Joey Logano wins the 2024 NASCAR All-Star Race, race recap and full results

Joey Logano wins the 2024 NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro. Check out the full results and race recap from the 2024 All-Star Race!

NASCAR arrived at North Wilkesboro Speedway for the 2024 All-Star Race, and it was a crazy weekend. The NASCAR Truck Series race was postponed after flooding left Christian Eckes walking knee-deep through water on pit road. Then, Kyle Busch and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. threw punches after the race. At the end of the night, it was a dominant performance by a Ford driver.

[autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] won the 2024 All-Star Race after holding off Denny Hamlin. It is Logano’s second career All-Star Race victory as he led 199 out of the 200 laps. The Team Penske driver won the pole as no one had anything for him. Christopher Bell got to his inside and battled him for a few laps, but that was the closest anyone was to passing him.

The night’s highlight was Busch and Stenhouse, as the two drivers confronted each other in the garage. Passing was difficult on the tire race track, and the different tire compounds proved inefficient. Yet, Logano didn’t let it phase him as he cruised to his second career All-Star Race win.

2024 NASCAR All-Star Race results:

  1. No. 22 Joey Logano
  2. No. 11 Denny Hamlin
  3. No. 17 Chris Buescher
  4. No. 5 Kyle Larson
  5. No. 12 Ryan Blaney
  6. No. 23 Bubba Wallace
  7. No. 1 Ross Chastain
  8. No. 9 Chase Elliott
  9. No. 34 Michael McDowell
  10. No. 8 Kyle Busch
  11. No. 10 Noah Gragson
  12. No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
  13. No. 54 Ty Gibbs
  14. No. 45 Tyler Reddick
  15. No. 99 Daniel Suarez
  16. No. 6 Brad Keselowski
  17. No. 20 Christopher Bell
  18. No. 16 A.J. Allmendinger
  19. No. 24 William Byron
  20. No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

NASCAR starting lineup for the 2024 All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro

Check out the NASCAR Cup Series starting lineup for the 2024 All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend!

The 2024 NASCAR All-Star Race is next for the Cup Series, and Team Penske will lead the field to the green flag. [autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] won the pole for the 2024 All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend. This comes after NASCAR canceled the heat races due to significant weather that flooded North Wilkesboro.

Brad Keselowski will join Logano on the front row, as Christopher Bell starts in third place and has the first pick of the pit boxes after winning the Pit Crew Challenge. The first 17 spots are secured; however, three more drivers will make the All-Star Race through the All-Star Open and fan vote.

The current starting lineup is available below.

2024 NASCAR All-Star Race starting lineup:

  1. No. 22 Joey Logano
  2. No. 6 Brad Keselowski
  3. No. 20 Christopher Bell
  4. No. 99 Daniel Suarez
  5. No. 17 Chris Buescher
  6. No. 45 Tyler Reddick
  7. No. 1 Ross Chastain
  8. No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
  9. No. 34 Michael McDowell
  10. No. 16 A.J. Allmendinger
  11. No. 11 Denny Hamlin
  12. No. 5 Kyle Larson
  13. No. 24 William Byron
  14. No. 8 Kyle Busch
  15. No. 9 Chase Elliott
  16. No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  17. No. 12 Ryan Blaney
  18. No. 54 Ty Gibbs
  19. No. 23 Bubba Wallace
  20. No. 10 Noah Gragson

Logano on All-Star pole as No. 20 JGR team wins Pit Crew Challenge

Joey Logano won the pole for the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro, while Joe Gibbs Racing claimed a repeat Pit Crew Challenge victory. The overall time for Logano to claim the pole was 89.754s between his qualifying laps and pit stop. His …

Joey Logano won the pole for the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro, while Joe Gibbs Racing claimed a repeat Pit Crew Challenge victory.

The overall time for Logano to claim the pole was 89.754s between his qualifying laps and pit stop. His No. 22 Team Penske team clocked in at 13.59s, the fifth overall time in the competition.

“It’s probably the most fun qualifying session we have all year, and I think that’s why we didn’t cancel it last night,” Logano said. “We just postponed it to today because everyone looks forward to this event, and it really does a great job at showcasing every team member on the team. From setting the dash to make sure all the lights are right and making sure you maximize your speed on pit road, to the car going fast obviously, executing onto pit road, rolling time, the spotter helping me be able to make sure I hit all the right lights around the corners to maximize that… Obviously, the pit crew doing their part and then back onto the racetrack.

