RFK tips Custer to qualify for dad-again Keselowski at Phoenix

Cole Custer will qualify the No. 6 Ford for RFK Racing on Saturday afternoon as Brad Keselowski has left Phoenix Raceway to be with his wife Paige, who has gone into labor. NASCAR Cup Series qualifying is scheduled for 1:35 p.m. local time (4:35 …

Cole Custer will qualify the No. 6 Ford for RFK Racing on Saturday afternoon as Brad Keselowski has left Phoenix Raceway to be with his wife Paige, who has gone into labor.

NASCAR Cup Series qualifying is scheduled for 1:35 p.m. local time (4:35 p.m. ET). It will set the field for the final race of the season and the championship-deciding race for William Byron, Kyle Larson, Christopher Bell, and Ryan Blaney.

Custer will pull double duty on Saturday. Following Cup Series qualifying, Custer will compete for the Xfinity Series championship in his No. 00 Ford for Stewart-Haas Racing.

RKF Racing stated: “Brad Keselowski will not qualify the No. 6 car today, due to his wife, Paige, going into labor. In place of him, Cole Custer will qualify the car later this afternoon. The expectation is that Brad will return to Phoenix Sunday to drive the No. 6 in the NASCAR Cup Series Race.”

Custer has made six Cup Series starts this season with Rick Ware Racing with his best finish being a 24th-place result at Kansas Speedway last month. He was a full-time Cup Series driver from 2020 through 2022.

Rhodes edges Enfinger for Truck Series title as Eckes wins at Phoenix

Cautions, restarts, retribution, extra laps and high action marked Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway. And that was just the final 50 laps. In the end, ThorSport Racing’s Ben Rhodes claimed his second …

Cautions, restarts, retribution, extra laps and high action marked Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway. And that was just the final 50 laps.

In the end, ThorSport Racing’s Ben Rhodes claimed his second series championship in the last three years with a hard-earned fifth-place finish in the No. 99 Ford while McAnally Hilgemann Racing’s Christian Eckes raced to his fourth win of the season by a slight 0.421s over rookie teammate Jake Garcia in four dramatic overtime periods.

That’s the conclusion to an evening that featured 12 caution periods, 29 laps of overtime competition and plenty of high-stakes racing – especially among the four championship contenders that earned a chance to settle the season title.

Perhaps indicative of the night, Rhodes’ finish and ultimate trophy haul wasn’t secure until the checkered flag with championship runner-up Grant Enfinger giving it his all in the No. 23 GMS Racing Chevrolet coming off Turn 4 in an all-out pursuit to the very end.

Both Rhodes and Enfinger had survived close calls in the overtime laps. Rhodes collided with Zane Smith racing for the lead – hitting Smith’s truck when it appeared Smith missed a shift out front in the second overtime restart. Enfinger had close calls in two of the four extra-lap periods and still was able to pull off that final push forward; ultimately finishing one position behind Rhodes in the standings.

 

The regular season champion and race polesitter Corey Heim finished 18th after contact from fellow Championship 4 driver Carson Hocevar with 30 laps of regulation remaining in the scheduled 150-lap race.

“I can’t even believe it,” the 26-year-old Kentucky native Rhodes said of his dramatic title win. “It’s just so awesome, man. To go 25 laps into overtime, do you know what that feels like? It’s crazy. I didn’t think we were going to make it. I thought we were going to pop a tire, that anything that could have gone wrong was going to go wrong.

“Grant almost got me. But hats off to him, he ran a great race. I wouldn’t want to race against anybody else for the championship. He raced me clean, and I respect the heck out of him for it.”

“I saw him,” Rhodes said of Enfinger’s final push forward in the last corner. “He went for everything, but he ran me clean, and I thank him for that. That’s what these championships are all about.”

Enfinger, whose GMS Racing team is closing shop at the end of the season, was especially gutted to come so very close to his first championship.

“I don’t know,” Enfinger said of doing anything differently on that last lap.

“Obviously we got loose there at the end,” he continued. “Maybe if he didn’t have such a good run down the backstretch, we’d be able to make that pass. It’s a shame the championship came down to a race like that with 15 green-white-checkers or whatever it was. I feel like we did everything we could to win this and just got used up.”

