NASCAR Cup Series

Next Race: Bass Pro Shops Night Race

The Place: Bristol Motor Speedway

Track Length: 0.533 Mile Concrete Oval

The Date: Saturday, September 13

The Time: 7:30 p.m. ET

The Purse: $10,447,135

TV: USA, 7 p.m. ET

Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR (Channel 90)

Distance: 266.5 miles (500 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 125),

Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 250), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 500)

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Next Race: Food City 300

The Place: Bristol Motor Speedway

Track Length: 0.533 Mile Concrete Oval

The Date: Friday, September 12

The Time: 7:30 p.m. ET

The Purse: $1,651,939

TV: CW, 7 p.m. ET

Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR (Channel 90)

Distance: 159.9 miles (300 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 85),

Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 170), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 300)

NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series

Next Race: UNOH 250 presented by Ohio Logistics

The Place: Bristol Motor Speedway

Track Length: 0.533 Mile Concrete Oval

The Date: Thursday, September 11

The Time: 8 p.m. ET

The Purse: $782,900

TV: FS1, 8 p.m. ET

Radio: NRN, SiriusXM NASCAR (Channel 90)

Distance: 133.25 miles (250 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 65),

Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 130), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 250)

Where To Watch NASCAR This Week:

Thursday, Sept. 11

NCTS Practice & Kennametal Pole Qualifying (FS2 at 3 p.m. ET)

ARCA Race: Bush’s Beans 200(FS1 at 5:30 p.m. ET)

NCTS Race: UNOH 250presented by Ohio Logistics(FS1, NRN, SiriusXM at 8 p.m. ET)

Friday, Sept. 12

NXS Practice & Kennametal Pole Qualifying (The CW App at 2 p.m. ET)

NCS Practice & Busch Light Pole Qualifying (truTV, PRN, SiriusXM at 4:30 p.m. ET)

NXS Race: Food City 300 (The CW, PRN, SiriusXM at 7:30 p.m. ET)

Saturday, Sept. 13

NCS Race: Bass Pro Shops Night Race (FS1, PRN, SiriusXM at 3 p.m. ET)

NASCAR Cup Series

Bristol Storylines and Insights:

·       This weekend marks the 127th running of a NASCAR Cup Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway, not including the three races held on the track’s dirt surface from 2021-2023.

·       This is the sixth time Bristol hosted a Playoff race, each race being the elimination race for the Round of 16.

·       Denny Hamlin (3) and Kyle Larson (3) combined have won six of the last nine Bristol races including each of the last four races with each winning twice.

·       Denny Hamlin won four times at Bristol; three of his four wins came in the last nine races.

·       Kyle Larson led 462 of the 500 laps led at Bristol last September, the most ever led by a Hendrick Motorsports driver in a Cup race.

·       Kyle Larson won the last two races at Bristol after sweeping both stages in each and leading 87% of the laps (873 of 1000).

·       Kyle Larson led 873 laps in the last two Bristol races, the most over a two-race spread on a short track since 1972 (Bobby Allison: Bristol – 903).

·       Alex Bowman won the pole for each of the last two Bristol races, the last driver two win three straight poles there was Rusty Wallace between 1997 and 1998.

·       The spring Bristol race this year had just four lead changes, the fewest for a Bristol race since August 2008.

·       Last April’s Bristol race featured only three cautions, the fewest at Bristol since August 1982 (81 races between).

·       No driver failed to finish due to an accident in two of the last three Bristol races, all of the previous 78 races at Bristol dating to August 1983 had at least one accident DNF.

·       Last September’s Bristol race had 36 laps of caution, the fewest for a race here since April 1984 (19).

·       None of the last 17 races at Bristol ended in overtime; the last Bristol overtime race was in April 2015.

·       A driver swept the stages in each of the last four Bristol races; Kyle Larson was the only driver ever at Bristol to sweep both stages and win, doing so in each of the last two races.

·       There were only two caution free stages in the stage era of racing at Bristol, one coming last April.

