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Practice #1 : Martinsville Speedway

Xfinity 500

Martinsville Speedway , Ridgeway, VA

Sunday, November 3rd, 2024 Race 35 of 36 2024 Season
Martinsville Speedway logo
  • 15
  • 8
  • 14

  • Thursday, October 31st, 2024
  • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
Race for the final two NASCAR Cup Championship 4 spots is wide open

In a tripleheader weekend that will decide the Championship 4 contenders in each of NASCAR’s top three national series, the marquee event is Sunday’s Xfinity 500 NASCAR Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway (2 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Two-time champion Joey Logano and this season’s Regular Season Champion Tyler Reddick already have qualified for the Nov. 10 Championship 4 event at Phoenix Raceway by virtue of their respective victories at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami Speedway in the first two races of the Round of 8.

That leaves Christopher Bell, William Byron, Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin, defending series champion Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott vying for the final two title-eligible positions.

Bell is 29 points above the elimination line for the Championship Four and likely can earn a berth on points. For the other five hopefuls, victory is the surest—and perhaps only—path to success.

Bell is one of three drivers among the six who have advanced to the Championship 4 Round by winning an elimination race at Martinsville, a feat he accomplished in 2022. But Bell knows that each one of the aspirants has the talent to triumph there.

“Martinsville is a driver’s race track, and you aren’t going to be good there unless you are a good race car driver,” he asserted. “It’s pretty hard to fake your way around it.

“The race is extremely long, so you have to be good at all the parts of the sport. You have to execute pit road, you have to be able to get in and out of your pit box, you have to run your pit road lights through the corners at Martinsville—it tests every ability that you have as a driver.”

Bell is seeking his first championship in NASCAR’s premier division. Both Elliott (2020) and Blaney (last year) went on to claim the Cup championship after winning the Round of 8 event at Martinsville.

Larson comes to the historic 0.526-mile short track having won the elimination races in the previous two rounds—and decisively so. The spring race winner at Martinsville in 2023, Larson is seven points below the current cut line.

“We’ve got a win and a couple second-place finishes I think at Martinsville since I joined Hendrick Motorsports,” said Larson, who has posted an average finish of 2.75 in his last four starts at the track.

“It’s not always been a great track for me, but I think that Hendrick Motorsports has a great package for the track, and it has definitely helped me. Hopefully, we can battle for stage wins and the victory on Sunday.”

Elliott is 43 points below the current cutoff, almost certainly needing a victory to advance.

“I try hard not to overthink the situation,” Elliott said. “To be candid, we’ve been in this spot before, so it’s not like this is the first time I’ve been through this or had to experience this.

“Having done that before and been in this spot, I think that it gives you a little bit of a sense of peace and just kind of knowing how to handle it and knowing that your team can get it done.”

Byron (+7 versus the elimination line) is the most recent winner at Martinsville, and Hamlin (-18 points below the current cutoff) leads all full-time active Cup drivers with five victories at the track.

Clearly, it would be a mistake to underestimate the chances of any of the six contenders for the final two berths in the title race.

  • Saturday, November 2nd, 2024
  • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
Martin Truex Jr. upstages Playoff drivers with pole-winning run at Martinsville

Martin Truex Jr. may be out of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, but the veteran driver still has compelling goals, as he proved with a pole-winning run on Saturday at Martinsville Speedway.

After a final-round lap at 96.190 mph (19.686 seconds), Truex will start from the top spot in Sunday’s Xfinity 500 (2 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Behind him and next to him, six Playoff drivers, led by second-place starter Chase Elliott, will begin their battle for the final two positions in the Nov. 10 Championship 4 Race at Phoenix Raceway. 

And at the opposite end of the spectrum, Playoff driver Denny Hamlin, Truex’s teammate, will start from the rear after a bizarre wreck in practice damaged his No. 11 Toyota, preventing him from making a qualifying run.

“I feel great about our car on stickers (new tires),” said Truex, who was 0.049 seconds faster than third-place starter William Byron, who posted a lap at 95.931 mph in the final round. “You never want to get too optimistic, but I fired off really good in practice, especially that second run with the track rubbered-in.

“I was like ‘If we can just hit the balance here for qualifying, it should be really fast.’”

Earlier this season, Truex announced he will retire from full-time racing at season’s end.

“We’ve got two more chances to win,” said Truex, who earned his third pole at Martinsville, his first of the season and the 24th of his career. “We want it bad, we’re working hard, we’re not giving up, and hopefully we can get it for everyone.”

Though he was fifth fastest in the final round, Elliott starts second because he was the fastest of the five qualifiers in Group A. That left Byron third, Chase Briscoe fourth and Ty Gibbs fifth.