The other two championship contenders, Heim and Hocevar had a more contentious situation on-track. Heim, whose 47 laps out front in the No. 11 TRICON Garage Toyota were second most laps led on the night, was actually leading the championship-eligible drivers when Hocevar hit him going into Turn 2 with 30 laps remaining. The contact sent Heim’s Toyota into Stewart Friesen’s Toyota which hit the wall and brought out a caution. Hocevar continued on and Heim had to pit for repairs and went down a lap.

Heim viewed the hit as intentional and later in the race, collided with Hocevar, bringing out another caution period. Heim insisted his car just wasn’t steering properly at the time, while Hocevar said he had fully expected the payback. It was enough to sideline Hocevar’s No. 42 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet which was credited with a 29th-place finish from the garage.

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“My only goal was to try slow him down,” Hocevar said. “I didn’t want to do that at all. With my track record, I can’t sit here and say I didn’t mean to. I just messed up. I was trying really hard to slow him up and just messed it up.

“I feel bad I robbed him of that and feel sorry for that,” an apologetic Hocevar added of Heim’s championship chances. “I just messed up.”

The 21-year-old Heim had a streak of 15 consecutive top-10 finishes coming into the race and was considered the favorite by many. He had three wins on the season in only his first fulltime year of competition.

“It was a great year, a phenomenal year for us and our worst finish in like six months,” a disappointed Heim said. “Really put together a good race and really hoped the guys would race clean. I had a lot of respect for everybody in the field, but clearly I don’t anymore. It is what it is; it’s part of racing.”

As for the later contact with Hocevar, Heim said it was purely coincidental.

“It wasn’t retaliation,” he said. “I had no side force; he put it on my door, and I wrecked [into him].

“I’ve been racing Carson for a long time. Racing since I was eight or nine years old,” Heim said later. “That’s kind of just what he does. He’ll wreck you and apologize and do it again the next week. So that’s not going to be the last time he does it and certainly [wasn’t] the first time he’d done it. I’ve known him for a long time. … it is what it is. I completely expected it.”

As for his victory, the 22-year-old Eckes tried to reconcile the championship race win with having just been eliminated from Playoff contention. He had a win (at Kansas) and a pair of runner-up finishes (Indianapolis Raceway Park and Bristol, Tenn.) during the Playoff stretch but was eliminated after finished of 19th and 20th in the two races leading into the championship finale.

“Those two races that killed the whole Playoffs pretty much and that’s just kind of the nature of it,” Eckes said. “I didn’t do my job last week and really the week before either.

“That gets us out and that puts us in this situation, but it’s motivating for next year and it was motivating for this race too.

“This one kind of stings, I know it’s a win, but the stupid mistakes the last two weeks of a near perfect Playoffs cost us a championship,” Eckes added.

“It’s kind of hard to be happy right now, but overall, just super proud of everybody for the year that we’ve had and just ready for 2024.

Chase Purdy, Jesse Love and Rhodes rounded out the top five. Enfinger, Dean Thompson, Kaden Honeycutt, Tanner Gray and Nick Sanchez completed the top 10. It was a career best finish for the runner-up Garcia as well as Love and Honeycutt.

RESULTS

Busch leads the way in Cup finale practice at Phoenix

Kyle Busch paced the final NASCAR Cup Series practice of the season while Ryan Blaney was the fastest championship contender. Busch led the way at 130.814mph (27.520s). He ran 61 laps in what was a traditional 50-minute practice session. Bubba …

Kyle Busch paced the final NASCAR Cup Series practice of the season while Ryan Blaney was the fastest championship contender.

Busch led the way at 130.814mph (27.520s). He ran 61 laps in what was a traditional 50-minute practice session.

Bubba Wallace was second fastest (130.676mph), Blaney was third (130.425mph), Christopher Bell fourth (130.378mph) and Ross Chastain fifth (130.378mph).

Joey Logano was sixth (130.072mph), William Byron seventh (130.011mph). Tyler Reddick eighth (130.011mph), Ty Gibbs ninth (129.959) and Brad Keselowski 10th (129.847mph).

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Logano is the defending race winner.

Kyle Larson was the lowest playoff driver in practice — 11th fastest on the overall speed chart (129.847mph).

Wallace ran the most laps of any driver at 69.

Busch suffered some damage after laying down the quickest lap, and the team is working over the left-rear quarter panel. Off Turn 4, Busch was slower against the outside wall than AJ Allmendinger behind him. Allmendinger hit Busch and then spun. The No. 16 suffered damage to the right front.