·       The driver leading the most laps won six of the last seven Bristol races.

·       The final green flag stretch was at least 121 laps in each of the last four Bristol races and at least 57 laps in each of the last seven.

·       The final stage at Bristol in April was caution free with final green flag stretch going 235 laps, the 2nd longest in track history (291 laps – March 1980).

·       Each of the last 23 races at Bristol was won by a driver with at least 200 Cup Series starts.

·       Kyle Larson finished top-10 in 11 of his last 12 Bristol starts including top-fives in all six races there with Hendrick Motorsports.

·       Three drivers finished top-10 in the five Bristol races in the Next Gen car: Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell.

·       Hendrick Motorsports drivers led 1,027 of the 2,500 laps raced at Bristol in the Next Gen car (41%).

·       873 of Hendrick Motorsports’ 1,027 laps led at Bristol in the Next Gen car came in the last two races with Kyle Larson.

·       Kyle Busch’s eight Bristol wins rank fifth all-time but he finished 14th or worse in each of the last six races there.

·       Ty Gibbs’ 239 laps led at Bristol are his most led at a track, he led over 100 laps in two of the last four races there.

·       Six drivers ended winless streaks of 50+ races at Bristol, more than any other short track in Cup Series history.

·       Ryan Blaney finished 11th or better in the last nine short-track races including two wins.

·       Five drivers combined won the last 13 short-track races: Denny Hamlin-4, Ryan Blaney-3, William Byron-2, Kyle Larson-2, Austin Dillon-2.

·       Christopher Bell doesn’t have a top-10 finish in a night race in 2025 (seven races) after a streak of nine straight night races with a finish of sixth or better prior.

·       Four of Erik Jones’ five top-10 finishes in 2025 came in night races.

·       Legacy Motor Club had the best finishing non-Playoff driver in both Playoff races.

·       St. Louis was Toyota’s 200th Cup Series win. Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch are tied for the most wins with Toyota (56 each).

·       Joe Gibbs Racing has won the opening two races of the Playoffs five times.

·       Denny Hamlin became the fifth oldest driver to win from pole in Cup Series history, behind Mark Martin, Bill Elliott, Lee Petty, Geoff Bodine and Cale Yarborough.

·       Denny Hamlin is the third oldest driver in Cup Series history to win back-to-back poles behind Mark Martin (2009) and Bill Elliott (2002).

·       Six drivers won from the pole in 2025, more than the last two seasons combined.

·       This is only the second time Kyle Larson finished outside the top 10 in the opening two races of the Playoffs in his career (2014-today), 2024 was the first.

·       Toyota led 515 of the 607 laps in the Playoffs.

·       Toyota had six of the top seven finishers at Darlington and five of the top eight at St. Louis.

·       Bubba Wallace’s 343 laps led in 2025 are his most in a season.

·       Chase Briscoe led 551 laps in the last 12 races; he led 617 in his career prior.

·       In the stage era, the largest deficit overcome entering the final race of the round of 16 to move on to the next round is 19 points by Bubba Wallace in 2023 at Bristol.

·       In the stage era, no playoff driver has won the Round of 16 finale from below the cutline.

·       In the stage era, most points a driver has entered the final round of 16 race above the cutline and failed to advance was 14 points by Ryan Newman in 2019 at the Roval.

·       At least one driver that was above the cutline entering the final round of 16 race failed to move on in each of the last four seasons.

·       The current bubble, 11 points, is the largest ever entering the final round of 16 race. The previous record was 7 points in 2023.

·       The final bubble to advance has been 5 or less points in 6 of 8 seasons in the stage era.

·       Shane van Gisbergen entered the playoffs +16 to the cutline. If he does not advance, it would be the most points a driver has started above the cutline and failed to move on to the round of 12.

NCS Clinch Scenarios for Bristol Motor Speedway (Playoff Race #3):

Already Clinched

·       The following two drivers have clinched a spot in the 12-driver field of the next round: Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe.