“It’s a very detail-oriented exchange all the way through that we typically see every weekend when we have green flag stops, but it’s really neat to put it all on the line and do that today. It’s a very special pole, maybe the most special pole I’ve ever had because it’s a great example of everybody and I’m proud of that. It’s a lot of work that goes into the minute-and-a-half out there.”

Logano will start on the pole for both the first All-Star Race heat and the All-Star Race. Brad Keselowski, who qualified second, will start from the pole in the second All-Star Race heat race. Keselowski’s overall time was 90.14s.

Christopher Bell qualified just third at 90.16s, however his No. 20 team won the Pit Crew Challenge with a time of 13.22s. It is the same team that won the Pit Crew Challenge last year as the No. 54 team for Ty Gibbs.

The winning pit crew claims $100,000 and gets the first pick of pit stall selection for the All-Star Race.

Bell’s crew members are:

Jake Holmes (tire carrier)

Peyton Moore (fueler)

Blake Houston (front tire changer)

Michael Hicks (rear tire changer)

Derrell Edwards (jackman)

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1428]

Daniel Suarez qualified fourth with an overall time of 90.19s, Chris Buescher, fifth with an overall time of 90.28s and Tyler Reddick, sixth with an overall time of 90.66s.

Ross Chastain qualified seventh at 90.76s, Martin Truex Jr., eighth at 90.94s, Michael McDowell, ninth at 90.99s and AJ Allmendinger completed the top 10 at 91.67s.

Four drivers were called for speeding during their pit stop: Kyle Busch, Ryan Blaney, William Byron, and Chase Elliott. All were given 10s penalties for the infraction.

Elliott’s No. 9 team also had a slow pit stop on the left rear. Blaney was given an additional 10s penalty for hitting the commitment box coming to pit road.

The No. 5 and No. 47 teams had some of the more significant issues during their pit stop.

It was trouble on the left rear for the Hendrick Motorsports team as they could not get the left rear tire on the car and needed additional pumps on the jack.

JTG Daugherty’s No. 47 crew had the slowest time in the Pit Crew Challenge because of trouble on the right front and the left side. After being slow on the right front, the jack fell on the left side of the car, and the jackman needed to give it multiple pumps to lift the car back up.

The pit stop times were as follows:

Christopher Bell’s team: 13.22s

Brad Keselowski’s team: 13.32s

Ryan Blaney’s team: 13.51s

Ross Chastain’s team: 13.52s

Joey Logano’s team: 13.59s

William Byron’s team: 13.84s

Tyler Reddick’s team: 13.95s

Kyle Busch’s team: 13.98s

Daniel Suarez’s team: 14.03s

Martin Truex Jr.’s team: 14.07s

AJ Allmendinger’s team: 14.18s

Chris Buescher’s team: 14.18s

Michael McDowell’s team: 14.38s

Chase Elliott’s team: 16.93s

Kevin Harvick’s (Kyle Larson) team: 17.94s

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. team’s: 25.74s

The first All-Star Race heat race will be at 5:20 p.m. ET Saturday. The second heat race will run afterward at approximately 6:15 p.m. ET.

NASCAR qualifying results for 2024 All-Star Race, Pit Crew Challenge

Check out the NASCAR Cup Series qualifying results for the 2024 All-Star Race. Plus, the winner of the Pit Crew Challenge!

The NASCAR Cup Series arrived at North Wilkesboro Speedway for the 2024 All-Star Race, and the method for setting the starting lineup is unique. NASCAR qualifying took place on Saturday morning, including a Pit Crew Challenge to set the pole position for the 2024 All-Star Race. However, the rest of the drivers set the starting lineups for the heat races on late Saturday.

[autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] won the pole for the 2024 All-Star Race. Brad Keselowski was the second-place driver but will have to earn his front-row start later tonight. Meanwhile, [autotag]Christopher Bell[/autotag]’s No. 20 team won the 2024 Pit Crew Challenge, pocketing $100,000 and the first pit box selection for the All-Star Race on Sunday night.

The full NASCAR qualifying results are available below.

