans had to wait nearly an hour over the expected finish time for the end of the 2023 Indy 500 after Felix Rosenqvist and Kyle Kirkwood collided in a scary crash that sent a tire flying past the stands. Two more crashes then followed, with fans wondering if the race would finish under yellow, but in the end Newgarden was able to take home the win after a thrilling final lap.

MORE INDY 500: Twitter reacts to Josef Newgarden winning the 2023 Indy 500.

And after all was said and done, Newgarden hopped into the crowd to celebrate with fans!

Then, finally, the moment racing fans were all waiting for. Newgarden drove over to Victory Lane to dump milk — whole milk, as was his choice! — all over himself to celebrate his win!

Here are 13 photos of Newgarden’s Indy 500 celebrations with fans and his iconic victory milk bath.

Twitter reacts to Josef Newgarden winning the 2023 Indy 500

Josef Newgarden pulled off a last-lap pass to win the 2023 Indy 500.

The 2023 Indianapolis 500 delivered a wild one-lap dash to the finish after several red flags in the closing stages, and Josef Newgarden passed Marcus Ericsson to win in a thrilling finish.

Ericsson got a great jump on the restart, but Newgarden was able to use the draft to pass Ericsson down the backstraight, and held off the defending Indy 500 champion through the final two turns to win IndyCar’s biggest race in his 12th attempt.

Instead of climbing the fence, Newgarden went into the crowd to celebrate with the fans. Here’s what fans were saying after an epic race.

Also see:

Felix Rosenqvist’s flying tire smashed into a parked car after narrowly missing Indy 500 crowd

Thankfully, the tire only hit a parked car and no bystanders.

It’s a miracle no one was injured in this terrifying incident at the 2023 Indianapolis 500.

During the final 17 laps of Sunday’s race, Felix Rosenqvist spun out on the track after hitting the wall. Kyle Kirkwood’s car clipped Rosenqvist on the way by, causing the tire of the latter’s car to fly off out of the track in a scary moment.

MORE INDY 500: Kyle Kirkwood’s on-board camera captured a terrifying angle of his Indy 500 crash.

Thankfully, Rosenqvist’s tire cleared the fans in the stands nearby, as it had just enough height to miss the stands completely. Here’s how the crash unfolded, with the flying tire missing the stands.

So, where did the tire land? Not too far away after it hit a parked car sitting nearby!

It’s really incredible that no one was hit by the flying tire as it made its way out of the track. And thankfully, Rosenqvist and Kirkwood were both uninjured after their scary crash.

Here’s how racing fans reacted after Rosenqvist’s flying tire narrowly missed the Indy 500 crowd and smashed into a parked car.

Kyle Kirkwood’s on-board camera captured a terrifying angle of his Indy 500 crash

Crashing at 200 MPH doesn’t get more unsettling

Kyle Kirkwood survived an absolutely horrific crash in the late stages of the 2023 Indianapolis 500 on Sunday.

With 14 laps to go, Felix Rosenqvist lost control of his car heading into Turn 2 and wound up facing the wrong way up near the front of the pack. Kirkwood almost avoided the incident entirely until he clipped tires with Rosenqvist and went spiraling out of control himself.

As a tire went flying over the stands — narrowly, and miraculously, avoiding the crowd —Kirkwood went airborne. landed upside down and went sliding down the track at 200 miles per hour.

The NBC broadcast confirmed all drivers escaped the incident without any injuries.

Kirkwood’s on-board camera survived the collision as well and produced some chilling footage of the crash.

Kirkwood told the broadcast he could see the sparks flying everywhere, which was the scariest part. And yeah, it’s very easy to believe him. He then brushed off the crash and lamented that his day ended early because he was driving a good race.

Just another reminder that IndyCar drivers built incredibly different.