Can Clinch Via Points

·       If there is a repeat winner or a win by a driver who cannot advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being ahead of the 11th winless driver in the standings. The same point requirements listed below would hold true if a new win comes from among Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Ryan Blaney, William Byron, Tyler Reddick, Christopher Bell, Chase Elliott, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain or Austin Cindric.

•        Kyle Larson: Would clinch regardless of finish

•        Bubba Wallace: Would clinch with 7 points

•        Ryan Blaney: Would clinch with 15 points

•        William Byron: Would clinch with 18 points

•        Tyler Reddick: Would clinch with 19 points

•        Christopher Bell: Would clinch with 25 points

•        Chase Elliott: Would clinch with 29 points

•        Joey Logano: Would clinch with 36 points

•        Ross Chastain: Would clinch with 38 points

•        Austin Cindric: Would clinch with 46 points

•       Austin Dillon, Shane van Gisbergen, Alex Bowman and Josh Berry: All could only clinch with help

·       If there is a new winner from Austin Dillon or another winless driver lower in the standings but still eligible to advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being ahead of the 10th winless driver in the standings.

•        Kyle Larson: Would clinch with 8 points

•        Bubba Wallace: Would clinch with 18 points

•        Ryan Blaney: Would clinch with 26 points

•        William Byron: Would clinch with 29 points

•        Tyler Reddick: Would clinch with 31 points

•        Christopher Bell: Would clinch with 36 points

•        Chase Elliott: Would clinch with 40 points

•        Joey Logano: Would clinch with 47 points

•        Ross Chastain: Would clinch with 49 points

•       Austin Cindric, Austin Dillon, Shane van Gisbergen, Alex Bowman and Josh Berry: All could only clinch with help

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Bristol Storylines and Insights:

·       This weekend will be the 83rd running of a NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway (1982-2025).

·       Bristol hosted more Xfinity Series races than any other track.

·       Bristol was on the Xfinity Series schedule every year since the inaugural season in 1982.

·       Bristol is the fourth of five short track races this season.

·       Bristol is the opening race of the Playoffs for the second time in the Playoffs and the first since 2023.

·       The Round of 12 includes Bristol, Kansas and Charlotte Roval.

·       The four lowest drivers in points after the Charlotte Roval will be eliminated from the Playoffs.

·       One past champion made the Playoffs: Justin Allgaier.

·       Justin Allgaier is making his 10th Playoff appearance; he’s been in every Playoff since its inception in 2016.

·       Four rookies made the Playoffs: Connor Zilisch, Nick Sanchez, Taylor Gray & Carson Kvapil.

·       All four JR Motorsports drivers made the Playoffs, just the third time a team had a record four drivers in the Playoffs (all three times were JR Motorsports).

·       Connor Zilisch enters the Playoffs with 64 Playoff points, the most all-time, and holds a 59-point lead over the cutoff.

·       Connor Zilisch’s ninth win this season extended his record for most wins by a rookie.

·       Connor Zilisch’s St. Louis win made him the third driver in series history to win four straight races; no driver has ever won five-in-a-row.

·       Connor Zilisch won seven of the last eight races this season, the first driver in series history to win seven of eight.

·       Connor Zilisch has more wins in the last eight races than all but four other drivers racing this weekend have in their NXS career.

·       Connor Zilisch’s 14 straight top fives since returning from back injury is the second-longest top five streak all- time; Zilisch is the youngest driver with more than five straight top fives.

·       Connor Zilisch won 34% of his starts, the best win percentage all-time.

·       Rookies finished 1-2-3 at St. Louis, the second straight race where rookies swept the Top 3.

·       JR Motorsports won 11 of the last 13 races with four different drivers, the first time in series history a team has won 11 of 13.

·       JR Motorsports won 16 races this season with a series-record six different drivers, all six drivers won in the last 17 races (does not include Parker Kligerman who won in relief role at Daytona).