NASCAR qualifying results for the 2024 All-Star Race:

  1. No. 22 Joey Logano
  2. No. 6 Brad Keselowski
  3. No. 20 Christopher Bell
  4. No. 99 Daniel Suarez
  5. No. 17 Chris Buescher
  6. No. 45 Tyler Reddick
  7. No. 1 Ross Chastain
  8. No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
  9. No. 34 Michael McDowell
  10. No. 16 A.J. Allmendinger
  11. No. 11 Denny Hamlin
  12. No. 5 Kevin Harvick
  13. No. 24 William Byron
  14. No. 8 Kyle Busch
  15. No. 9 Chase Elliott
  16. No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  17. No. 12 Ryan Blaney

[lawrence-related id=12016]

‘We’ve got to be perfect from here on out’ – Logano

Joey Logano remains confident in the ability of his Team Penske race team but also admitted he has some anxiety for the first time in quite a few seasons for this point in the year. “There’s no running away from it,” Logano said at North Wilkesboro …

Joey Logano remains confident in the ability of his Team Penske race team but also admitted he has some anxiety for the first time in quite a few seasons for this point in the year.

“There’s no running away from it,” Logano said at North Wilkesboro Speedway, where the NASCAR Cup Series runs the non-points All-Star Race. “It is what it is. We’ve got to be perfect from here on out.”

The two-time Cup Series is 17th in the championship standings. Logano has earned just three top-10 finishes in 13 races.

“I always look at the points,” Logano said. “We’re halfway through the regular season and, obviously, it’s not been the season that we’ve wanted or have hoped for at this point. But we keep fighting. I don’t feel like we’re in a bad spot. We’re not in as good a spot as we want to be by [any] means, but we can definitely make up the points…just by getting consistent and running up front more often like we should.

“The facts are, if you’re not good enough to make the playoffs, you’re probably not good enough to win the championship anyway, so we’ve got to get to that point where we’re good enough, and then the points will follow that, for sure.”

It was a struggle for Logano and the No. 22 team for much of the 2023 season, which resulted in a first-round exit from the postseason. Logano won only once last year.

For 2024, Ford debuted a new body – the Mustang Dark Horse — but Logano’s group is still behind. If not for self-inflicted wounds such as speeding last weekend at Darlington Raceway, it’s been pure lack of speed. The intermediate racetracks have been their weakness, but Logano looks at how well Ford teammates Chris Buescher and Brad Keselowski from RFK Racing have run and believes there is an opportunity to do the same.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1428]

“We just have to go find it,” Logano said. “Whatever that is. We have to figure that out.”

Fortunately, Logano doesn’t feel his team is that far off. Then again, the entire Cup Series field could say that because Logano said everything is fairly close.

“Last week, we had a top five coming and I sped on pit road, which that one stings a lot,” he said. “But outside of that, I’d say it was a pretty solid weekend, so our race teams still got it. We all just have to clean up a little bit. Obviously last weekend I made a mistake, and we’ve got to keep getting faster.

“I feel confident this weekend here in [North Wilkesboro]. We came and did the tire test, and I felt pretty good about what we had. Hopefully that transfers [to this weekend]. Charlotte, I don’t know. [Ryan] Blaney had a great run there [last year], so hopefully we can learn a lot from that.”

With 13 races down, there are 13 races left in the regular season. Over the next month, the series will run its longest race in the Coca-Cola 600, make a third trip to St. Louis, visit a repaved Sonoma Raceway and debut at Iowa Speedway.

All of it sounds good to Logano.

“The [Coke] 600, I think I feel OK about,” he said. “Gateway has been a solid race for us the last two times we’ve been there, so I look forward to that one. Sonoma is repaved, so who the heck knows? Then Iowa — new tracks have been good, and short tracks have been good for us, as well.

“I like the way the schedule’s lined up the next few weeks.”

2024 Goodyear 400 odds, picks and predictions

The best bets for Sunday’s 2024 Goodyear 400 from Darlington Raceway, with NASCAR expert picks and predictions.

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3011″ ]

The NASCAR Cup Series Darlington Raceway Sunday for the 2024 Goodyear 400. The green flag is scheduled to drop approximately at 3 p.m. ET (FS1). Let’s analyze FanDuel Sportsbook’s lines around the 2024 Goodyear 400 odds, and make our expert NASCAR picks and predictions.