Harrison Burton, Alex Bowman, Ryan Preece, Kyle Larson and Austin Dillon will start from positions six through 10 respectively. The three Hendrick Motorsports drivers—Elliott, Byron and Larson—are the only Playoff drivers in the top 10 on the grid.

Other Playoff drivers qualified as follows: Joey Logano 12th, Ryan Blaney 14th, Christopher Bell 16th, and Tyler Reddick 31st. Logano and Reddick already have qualified for the Championship 4 with respective victories at Las Vegas and Homestead-Miami.

As qualifying progressed, Hamlin’s crew was trying to repair his primary car, which backed into the Turn 3 wall when the throttle stuck during practice, thanks to a chunk of rubber that found its way into the throttle body.

“We had just come back out, we had just made an adjustment to the car, and it was doing everything it needed to do,” Hamlin said. “It was maneuvering through the pack pretty well. I went into Turn 3, and the car just didn’t slow down, and the throttle hung on us. The throttle had no chance to come backwards.

“That certainly caught me off guard, but it happens. We just got unlucky.”

Truex was sympathetic to his teammate’s misfortune but wasn’t worried about a similar circumstance on his car.

“About as much as I’m concerned about getting hit by lightning,” Truex quipped. “One-in-a-million. I don’t know how—his number just came up.”

  • XFINITY 500
  • Busch Pole Award Pole Winner: Martin Truex Jr
  • Age: 44
  • Team : No 19 - Auto-Owners Insurance/Thank You Martin Toyota
  • Owner: Joe Gibbs
  • Crew Chief: James Small
  • Martin Truex Jr won the Pole Award for the XFINITY 500 with a lap of 19686 seconds, 96190 mph
  • This is his 24th pole in 692 NASCAR Cup Series races
  • This is his first pole and 16th top-10 start in 2024
  • This is his third pole in 38 races at Martinsville Speedway
  • Chase Elliott (second) posted his 20th top-10 start of 2024 and his 13th in 19 races at Martinsville Speedway
  • William Byron (third) posted his fourth top-10 start at Martinsville Speedway It is his 23rd in 35 races this season
  • Josh Berry (11th) was the fastest qualifying rookie

  • Sunday, November 3rd, 2024
  • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
Blaney gets second straight walk-off win at Martinsville to join Championship 4

He did it again.

For the second straight year, defending series champion Ryan Blaney won the NASCAR Cup Series Round of 8 elimination race at Martinsville Speedway to advance to the Championship 4.

And as Blaney took the checkered flag to win Sunday’s Xfinity 500, Christopher Bell made a kamikaze move into the final corner in a futile attempt to deprive William Byron of the final spot in the next Sunday’s title event at Phoenix Raceway.

Bell drove hard into Turn 3 on the final lap, passed Bubba Wallace for the one point he needed, slipped up into the outside wall and rode the fence through Turn 4, committing what NASCAR deemed a safety violation. Bell was penalized four positions to 22nd as Byron advanced by four points.

Blaney passed Chase Elliott for the lead on Lap 486 of 500 and pulled away to win by 2.593 seconds over the Hendrick Motorsports driver, who was eliminated from the Playoffs along with teammate and third-place finisher Kyle Larson.

“I’m worn out out—I’ve got nothing left,” said Blaney, who ran down both Elliott and Larson from three seconds back after a restart on Lap 414.

“Oh, my God, I’m tired. Good battle, and this car hung on longer than most, and I could really make some ground.”

The victory was his third of the season, his second at the 0.526-mile short track and the 13th of his career.

Blaney joins Team Penske teammate Joey Logano in the Championship 4 after triumphing in a race that featured Goodyear’s option tire on the right sides of the cars and a softer compound on the left.

“The last 70 or so laps I tried to save my rear (tires) the best I could, because that’s where I started struggling later in the runs,” said Blaney, who led 32 laps. “I hated I had to lay the bumper to some guys, but I had to do it. It was nice to pass the 9 (Elliott) clean. I laid the bumper to a couple guys that I wish I didn’t have to, but I needed to get going, so it was a long night.

“I appreciate everybody for getting (the No. 12 Ford) better through the night. Thank goodness. I think that’s the most tired I’ve been after a race in a long time.”

Byron came home sixth behind Austin Cindric and Denny Hamlin, as the Chevrolets of Austin Dillon and Ross Chastain ran side-by-side behind him on the closing laps, boxing in the Ford of Brad Keselowski, who led a race-high 170 laps and won the second stage.

After the race, before Bell’s penalty, Byron was adamant that Bell had committed a violation by riding the wall in the final corner.