·       JR Motorsports had at least one car finish top-five in a record 28 straight races.

·       Justin Allgaier is the only past Xfinity Series Bristol winner racing this weekend.

·       CARS champion and ARCA points leader Brenden “Butterbean” Queen will make Xfinity Series debut in the Kaulig Racing #11.

·       Sam Mayer has four total Bristol wins: 1 Trucks, 1 ARCA and 2 ARCA East.

·       Connor Zilisch leads the series with nine wins, 15 top fives, 750 laps led, an 8.5 average finish and seven poles this season.

·       Jesse Love leads the series with 18 top 10s this season.

·       Justin Allgaier won the Fastest Lap Award five times this season, Connor Zilisch won four times.

·       Justin Allgaier’s 28 career wins are 9th on the all-time wins list and one away from tying Matt Kenseth.

·       Justin Allgaier is three Top 10s away from becoming the first driver to reach 300 NXS top-10 finishes.

·       Justin Allgaier will make his 498th career start at Bristol, passing Mike Wallace for 5th-most all-time.

·       Chevrolet led 3,097 of 4,001 laps this season (77%).

·       Chevrolet won 23 of 26 races, the most all time by a manufacturer through 26 races in series history.

·       Five crew chiefs got their first NXS win in 2025: Chad Haney at Atlanta, Sam McAulay at Darlington, Adam Wall at Bristol, Cory Shea at Mexico City & Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Pocono.

·       Five races this year ended with a last lap pass.

·       O’Reilly Auto Parts will replace Xfinity as title sponsor starting in 2026 becoming the fifth different title sponsor of the series: Budweiser, Busch, Nationwide, Xfinity & O’Reilly.

NXS Clinch Scenarios for Bristol Motor Speedway (Playoff Race #1)

Already Clinched

·       No drivers have clinched a spot in the 8-driver field of the next round.

Can Clinch Via Points

·       If there is a win by a driver who cannot advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being 113 points above the 7th winless driver in the standings.  The same point requirements listed below would hold true if a new win comes from among Connor Zilisch, Justin Allgaier, Sam Mayer, Brandon Jones, Jesse Love or Sammy Smith.

•       Connor Zilisch: Could only clinch with help

·       If there is a new winner from Nicholas Sanchez or another winless driver lower in the standings but still eligible to advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being 113 points above the 6th winless driver in the standings.

•       Connor Zilisch: Could only clinch with help

Can Clinch Via Win

·       The following drivers would clinch on their win alone: Connor Zilisch, Justin Allgaier, Sam Mayer, Brandon Jones, Jesse Love, Sammy Smith, Nicholas Sanchez, Carson Kvapil, Taylor Gray, Sheldon Creed, Harrison Burton, Austin Hill

NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series

Bristol Storylines and Insights:

·       This week marks the 30th running of a NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway, the track has hosted at least one race every season since joining the schedule in 1995.

·       2025 is the 10th season of Playoffs in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series (2016-2025).

·       Bristol serves as the second track of the seven-race NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Playoffs and the second race of the Round of 10: Darlington, Bristol and New Hampshire, two drivers will be eliminated after New Hampshire.

·       This is the seventh Playoff race at Bristol, it has been in the Playoffs every year since 2019, and this is the fifth time that Bristol has been part of the first round of the Playoffs.

·       This is the third 250 lap race at Bristol, both Truck races in 2025 were 250 laps.

·       2025 is the second season to have two Bristol races (2024).

·       Bristol is the sixth of seven short track races in 2025.

·       The NCTS Playoff Outlook following Darlington: Corey Heim (Advances next Round on Darlington win), Layne Riggs (+38 up on cutline), Daniel Hemric (+33), Grant Enfinger (+30), Tyler Ankrum (+22), Ty Majeski (+16), Rajah Caruth (+4), Jake Garcia (+2), Chandler Smith (-2 back from the cutline) and Kaden Honeycutt (-7).