2024 Goodyear 400: What you need to know

  • Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin leads all active drivers with 4 wins and an 8.4 Average-Finish Position (AFP) in 23 career Cup starts at Darlington
  • Hamlin also leads all drivers with 978 laps led, and he has posted 12 top-5 finishes among 16 top-10 runs
  • Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson has managed just 1 win in his 12 career Darlington Cup starts, but he has a 9.4 AFP and 770 laps led. His AFP is 2nd only to Hamlin among active drivers
  • 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick ranks 3rd among all active drivers with an 11.3 AFP in 9 career Cup starts at Darlington, but he has no wins with 3 top-5 finishes and 102 laps led
  • Penske Racing’s Joey Logano has a win among 6 top-5 finishes and 10 top-10 runs with 293 laps led with a 13.2 AFP in 20 career Cup starts at the “Lady in Black”
  • Front Row Motorsports driver Michael McDowell has just 2 top-10 finishes in 17 career Cup starts at Darlington, posting a dismal 26.8 AFP
  • Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suarez has struggled over the years at Darlington, posting a poor 23.9 AFP with just 1 top-10 finish and 1 lap led with 3 DNFs in 12 career Cup starts at the track
  • Penske’s Austin Cindric has also struggled at Darlington. In his 4 career Cup starts here, he has a 21.0 AFP. His best finish at the South Carolina oval is 16th
  • Hendrick’s Chase Elliott has a dismal 17.0 AFP in 14 career Darlington Cup starts with 4 top-5 finishes among 7 top-10 runs at with 3 DNFs

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3012″ ]

2024 Goodyear 400 – Expert pick

Odds provided by FanDuel Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated at 2:13 a.m. ET.

DENNY HAMLIN (+450) has the 2nd-shortest odds to win at Darlington, right behind the chalk, which is Larson (+400).

Hamlin has dominated over the years at the venerable South Carolina track, while posting 4 checkered flags in 23 career Cup starts. He has managed 12 top-5 finishes in those Cup runs, which equates to 52.2% of his career starts at the track. That’s easily the best rate among all active drivers. Plus, 16 of his runs have resulted in top-10 finishes, or a 69.6% conversion rate.

2024 Goodyear 400 – Contender

JOEY LOGANO (+2500) hasn’t had a great season by his standards, ranking just 17th in the NASCAR Cup Series standings with 269 points, 198 behind the leader (Larson) through 12 starts.

Logano is coming off a dismal 34th-place showing at the AdventHealth 400 last weekend in Kansas, and he has finished 11th or worse in 4 straight starts.

While there haven’t been a lot of signs of Logano pulling out of his nosedive, perhaps a start at Darlington will get him going. He has a checkered flag in 20 career Cup starts among his 10 top-10 finishes with 293 laps led and a 13.2 AFP. He is certainly worth a roll of the dice for a chance to multiply up by 25 times.

If you’re a little more conservative, LOGANO TOP-10 FINISH (+100) is still reasonably priced.

2024 Goodyear 400 – Props and matchbets

KYLE BUSCH (+126) over Brad Keselowski (-164) is a solid matchbet play.

Busch has a win among 6 top-5 finishes and 14 top-10 runs with a 13.3 AFP in 24 career Cup starts at Darlington, while leading the pack in 899 laps.

While Keselowski actually has a higher career AFP (11.4) at Darlington, he is really struggling lately. The RFK Racing driver had back-to-back runner-up finishes at Texas and Talladega, but he also has 5 finishes of 24th or higher in 12 starts this season. Busch is a little steadier, and will get the job done H2H.

Check out Motorsports Wire: For the auto racing fan, USA TODAY Sports Media Group’s website covers NASCAR, F1, IndyCar and more.

Play our free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

The windows are open, North Carolina!
Online sports betting is LIVE!

North Carolina sports bettingNorth Carolina betting appsNorth Carolina sportsbook promosBetMGM North Carolina bonus codeCaesars North Carolina promo codeESPN BET North Carolina promobet365 North Carolina bonus codeFanDuel North Carolina promo codeDraftKings North Carolina promo code

[gambcom-standard rankid=”5″ ]

For more sports betting picks and tips, check out SportsbookWire.com and BetFTW.

Follow Kevin J. Erickson on Twitter/X, Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter/X and like us on Facebook..

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1950]

Logano experiences hand-control Mustang with Torsten Gross

Joey Logano showed up at Charlotte Motor Speedway in mid-March admittedly having done zero research beforehand about what he was getting into. The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, through his sponsor Shell, was set to spend the day with Torsten …

Joey Logano showed up at Charlotte Motor Speedway in mid-March admittedly having done zero research beforehand about what he was getting into.

The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, through his sponsor Shell, was set to spend the day with Torsten Gross. Logano and Gross, a C6 quadriplegic and founder of the Just Hands Foundation, which focuses on adaptive driving solutions, were going to highlight the inner workings of a retrofitted hand-controlled Ford Mustang before each took a turn driving it through the road course section of the racetrack.