“He rode the wall, and there’s a clear rule against riding the wall,” Byron said, referring to the prohibition instituted after Ross Chastain shot around the outside wall through Turns 3 and 4 at Martinsville to advance to the Championship 4 in 2022.

“In my eyes, that’s what counts… We all sat in meetings and talked about whether there should be a rule against it. His (Bell’s) front tires were off the ground coming off (Turn) 4 there, against the fence.”

After the ruling, Bell congratulated Byron on his advancement to the Championship 4. Bell had recovered from an early spin in Turn 2 and an unscheduled pit stop to tighten a loose wheel to make his last-ditch bid for the final Playoff spot.

Had Bell retained his 18th-place finish, he would have edged Byron for the Championship 4 berth on a tiebreaker.

“It was Martinsville, and it was a Round of 8 cutoff race,” Bell said. “Unfortunately, I was on the bad side of it. Made a lot of mistakes, ran a sloppy race. It is a shame that it comes down to a ball-and-strike call like that.

“You can look at both sides of the fence—the Chevy organization had a lot of blocking going on so that the 24 (Bryon) didn’t lose positions. I slid into the wall (on the final lap) and kept my foot into it. I guess that is a losing move.”

Along with Larson, Elliott and Bell, Hamlin failed to make the Championship 4, finishing 24 points below the elimination line.

Dillon finished seventh on Sunday, followed by Chastain, Keselowski and Logano.

Elliott won the first stage and led 129 laps. Larson led 71 laps and Byron 51 in a race that featured nine cautions for 66 circuits.

Championship 4 driver Tyler Reddick, who won last Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway, fell put of the race after completing 458 laps and finished 34th.

However, Reddick, Logano, Blaney and Byron will start on even terms in next Sunday’s Championship 4 Race at Phoenix.

  • Drivers Entered: 37
  • Laps Scheduled: 500
  • Margin of Victory: 02.593 Seconds
  • Time of Race: 3 Hours 28 Minutes 31 Seconds
  • Average Speed: 75.677
  • Cautions: 9 for 66 laps
  • Lead Changes: 15
  • Green Flag Passes: 2,605 (6.0 passes per green flag lap)

  • XFINITY 500
  • Race Winner: Ryan Blaney
  • Age: 30
  • Team : No 12 - Discount Tire Ford
  • Owner: Roger Penske
  • Crew Chief: Jonathan Hassler
  • Ryan Blaney won the XFINITY 500, his 13th victory in 341 Cup Series races
  • This is his third victory and 17th top-10 finish in 2024
  • This is his second victory and 12th top-10 finish in 18 races at Martinsville Speedway
  • Chase Elliott (second) posted his 12th top-10 finish in 19 races at Martinsville Speedway It is his 18th top-10 finish in 2024
  • Kyle Larson (third) posted his eighth top-10 finish in 20 races at Martinsville Speedway
  • Josh Berry (16th) was the highest finishing rookie
  • William Byron leads the point standings by 4 points over Christopher Bell
Denny Hamlin reacts in the garage area
Martinsville, Virginia - November 2, 2024 : Denny Hamlin, driver of the #11 FedEx One Rate Toyota, reacts in the garage area after an on-track incident during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway.
Jared C TiltonGetty Images
DRIVER
DRIVER
#
MAKE
SINGLE BEST LAP
RANK
SPEED
TIME
BHND
LAP
LAPS
TOTAL
MULTI-LAP AVERAGES
5-LAP
10-LAP
15-LAP
20-LAP
25-LAP
30-LAP
10-LAP AVG
SPEED
FROM
TO