·        Chandler Smith won at Bristol last April making him the only repeat winner in the last 13 Bristol races.

·       The last four Bristol Playoff races were won by current Playoff drivers (Riggs, Heim, Majeski, C. Smith).

·       Front Row Motorsports won the last two Bristol races.

·       Bristol has not gone to overtime since 2017 (nine races).

·       The Bristol winner has only stopped one time in the last five Bristol races (9/22-4/25).

·       The driver who led the most laps won the last three Bristol races, but failed to in the six prior Bristol races.

·       Ford drivers won the last two Bristol races after going winless in the nine previous races.

·       Corey Heim is one win away from tying Greg Biffle for most wins in a single season (9 wins in 1999).

·       Corey Heim is 341 laps led away from tying the all-time single season laps led record (Mike Skinner, 1996).

·       Corey Heim won the last three races of 2025, the record for most consecutive wins is five (Ron Hornaday Jr 2009).

·       Corey Heim’s Richmond win was the first short track win for Toyota in the last nine races.

·       Front Row Motorsports drivers won three of the last four short track races.

·       Any driver 57 points ahead of eighth following Bristol will advance to the next round.

·       Corey Heim’s eight wins in 2025 are the most through 19 races all-time, the first driver to accomplish the feat.

·       Corey Heim’s 19 career wins passes Dennis Setzer for seventh most all-time in the Truck Series.

·       Heim at 83 starts is the fastest driver to reach 19 NCTS wins since August 2010 (Kyle Busch – Bristol:  77 starts).

·       Heim is the youngest driver to reach 19 NCTS wins (previous record: Kyle Busch – Bristol 08/10:  25 y: 03 m: 16 d.)

·       Heim is the fifth driver to win eight or more NCTS races in a single season, first since 2010 (Kyle Busch).

·       Corey Heim is the fifth driver to win at 17 or more NCTS tracks.

·       Heim is the first driver to lead in each of the first 19 races of a NCTS season.

·       Current Playoff drivers have won five of the last six Bristol races – Chandler Smith (2021, 2025), Ty Majeski (2022), Corey Heim (2023) and Layne Riggs (2024).

·       Grant Enfinger moved up +3 spots in the Playoff standings – the largest positive move in the points following Darlington (from 7th to 4th).

·       Chandler Smith moved down -6 spots in the Playoff standings – the largest negative move in the points following Darlington (from 3rd to 9th).

·       All four drivers straddling the Playoffs’ Round of 8 cutline – Caruth (+4), Garcia (+2), Smith (-2), Honeycutt (-7) –finished inside the top-10 at Bristol earlier this season – Smith (1st), Garcia (6th), Honeycutt (8th) and Caruth (9th).

·       TRICON Garage leads the series in wins this season with eight victories – all by Corey Heim.

·       The NCTS has produced 218 lead changes through the first 19 races of the season – third-most all-time.

NCTS Clinch Scenarios For Bristol Motor Speedway (Playoff Race #2):

Already Clinched

·       The following driver has clinched a spot in the 8-driver field of the next round: Corey Heim.

Can Clinch Via Points

·       If there is a repeat winner or a win by a driver who cannot advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being 57 points above the 7th winless driver in the standings.  The same point requirements listed below would hold true if a new win comes from among Layne Riggs, Daniel Hemric, Grant Enfinger, Tyler Ankrum, Ty Majeski or Rajah Caruth.

•        Layne Riggs: Could only clinch with help

•        Daniel Hemric: Could only clinch with help

•        Grant Enfinger: Could only clinch with help

•        Tyler Ankrum: Could only clinch with help

•        Ty Majeski: Could only clinch with help

•        Rajah Caruth: Could only clinch with help

·       If there is a new winner from Jake Garcia or another winless driver lower in the standings but still eligible to advance to the next round, the following drivers could clinch by being 57 points above the 6th winless driver in the standings.