The latter is where the expectations of having no preconceived notions met reality for Logano.

“I actually thought there was going to be a throttle squeezer and brake,” Logano told RACER, who was in attendance at the production shoot, after driving the car. “I thought, ‘How hard can this be? It’s like driving a four-wheeler. I can do that.’ Then, when there was a handle there, I was like, ‘Now you’re getting me!’

“I thought it would be gas, brake, steer (and) I should be able to do that. Once you take your other hand off the steering wheel, it changes the game.”

How does it work? Gross walked Logano — and everyone else — through the details of the hand controls before giving up the driver’s seat.

“He (Gross) ties his leg to the door handle, so it holds his leg from flopping around, so I did that, too,” Logano said. “I think he wanted me to because he said I was going to cheat. I said, ‘Probably.’ So, he tied my leg up with a Velcro strap. Your natural tendency is to (hit) the brake.”

Gross was 15 years old when he broke his neck in a diving accident. However, it wasn’t until last year that he began competitive driving after his wife signed him up for a track day as an anniversary gift. Gross competed in NASA Time Trials, International GT and World Racing League.

It came a year after Gross founded the Just Hands Foundation, which has a simple mission of making it easy and realistic for anyone who needs hand controls to be able to race. Another word Gross embraces is “normal,” normalizing hand-controlled driving and racing. It was also important that there were different options – whether a professional racing competitor or otherwise – not of the same financial means or resources as someone like Robert Wickens.

Wickens became a paraplegic after a crash in the NTT IndyCar Series race at Pocono Raceway in 2018. Since his return to racing a few years later, Wickens has been the most recognizable hand-controlled racing driver.

“Robbie saw mine and he was like, ‘Wow, this is amazing,’” Gross said.

Gross is the type of personality that, when given a “no” answer, becomes determined to “definitely” figure out how to do it. This makes the month of May even more important to Gross, as it is Mobility Awareness Month. As someone who rolls his eyes at a lot of marketing techniques, Gross connects with companies that are inclusive and use terminology that reflects as much.

Pennzoil did that when presenting with Gross with the Long May We Drive campaign that celebrates the thrill of driving. By partnering with Gross, Pennzoil supports his goal of “equalizing mobility in motorsports, supporting the Just Hands Racing team’s development of more cars modified with hand controls to hit racetracks nationwide so people with disabilities can experience the thrill of racing.”

Spending time teaching Logano something new as part of the campaign was special to Gross.

“I want people to understand what it’s like,” said Gross, whose foundation takes the approach of not walking a mile in someone’s shoes but driving a mile in their gloves. “Joey leaving with two different mindsets is exactly what I wanted (going) from, ‘That’s not as hard as I thought,’ to, ‘Wow that’s pretty damn hard.’”

But for that to be successful, Gross acknowledges sometimes that means breaking down the stereotype or discrimination of racing against an individual with a disability. Having someone of Logano’s stature spend a day in a hand-controlled car brings another form of approval to the program.

“I thought (he) said it best that there is not another sport that he can compete with me,” Logano said. “Or with someone who is not in a chair. But this is what he can do and compete with everybody. So that part is really cool. He’s out there racing against everybody and he’s safe and fine and in control. That’s pretty neat. He has a lot of good thoughts on life, and another one is that everyone has something holding them back, whether mentally or physically.

“His outlook on life is that he’d rather have something physically wrong because then everybody knows what he’s dealing with. But mentally, if you’re depressed or stressed or whatever it may be, nobody sees it, and nobody knows what you’re dealing with. He just has a very positive outlook on his situation. I don’t think it’s an easy thing to have in his scenario, but he’s really found what some would call his weakness (to be) maybe his actual strength.”

The retrofitted Ford Mustang the pair drove at Charlotte stayed at the racetrack after the production shoot. Charlotte Motor Speedway is the home of the Ford Performance Racing School, and the car is now available to use during track days.

Just Hands Foundation is having the same type of success across the country. Racetracks have made their facilities more accessible after noticing they had a problem when Gross and others were on the property. Gross also explained how some track instructors were reluctant to instruct a hand-controlled driver, but that has been disappearing.

“That doesn’t happen anymore because they see us, they respect us, and hopefully they respect me (and) what I can do,” Gross said.

The number of drivers going through the program has also grown, and there’s also been an uptick in those who bought their own track car. Then comes an interaction Gross has to share.