In the best 10 consecutive lap average, it was Bell over Blaney, Byron, Kevin Harvick, and Busch.

NEXT: Cup Series qualifying at 4:35 p.m. ET Saturday.

Q&A: William Byron is happy to be ‘under the radar’ for his first NASCAR title race at Phoenix

“It’ll take a high-commitment level to win the race and win the championship,” William Byron told FTW about his NASCAR title run.

William Byron’s relatively short but impressive career in the NASCAR Cup Series has been leading up to this moment. The 25-year-old driver is about to close his sixth — and, by far, most successful — season racing at the sport’s highest level Sunday at Phoenix Raceway, where he’ll be one of four drivers racing for the Cup championship.

Byron’s career-high six wins on the season so far and largely consistent speed throughout the first 35 races of the season helped propel him to his first Championship 4 round. For NASCAR’s crown, the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet driver compete against Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson, Ryan Blaney and Christopher Bell.

Of those six wins in 2023, one was at Phoenix in March, which could help give him a slight edge this weekend on the one-mile desert track.

“It helps just with confidence and knowing what the car needs to feel like and having to have a good memory of all those things in the spring,” Byron told For The Win. “So the track temperature and everything is different this time around. So I think it’ll be a little bit different, but I feel like we can adapt.”

For The Win spoke with Byron on Wednesday after he arrived in Phoenix about qualifying for his first championship race, his competitors and embracing an underdog mentality.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Highs and lows steel Larson and Daniels for a title fight to the finish

The sense of accomplishment of making it to Phoenix Raceway with an opportunity to win another NASCAR Cup Series championship is much different this time around for Hendrick Motorsports crew chief Cliff Daniels. Daniels and his driver Kyle Larson …

The sense of accomplishment of making it to Phoenix Raceway with an opportunity to win another NASCAR Cup Series championship is much different this time around for Hendrick Motorsports crew chief Cliff Daniels.

Daniels and his driver Kyle Larson have not had their best season — if only the box score were taken into consideration. The No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet has been a top-five car on speed and performance, but the finishes were inconsistent throughout the year. And yet, Daniels and Larson put together a solid three rounds of the postseason and earned their second Championship 4 berth.

“This one has the potential of being more fulfilling from that aspect,” Daniels told RACER. “The other one (in 2021) had the opportunity of the fulfillment aspect of, ‘OK, we just dominated (and) we capped off a dominating season.’ In this case, it would be from the standpoint of, ‘We have been through it all.’ Truly. Which we almost quite didn’t back then.

“We have been through it all and we have failed miserably as a team at times and we have succeeded — could have lapped the field at North Wilkesboro. So, we’ve had those moments, and now it’s, ‘OK, can we cap off what has been so extreme on either side?’”

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Daniels and Larson ran roughshod through the Cup Series field in 2021. The team earned 10 wins (including the finale at Phoenix to clinch the championship), the non-points event All-Star Race and led over 2,500 laps.

There was no question two years ago who the best team in the series was, and so stressed was Daniels to cap off what he described as a magical season with a championship that he hardly slept. Daniels would stress about race strategy. He would spend endless amounts of time thinking of the tiniest things on the race car and how everything could be buttoned up.

“I wasn’t losing sleep like, ‘Oh, am I going to fail?’ It was more of losing sleep of, ‘Man, if the caution comes out at this point in the stage, what am I going to do?” Daniels said. “Or, ‘Man, we were tight here the last time, do I have enough stuff in the car to not be tight?’ That was way more of my mindset then, which as a crew chief or coach, you still always have those thoughts.

“I’ve learned how to manage that better, and the way we work as a team and our processes have evolved so much since then. Which is kind of the way it should be. You have to evolve. You have to grow. So that growth has certainly been healthy, I think.”

Kyle Larson and Cliff Daniels have had a lot more ups and downs together than they did in 2021 but still have a shot at ending up in the same place. Nigel Kinrade/Motorsport Images

Larson won two races in the regular season, had three stage wins and led 624 laps. But he also had six DNFs. The postseason has been better as the No. 5 added two more victories and, in nine races, has led 503 laps with five top-10 finishes.

Even with some of the struggles, Daniels and his team are much more comfortable in their own skin. And for him, that includes sleeping more.