•        Layne Riggs: Could only clinch with help

•        Daniel Hemric: Could only clinch with help

•        Grant Enfinger: Could only clinch with help

•        Tyler Ankrum: Could only clinch with help

•        Ty Majeski: Could only clinch with help

Can Clinch Via Win

·       The following drivers would clinch on their win alone:

•        Layne Riggs, Daniel Hemric, Grant Enfinger, Tyler Ankrum, Ty Majeski, Rajah Caruth, Jake Garcia, Chandler Smith, Kaden Honeycutt

NASCAR & Bristol, Etc.

Historical & Significant Events at Bristol Motor Speedway:

Groundbreaking for Bristol International Speedway, as Bristol Motor Speedway was originally known, took place in 1960.The track was built by Bowling operator Larry Carrier, Kingsport businessman Carl Moore and construction company owner R.G. Pope and the track measured an exact half-mile.The first NASCAR Cup Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway was on July 30, 1961, and the inaugural event was won by Jack Smith with relief from Johnny Allen. Smith had a three lap lead when Allen took over and Allen built the lead to as many as six laps.Also in 1961, the NFL’s Washington Redskins took on the Philadelphia Eagles in a pre-season game at Bristol Motor Speedway. The Eagles won, 17-10. In 1969 the track was dug up and reshaped and the banking significantly increased. Starting in July 1969 the track was measured at .533 miles.Financial problems led to sale of the track after the 1976 season to Nashville accountant and attorney Gary Baker and his partner Lanny Hester.All of the NASCAR Cup Series races at Bristol have been scheduled for 500 laps, except for both races in 1976 and the second in 1977, which were 400 laps each.The name changed to Bristol International Raceway in 1978.The first night race was held in the fall of 1978.In 1982 and in 1985 the track underwent ownership changes. In 1982 California businessman Warner Hodgdon began buying into teams and tracks. In 1982 he bought out Hester and in 1983 Baker’s half. In 1985 Hodgdon declared bankruptcy. Larry Carrier stepped in to run the track.The surface was changed from asphalt to concrete in 1992, becoming the first track on the schedule to be completely surfaced in concrete.Larry Carrier led the track for 10 years until he sold it to Speedway Motorsports for a reported $26 million in 1996. The track had a capacity of 71,000 and the Night Race was one of the Series premier events, called the ‘Toughest Ticket in Racing’.The track name changed again, this time to Bristol Motor Speedway in May of 1996.The track was resurfaced between races in 2007, and the turns were ground down in 2012 to eliminate part of the progressive banking.In 2016, Bristol enjoyed its “Biggest Year Yet” hosting the Pilot Flying J Battle at Bristol, where border rivals Virginia Tech and the University of Tennessee played a college football game in front of an NCAA-record crowd of 156,990.In 2016, a special country music concert was held, featuring a trio of successful local acts. The Honda Ridgeline Bristol Tailgate featured Kenny Chesney, The Band Perry and Old Dominion in front of a crowd of more than 40,000.The week following the Pilot Flying J Battle at Bristol, Bristol Motor Speedway held a second game in 2016, the Food City Bucs at Bristol presented by Food City. The local favorite East Tennessee State University Buccaneers upset rival Western Carolina University 34-31 in a thrilling come-from-behind victory.In 2020, Bristol Motor Speedway hosted the NASCAR Cup Series Open and All-Star Race for the first-time. In total, there have been 125 NASCAR Cup Series points-paying races at Bristol Motor Speedway since the first race in 1961, two races each season until 2021 when the track replaced their spring date with the Bristol Motor Speedway Dirt track (2021-2023).The 2024 season is the first season since 2021 that both Bristol races will be run on the concrete surface. From 2021-2023 the spring Bristol race was run on a dirt surface.In 2025, Bristol Motor Speedway will host the first Major League Baseball game in Tennessee history inside its infield. On Aug. 2, 2025, the Atlanta Braves will play the Cincinnati Reds in an official regular season game during the MLB Speedway Classic.

NASCAR PR