“Our second driver, his wife was there with his young boy and daughter,” Gross began. “The wife comes up to me with tears in her eyes and says husbands are heroes to their sons. When my husband landed in a wheelchair, it was obvious that my son no longer saw him as a hero. The way he treated my husband was not good. Now, all my son can say is, ‘I want to be like daddy. I want to be a race car driver.’ He’s saying that over and over again, and he won’t leave my husband’s side. She said you brought back hero (status) to my husband.”

It’s a story that perfectly connects Gross’s message to all for Mobility Month.

“It doesn’t matter what appendages you use to drive, just do it,” he said. “Figure it out.”

Oh, and if you’re wondering how Logano did driving with just his hands?

“He got way more aggressive faster than I thought he would — in a good way,” Gross said with amusement. “He did a great job watching and listening and then applying. … His MO is to go fast; he’s wired that way and so am I, and so he started pushing it and I was like, ‘Cool. I’m good for this. We’ve got insurance if we hit a wall.’

“But he felt comfortable doing it and then it was interesting to see how uncomfortable he got. He started using both hands and his feet about seven laps in because he got so tired on his shoulders. We’re only using one arm to drive, and he was like, ‘I can’t do it.’

“To see that arch was interesting.”

2024 Wurth 400 odds, picks and predictions

The best bets for Sunday’s 2024 Wurth 400 from Dover Motor Speedway, with NASCAR expert picks and predictions.

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3011″ ]

The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Dover Motor Speedway Sunday for the 2024 Wurth 400. The green flag is scheduled to drop approximately at 2 p.m. ET (FS1). Let’s analyze FanDuel Sportsbook’s lines around the 2024 Wurth 400 odds, and make our expert NASCAR picks and predictions.

2024 Wurth 400: What you need to know

  • Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch secured the pole position with a best speed of 162.191 mph, just edging out Penske Racing’s Ryan Blaney (161.951 mph)
  • Busch has managed 3 Cup wins at Dover, while posting 13 top-4 finishes and 1,341 laps led with 7 DNFs in 35 career starts
  • Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson leads all active drivers with an 8.6 Average-Finish Position (AFP) in 15 career Cup starts at Dover with 1 win, 7 top-5 finishes and 899 laps led
  • Hendrick’s Chase Elliott has a 9.8 AFP in 13 Cup starts, with 2 wins, 9 top-5 finishes and 394 laps led with 2 DNFs
  • Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. has managed 4 career checkered flags at the New Jersey native’s unofficial home track, with an 11.4 AFP with 10 top-5 runs and 1,069 laps led
  • Penske’s Austin Cindric has struggled in his 2 career Cup starts at the Monster Mile, finishing 26th and 36th
  • Front Row Motorsports driver Michael McDowell has led just 9 laps with no top-10 finishes in 23 career Cup starts at Dover. He has a dismal 30.6 AFP and 9 DNFs
  • Legacy Motor Club driver Jimmie Johnson will go off 27th Sunday. He has recorded 11 Cup wins at Dover with 18 top-5 finishes, 3,113 laps led and a solid 9.7 AFP

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3012″ ]

2024 Wurth 400 – Expert pick

Odds provided by FanDuel Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated at 4:25 a.m. ET.

MARTIN TRUEX JR. (+650) has racked up 4 wins at Dover Motor Speedway, including his 1st career Cup win back on June 4, 2007.

Truex has been humming along lately, especially in qualifying. However, while he rattled off 5 consecutive top-10 finishes from March 3-31, he has been 11th or lower in his past 3 starts. Still, he should be rejuvenated in what has been his unofficial favorite track.

2024 Wurth 400 – Contender

JOEY LOGANO (+2500) was unable to take advantage of his 7th starting spot at Talladega last week, tumbling to 19th to finish. He has been a little bit erratic this season, but Logano is worth a roll of the dice with some rather long odds.

Logano has never won at Dover, but he has 5 top-5 finishes and 15 top-10 runs with a respectable 14.5 AFP. For the opportunity to potentially multiply your initial wager by 25 times, take a chance on Sliced Bread.

2024 Wurth 400 – Props and matchbets

ALEX BOWMAN (+102) over Ross Chastain (-128) in a matchbet is the way to go.

While Bowman has a rather ordinary 17.8 AFP, he has won at Dover back on May 16, 2021. On the flip side, Chastain has a dismal 22.7 AFP in 9 Cup starts at Dover, while posting 2 top-5 finishes and 1 DNF.

KYLE BUSCH (-118) over Tyler Reddick (-108) is a decent matchbet play, too, especially since Rowdy starts out on the pole. Reddick has a 15.2 AFP in 5 Cup starts at the track, and he has never led a lap at the Delaware track.