“I think the difference is we still hold ourselves to a very high standard, and we still have a lot of pressure and intensity that we put on ourselves, but (back) then, we had won nine races leading up to Phoenix,” Daniels said. “We had won three in a row twice. We had all of these magical things that happened. Some of the pressure then was almost, ‘Oh no, how can we screw this up?’ Where now, every other week, we completely screw it up. And I don’t say that unnecessarily critically or too light, but we have absolutely witnessed ourselves do great things this year — and take a great thing and absolutely squander it this year.

“So, I guess my point is, now in our skin, we’ve got the experience of what it means to fail catastrophically, and there’s a lot of growth and learning that comes from that. If you listen to any of the great sports coaches or players over the years, they all identify that those failures are every bit as valuable as the moments of success. Our season has been so littered with both, I think that’s going to keep us very tempered … yes, the pressure and intensity are going to be there, I just think it’s going to keep us a lot more level going into the weekend.”

If anything, Daniels believes “100%” it’s been a good thing that his team has been so battle-tested this season.

“In the moment, the human emotion that goes with it, you’re mad, you’re sad, you’re frustrated,” Daniel said. “But to be where we are now and to have the experience of going through that, I almost welcome the fact that we’ve gone through it. It’s almost extra building blocks that we have that others don’t.

“My message to the team often is how to use those experiences, those very polarizing experiences that other teams really haven’t gone through the way we have, to our advantage.”

Second time around, Bell’s feeling better prepared for NASCAR’s title showdown

The circumstances around clinching his spot in the Championship 4 being so different from what happened a year ago means Christopher Bell is in a better place entering this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series season finale at Phoenix Raceway. “Just much …

The circumstances around clinching his spot in the Championship 4 being so different from what happened a year ago means Christopher Bell is in a better place entering this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series season finale at Phoenix Raceway.

“Just much more relaxed,” Bell said of himself on Thursday during media day. “I feel more prepared just because of the time we’ve had to get ready for this moment compared to last year being so far beneath the cutline and being in a must-win going into Martinsville (Speedway). We didn’t even talk about Phoenix until we left Martinsville, and now we’ve had two solid weeks to game plan what we’re going to do in practice and how we’re going to execute qualifying. I just feel much more prepared.”

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Bell clinched his spot two weeks ago with a victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway. He is the only Joe Gibbs Racing driver and Toyota Camry represented in the final four. Just as he was last year.

But unlike last year, Bell didn’t have to stress until the last moment to earn a shot at the Cup Series championship. Bell was over 30 points below the cutline going into the elimination race at Martinsville Speedway in 2022 and had to win the race to advance, which, of course, he did. It was his second walk-off win.

The victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway, however, came after Bell and his No. 20 team fought an ill-handling car and track position early in the day. It was a week after Bell felt his best opportunity to earn a spot at Phoenix had slipped away when he finished second to Kyle Larson in Las Vegas. Bell had started from the pole and led 61 laps.

In the Round of 8, Bell’s average finish was 3.3 with three top-10 finishes. He flew under the radar last weekend at Martinsville Speedway to close out the round.

Having worked his way into the championship race differently to last year, Bell hopes the result will be different, too. Twelve months ago he was in contention as the championship contenders made their final pit stops, but when one of his tire changers got his finger stuck between the nut and the spindle, it ended his chances.

Bell finished 10th in the race and fourth out of the four championship contenders.

“I learned a lot last year and one thing was, we weren’t super competitive last year,” Bell said. “We didn’t qualify well, we didn’t practice well, but whenever it came down to the end of the race, we still had an opportunity at it. I feel like most people didn’t see that.

“At the end of the race for the last green-flag pit stop, me and Joey [Logano] are within a second, I think, and then I followed him down pit road for the money stop in the championship event with … however many (laps) it was to go. So, with that being said, we weren’t as competitive as we wanted to be, and we were still in the thick of it.

“This year, we will be more competitive, and you’re not out of it until the checkered flag falls.”

Bell finished sixth at Phoenix Raceway in the spring.

Allgaier beat long odds to race for a Xfinity Series title

As Justin Allgaier sat in his No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet during a 28-minute red-flag period late in last Saturday’s race at Martinsville Speedway, he calculated his odds for winning the event and qualifying for the NASCAR Xfinity Series …

As Justin Allgaier sat in his No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet during a 28-minute red-flag period late in last Saturday’s race at Martinsville Speedway, he calculated his odds for winning the event and qualifying for the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship 4.