Martin Truex Jr
19
Toyota
1
95.070
19.918
0.000
34
85
20.034
20.131
20.212
20.313
20.379
20.444
94.068
33
42
Corey Lajoie
51
Ford
2
94.989
19.935
0.017
37
47
20.270
20.282
20.520
93.374
5
14
Denny Hamlin
11
Toyota
3
94.884
19.957
0.039
4
33
20.080
20.181
20.258
20.322
93.834
4
13
Christopher Bell
20
Toyota
4
94.856
19.963
0.045
49
94
20.092
20.189
20.269
20.338
20.376
20.436
93.797
47
56
Chase Elliott
9
Chevrolet
5
94.837
19.967
0.049
3
94
20.013
20.191
20.296
20.365
20.408
20.470
93.792
3
12
Ty Gibbs
54
Toyota
6
94.789
19.977
0.059
4
67
20.224
20.238
20.344
20.404
93.569
40
49
Chase Briscoe
14
Ford
7
94.689
19.998
0.080
49
83
20.157
20.291
20.461
20.537
93.330
48
57
Todd Gilliland
38
Ford
8
94.685
19.999
0.081
3
80
20.044
20.196
20.331
20.424
20.561
20.630
93.766
2
11
Austin Dillon
3
Chevrolet
9
94.482
20.042
0.124
36
76
20.207
20.285
20.356
20.421
20.887
93.353
3
12
Daniel Suarez
99
Chevrolet
10
94.463
20.046
0.128
4
89
20.118
20.223
20.299
20.473
20.597
20.641
93.640
3
12
William Byron
24
Chevrolet
11
94.392
20.061
0.143
15
64
20.148
20.263
20.361
20.483
20.558
20.610
93.454
33
42
Ross Chastain
1
Chevrolet
12
94.340
20.072
0.154
5
76
20.223
20.348
20.421
20.498
20.554
20.595
93.063
40
49
John Hunter Nemechek
42
Toyota
13
94.289
20.083
0.165
40
51
20.363
20.424
92.718
5
14
Harrison Burton
21
Ford
14
94.279
20.085
0.167
3
67
20.223
20.282
20.340
20.378
20.536
20.628
93.367
34
43
Brad Keselowski
6
Ford
15
94.256
20.090
0.172
10
47
20.178
20.405
92.805
24
33
Michael McDowell
34
Ford
16
94.251
20.091
0.173
5
86
20.214
20.316
20.356
20.434
20.490
20.564
93.206
37
46
Bubba Wallace
23
Toyota
17
94.223
20.097
0.179
37
98
20.162
20.240
20.331
20.407
20.486
20.584
93.562
34
43
Carson Hocevar
77
Chevrolet
18
94.214
20.099
0.181
57
100
20.200
20.255
20.310
20.366
20.415
20.459
93.490
3
12
Ricky Stenhouse Jr
47
Chevrolet
19
94.120
20.119
0.201
3
87
20.179
20.279
20.405
20.582
20.629
20.665
93.379
1
10
Kyle Busch
8
Chevrolet
20
94.101
20.123
0.205
37
65
20.161
20.359
20.373
20.410
93.030
34
43
Ryan Preece
41
Ford
21
94.087
20.126
0.208
50
91
20.223
20.249
20.329
20.375
20.433
20.494
93.519
50
59
Austin Cindric
2
Ford
22
94.059
20.132
0.214
48
74
20.240
20.295
20.402
20.483
20.535
20.562
93.308
47
56
Erik Jones
43
Toyota
23
94.040
20.136
0.218
36
65
20.212
20.295
20.368
93.307
33
42
Josh Berry
4
Ford
24
94.026
20.139
0.221
5
76
20.179
20.236
20.387
20.486
20.551
93.579
2
11
Joey Logano
22
Ford
25
94.008
20.143
0.225
5
93
20.204
20.276
20.361
20.438
20.479
20.508
93.395
4
13
Alex Bowman
48
Chevrolet
26
93.989
20.147
0.229
57
97
20.246
20.339
20.403
20.440
20.472
20.506
93.103
3
12
Justin Haley
7
Chevrolet
27
93.975
20.150
0.232
4
79
20.233
20.333
20.386
20.426
20.454
20.484
93.133
2
11
Shane van Gisbergen
16
Chevrolet
28
93.966
20.152
0.234
8
51
20.485
20.737
91.344
29
38
Ryan Blaney
12
Ford
29
93.957
20.154
0.236
5
103
20.185
20.269
20.318
20.361
20.411
20.443
93.424
4
13
Kyle Larson
5
Chevrolet
30
93.905
20.165
0.247
6
103
20.219
20.281
20.329
20.369
20.414
20.452
93.372
3
12
Noah Gragson
10
Ford
31
93.877
20.171
0.253
59
88
20.327
20.374
20.414
20.476
20.518
20.547
92.941
5
14
Zane Smith
71
Chevrolet
32
93.845
20.178
0.260
5
77
20.262
20.316
20.394
20.461
20.497
20.577
93.208
3
12
Kaz Grala
15
Ford
33
93.775
20.193
0.275
4
57
20.292
20.388
20.492
92.883
2
11
Tyler Reddick
45
Toyota
34
93.775
20.193
0.275
43
90
20.236
20.283
20.378
20.451
20.487
20.539
93.361
41
50
Daniel Hemric
31
Chevrolet
35
93.483
20.256
0.338
54
70
20.388
20.426
20.594
20.699
92.709
5
14
Chris Buescher
17
Ford
36
93.419
20.270
0.352
5
78
20.289
20.319
20.376
20.438
20.686
93.193
3
12
Josh Bilicki
66
Ford
37
92.110
20.558
0.640
14
34
20.661
0
0