Check out Motorsports Wire: For the auto racing fan, USA TODAY Sports Media Group’s website covers NASCAR, F1, IndyCar and more.

Play our free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

The windows are open, North Carolina!
Online sports betting is LIVE!

North Carolina sports bettingNorth Carolina betting appsNorth Carolina sportsbook promosBetMGM North Carolina bonus codeCaesars North Carolina promo codeESPN BET North Carolina promobet365 North Carolina bonus codeFanDuel North Carolina promo codeDraftKings North Carolina promo code

[gambcom-standard rankid=”5″ ]

For more sports betting picks and tips, check out SportsbookWire.com and BetFTW.

Follow Kevin J. Erickson on Twitter/X, Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter/X and like us on Facebook..

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1950]

Ford drivers banking on a Talladega breakthrough

Winless through the first nine races, Ford drivers enter Talladega Superspeedway knowing Sunday is one of their best chances to breakthrough. And yet, none of them will go as far as to admit it’s a must-win weekend. “Isn’t every race a must-win?” …

Winless through the first nine races, Ford drivers enter Talladega Superspeedway knowing Sunday is one of their best chances to breakthrough. And yet, none of them will go as far as to admit it’s a must-win weekend.

“Isn’t every race a must-win?” Logano said Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway. “I feel like it is, but maybe that’s just my attitude though.”

Logano is highly competitive, so his answer wasn’t a surprise. However, the question about the importance of Sunday’s GEICO 500 wasn’t centered on Logano and the No. 22 team looking to win, but all Ford drivers. The manufacturer is winless through nine races but enters Talladega Superspeedway as race favorites, given the speed and drafting strength the Ford drivers have at the superspeedways.

“Unfortunately, this is probably our best chance at the moment of races coming up,” Logano admitted. “I look at short tracks and superspeedways, those are our strengths right now as a team. Talladega fits into that area, so we need to maximize it. Not saying we can’t win at any other racetrack, but when I look at the raw speed and how we qualify and run, it’s going to be speedways and short tracks.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1428]

Ford is the only manufacturer without a victory. Ryan Blaney, the reigning series champion, has consistently been the best Ford driver and is the only one sitting inside the top 10 in the championship standings. Blaney has four top-10 finishes in nine races.

“I don’t really think it’s a must-win,” Blaney said. “I haven’t really sat around this week thinking of it that way. Yeah, it’s a good opportunity for us to win because we’ve been strong at these speedways, and we usually all work really well together on these things to try and get a blue oval in victory lane, but I don’t think it’s a must-win.

“It would be nice, obviously, and it would give a good shot of life for sure since a Ford hasn’t won this year, but I just think you’ve got to stick to your normal plan. ‘Hey, we’re pretty good at these things. Let’s just try to do our job again and see if we can get one in victory lane.’ But it’s not a must-win, I don’t think.”

Blaney won the most recent race at Talladega Superspeedway in the fall. In the last three races in Alabama, Blaney has finished no worse than second.

Kevin Harvick, a former Ford driver turned analyst with Fox Sports, said on his podcast earlier this week that Talladega is “really important” for Ford. He further said it would be an “absolute failure” if a Ford driver didn’t win.

“They need to win the race this week,” Harvick said. “A Ford has to win the race this weekend to stop the bleeding from everything that they have going on. … This is where we think they should win. This might be the only place they can win because of the position that they’re in with all the other racetracks.”

Ford debuted a new body design this season, the Mustang Dark Horse. It has been an adjustment for teams to translate what was shown in the data during the offseason to what works at the racetrack.

Chase Briscoe is the second-highest Ford driver in the championship standings at 12th. Briscoe has four top-10 finishes but nine laps led.

“I feel like we’ve been good enough,” Briscoe said. “Like Texas last week, I felt we were good enough to win, and I shot myself in the foot on that (late) restart. So, I don’t know. I definitely think this is the best opportunity for a lot of the Fords to win because it seems like there’s only been two or three Fords on the mile-and-a-half’s and even the short tracks that have been in the mix. So, from a numbers standpoint, this is probably our best opportunity.

“But it’s hard to say coming here this is a must-win and you’re going to pull it off. There are too many variables. I don’t feel like it for our team, but it would be nice to see a Ford get to victory lane, for sure. It’s crazy to think we’re this long into the season and haven’t had a win yet in any of the three seasons. So hopefully, this week will be the difference.”