He might as well have been playing roulette, trying to hit a single number.

“Sitting under the red flag at Martinsville truly was probably the best thing that ever happened,” said Allgaier, who was fifth in the running order at the time. “I looked at the odds of making the final four. I gave myself a five-percent chance, and that’s probably being a little bit generous.”

But Allgaier hit the number when Richard Childress Racing teammates Austin Hill and Sheldon Creed took each other out of the running with a bumping-and-rubbing overtime battle for the lead. Allgaier found an opening to the inside off the final corner and beat Creed to the finish line.

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“I don’t know if there’s any destiny in it, but in order to win a championship, you’ve got to be in the final four,” Allgaier said. “And if the five percent doesn’t happen last week at Martinsville, I don’t even have a shot at it, right?

“I think that’s truly something for me that does go a long way. Whether we win or we don’t win, this year has been phenomenal. We’ve had fast race cars. Shoot, I’ve made more mistakes in 2023 than I’ve made probably in entire career combined — pit road speeding penalties and just dumb stuff.

“But when I look at the cars we’ve brought to the racetrack, this is arguably the most speed week-in, week-out, and a lot of it just comes down to preparation for me.”

A case in point was last Saturday at Martinsville, where Allgaier did not have a winning car — until he did.

“I knew we weren’t in position to win the race,” Allgaier said. “We didn’t have the car to win the race. But my team stayed relevant. They stayed behind me, they kept pushing me, and we had a five-percent chance, and we came out with a win.

“And the Red Sea parted — listen, at the end of the day, everything had to be exactly as it was, and it worked out in our favor, and I can’t be more thankful for that… we’re kind of playing with house money. When I sat under that red flag and I knew we didn’t have a shot at it, it kind of changed my perception of the season, and it’s all for the better. I feel like I come here with a new invigoration to be successful and to win races, and it’s good.”

“We’re kind of playing with house money” is how Allgaier sums up his improbable path into the Championship 4. Lesley Ann Miller/Motorsport Images

Further buoying Allgaier’s confidence is the preparation of the track. Gone this year is the resin treatment that has made Phoenix top-lane dominant in recent seasons.

“We’re getting back to the old Phoenix, and I’m excited,” Allgaier said. “Hot, slick, all the things that I want it to be, so we’ve got it all.”

The 37-year-old Allgaier has two victories in 26 starts at Phoenix. Collectively, his Championship 4 competitors — John Hunter Nemechek, Cole Custer and Sam Mayer — are winless at the track.

“When we leave here,” Allgaier said, “I’d just like everyone else’s win column to stay zero still and ours to have one more.”

Heim hoping regular-season dominance will hold up for Truck Series title

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series regular season champion Corey Heim insisted Thursday there is no absolute clear-cut championship favorite among the four drivers racing for the big trophy Friday night. But of course. … he certainly likes his chances. …

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series regular season champion Corey Heim insisted Thursday there is no absolute clear-cut championship favorite among the four drivers racing for the big trophy Friday night. But of course. … he certainly likes his chances.

Despite one fewer start than the rest of the full-time field — Heim missed the Gateway race because of illness — the driver of the No. 11 TRICON Garage Toyota leads the series in top fives (12), top 10s (19) and stage wins (seven). He brings a streak of 15 consecutive top-10 finishes to Phoenix. And his 564 laps led is double that of any other full-time competitor.

The 21-year-old Georgia native — who is competing in his first full-time season — has only a single previous Phoenix start; leading five laps and finishing seventh last year driving for Kyle Busch. But he’s been preparing for this race since locking himself in early in the final round of the Playoffs.

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“I’ve heard it go both ways, so I don’t know, but I think we’ve earned that (favorite) label,” Heim said. “I guess it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day until you win it. I feel like we have just been so rock solid and consistent since the springtime. We’ve done a good job of executing every week and we show up with fast Toyota Tundra TRD Pros.

“I feel like ever since around Martinsville when our first win happened, we kind of knew that we were capable of it. It was just a matter of executing from that point.”

Heim and his TRICON Garage Toyota Tundra have consistently been at the front all year but as he readily admits, “I guess it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day until you win it.” Motorsport Images

Since his maiden national series victory at the Martinsville half-miler in April, Heim has led laps in all but one race (Talladega) and finished outside the top five only three times. It’s the kind of track record that has helped generate confidence and expectation.

Heim said he’s got plenty of family coming in from all over the country to support him this week, and he’s been relying on other Toyota Racing Development drivers such as John Hunter Nemechek and Christopher Bell, who have had championship experience, for tips on the sim and what to expect this weekend.

“It was nice to be able to kind of spread out some of my studying and really just sit on it and study on it for six weeks and show up and knowing what I need to do, and that has been really big for me,” Heim said. “I understand the circumstances and with this being my first full-time season and my first Playoffs, being able to sit on it and under the circumstances and the pressure has really let me just come here and feel a lot better about it.

“It would be a lot different if I just won my way in at (the last race) Homestead or something and had a week and a half to think about it. But I feel like I’d be more unprepared and coming in with a lot of pressure on me.

“But to be able to sit on it and study on it for six weeks and show up, kind of know what I need to do, was really big for me.”

Racing on TV, November 3-5

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted. Friday, November 3 Sao Paulo practice 1 10:25-11:30am Sao Paulo practice 1 10:25-11:30am Sao Paulo qualifying 1:55-3:00pm Sao Paulo qualifying 1:55-3:00pm Phoenix qualifying 6:00-7:00pm Phoenix …

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted.


Friday, November 3

Sao Paulo
practice 1
10:25-11:30am

Sao Paulo
practice 1
10:25-11:30am

Sao Paulo
qualifying
1:55-3:00pm

Sao Paulo
qualifying
1:55-3:00pm

Phoenix
qualifying
6:00-7:00pm

Phoenix
practice
7:00-8:00pm

Phoenix
practice
8:00-9:00pm

Phoenix 9:00-10:00pm
pre-race (FS2)
10:00pm-
1:00am
race

Saturday, November 4

Bahrain
start
6:30-8:00am

Sao Paulo
sprint
shootout
9:55-11:00am

Sao Paulo
sprint
shootout
9:55-11:00am

Bahrain
finish
2:00-3:30pm

Sao Paulo
sprint
2:25-3:00pm

Sao Paulo
sprint
2:25-3:00pm

Phoenix
qualifying
3:30-4:30pm

Phoenix
qualifying
4:30-6:00pm

Phoenix 6:30-7:00pm
pre-race
7:00-10:00pm
race

Sunday, November 5

COTA TA2 11:05am-
12:20pm

Sao Paulo GP 11:30-11:55am
pre-race
11:55am-
2:00pm
race

Sao Paulo GP 11:30-11:55am
pre-race
11:55am-
2:00pm
race

Phoenix 2:00-3:00pm
pre-race
3:00-7:00pm
race

COTA TA 2:10-3:25pm

Key: SDD: Same day delay; D = delayed; R = Repeat/Replay

A variety of motor racing is available for streaming on demand at the following sites:

  • SRO-america.com
  • SCCA.com
  • SpeedSport1.com
  • Ferrari Challenge
  • The Trans Am Series airs in 60-minute highlight shows in primetime on the MAVTV Network. For those wishing to tune in live, the entire lineup of SpeedTour events will stream for free on the SpeedTour TV YouTube page. SpeedTour TV will also air non-stop activity on Saturday and Sunday (SVRA, IGT and Trans Am). You can also watch all Trans Am event activity on the Trans Am YouTube page and Facebook page.
  • All NTT IndyCar Series stream live on Peacock Premium.

5 things to know about NASCAR’s Championship 4 drivers before season finale at Phoenix

Who will be the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion?

After about nine months and 35 races since the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season began back in February, it all comes down to Sunday’s championship event at Phoenix Raceway.

Surviving the first nine races of the playoffs and edging out the other 12 title contenders, four drivers — Kyle Larson, Ryan Blaney, William Byron and Christopher Bell — will compete on the one-mile Arizona track for the 2023 championship.

The final four drivers represent three different teams and manufacturers with Larson and Byron competing in Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets, while Blaney is in a Team Penske Ford and Bell a Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

So ahead of the NASCAR Cup Series championship race Sunday at Phoenix (3 p.m. ET, NBC), here are five things to know about the Championship 4 drivers.