Blaney, Briscoe, Chris Buescher and Logano are the only Ford drivers inside the top 15 in the championship standings. Logano has led the most laps for Ford — 177 — with the bulk of those led at Daytona, Atlanta and Martinsville. Todd Gilliland, who has led 91 laps, is second to Logano. Blaney is third with 74 laps led.

Combined, Ford drivers have led 507 laps. One stage win each by Blaney, Austin Cindric, and Michael McDowell are all that Ford drivers have earned.

“We know we’re going to be fast down here,” Buescher said. “We were fast in Daytona. When it comes to this race, we’re going to try and work together and try to execute it and try to find our way up to the front, but certainly not a do-or-die situation for this weekend.”

Speaking specifically to his RFK Racing team, Buescher believes they are better now than they were a year ago. It’s three positions that Buescher is looking at that the team needs to take forward.

The co-owner of Buescher’s car, Brad Keselowski, understands the talk about Ford being winless and that it’s a big deal. Outside of the Daytona and Atlanta races, Keselowski isn’t sure there has been a track where Ford had the fastest driver.

“And that’s really a key indicator,” Keselowski said. “We need to have more races where we’re the fastest car.”

Keselowski, like many of his peers, looks at Talladega Superspeedway as an opportunity race.

“It’s definitely a better opportunity for us,” he said. “We have more speed as a manufacturer at these types of tracks; we need to capitalize on that. I think it’s a great opportunity not just for Ford to win but our team to win at RFK and we need to come out of here with great finishes. Daytona and Atlanta, I thought both of those tracks, RFK had great speed, and Ford had great speed, and just the circumstances of the races, we obviously didn’t leave with the win but didn’t leave with a lot of points scored.

“It kind of dug a hole in our standings, which is kind of a shame because the opposite of that is the last few weeks, we earned finishes we probably didn’t deserve. So that’s the ebbs and flows of how a season goes. But when you have cars that are capable of winning, in general, you need to make that count.”

McDowell (left) and Logano both see Talladega as one of the strongest opportunities to crack the win column for Ford. Matt Thacker/Motorsport Images

Ford had six drivers qualify in the top 11 at Talladega Superspeedway. McDowell and Cindric locked down the front row, and it’s the third consecutive superspeedway-style race that McDowell has started on the front row.

“That’s so hard to answer because I feel like every race is a must-win, but, at the same time, I’m not panicked,” McDowell said. “If it doesn’t happen tomorrow, I don’t feel like, ‘Oh, we missed an opportunity, and there’s not another one right around the corner.’

“Does that answer it? Yes, tomorrow is a must-win, but if it doesn’t happen, I’m not panicked. I think we have speed still.”

Joey Logano urges NASCAR for ‘big changes’ to fix short tracks

Joey Logano urges NASCAR to make ‘big’ changes to fix short tracks in the Cup Series. Find out what Logano had to say about the racing!

NASCAR entered Martinsville Speedway looking to improve upon the racing the NextGen car has provided since 2022. Unfortunately, there wasn’t much change as drivers struggled to pass other competitors, and the tires didn’t wear as much as in previous seasons. [autotag]Joey Logano[/autotag] was one driver who saw this happen as he took two tires and led most of Stage 2.

On Tuesday, Logano jumped on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio and talked about the tires and short-track racing after Martinsville. The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion is concerned like everyone else and wants the sport to make significant changes.

“Bristol was good because the tire came apart,” Logano said “And that was good. Richmond and Martinsville, gosh, we got to swing the bat. We’ve got to do something big to fix it. I hate saying it, but we’re not an aero package away anymore. We’ve tried that. We’ve hit that button a few times. We’ve got to do something to make the tires fall off. I get it. Listen, here’s the deal, Goodyear has built a tire that is too good.”

“If you’re looking to buy a tire on the street. That’s the tire you want. You want the tire that is going to last forever…But that’s not what we want as racers. It’s a fine line. Think about it. If you are Goodyear and the storyline is these tires are coming apart or they’re wearing out quickly, well, then you would say, ‘I don’t want to put that on my car.’ We have to somehow separate our street wants versus our racecar wants.”

Bristol was unpredictable because the tires did not lay rubber on the track and were wearing very quickly. Obviously, NASCAR and Goodyear shouldn’t push to that extreme with the tires, but changes need to happen. Martinsville and Richmond are historically good tracks, and the NextGen car has turned them into shells of their former self.

[lawrence-related id=8889]