NASCAR's championship field heads
to Phoenix with no clear favorite to win Cup title
Send a link to a friend
[November 06, 2024]
By JENNA FRYER
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Roger Penske already won two sports car
championships this season and heads to Phoenix Raceway with two
chances to win a third consecutive NASCAR Cup Series title with both
Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney in the winner-take-all season finale.
The two Penske drivers will try to make it three consecutive Cup
titles for “The Captain,” who won the 2022 title with Logano and
last year's championship with Blaney.
They are up against Tyler Reddick of 23XI Racing, one of two teams
embroiled in an antitrust lawsuit with NASCAR. The first hearing in
the case was Monday and a federal judge promised a ruling on a
preliminary injunction by Friday, the same day NASCAR hits the track
at Phoenix for its first practice of the weekend.
And then there's William Byron of Hendrick Motorsports, who made the
field over Christopher Bell when NASCAR ruled Bell had committed a
safety violation in riding the wall Sunday at Martinsville Speedway.
That move has been banned since Ross Chastain did it in 2022.
All said, it is a pair of Fords from Team Penske against the Toyota
from 23XI and a Chevrolet from Hendrick Motorsports, NASCAR's
winningest team in history. The highest finishing driver among the
four title contenders will be crowned champion.
What to know about the four title contenders
Blaney, No. 12 Ford, Team Penske:
The 30 year old is a third-generation driver from Ohio and the son
of retired NASCAR driver Dave Blaney. He's making his second
appearance in the final four and won in his debut last year.
He bounced back this year from a devastating defeat two weeks ago at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, where Reddick passed him in the final turn
to steal a spot in the championship. Blaney recovered last Sunday to
win at Martinsville Speedway in Virginia — same place he earned his
championship berth in 2023 — and he's very good at Phoenix.
No driver has led more laps in the Next Gen car at Phoenix than
Blaney, who has two wins this year at tracks 1-mile or shorter.
Phoenix is a 1-mile low-banked tri-oval.
Working against Blaney is that no driver has won back-to-back
championships in the playoff elimination era, which started in 2014.
The last driver to defend his title was Jimmie Johnson, who won five
consecutive championships from 2006 to 2010.
Logano, No. 22 Ford, Team Penske:
Logano is the only two-time champion in the field — and along with
Kyle Busch the only active multiple champion in NASCAR — and is
making his sixth appearance in the final four. The 34-year-old from
Connecticut won in 2018 and 2022, which has earned him the nickname
“Even Year Logano."
[to top of second column] |
Ryan Blaney, front left, poses with the trophy in Victory Lane after
winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Martinsville Speedway in
Martinsville, Va., Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)
Logano won a five-overtime race at Nashville just
to get into the playoffs, and he finished 15th in the regular-season
standings. He won the playoff opener at Atlanta but was eliminated
in the second round until NASCAR disqualified Alex Bowman for
failing post-race inspection.
That put Logano back into the playoffs and he promptly won the
third-round opening race at Las Vegas, which has put his Team Penske
crew on cruise control preparing for Phoenix.
But, of the four contenders, Logano had the weakest season and
wouldn't even be in the finale if not for Bowman's disqualification.
William Byron, No. 24 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports:
The Daytona 500 winner has three victories this season and will
return to the final four for the second consecutive year. The
26-year-old from Charlotte only made the championship race because
Bell's move at Martinsville was disallowed.
His circumstances have changed in that a year ago he was in a
relationship with Blaney's youngest sister and the two drivers
referred to each other as “brother-in-laws.” Byron is no longer
dating Erin Blaney, and the tension between Byron and Ryan Blaney
has flared on-track at times this season.
Byron won at Phoenix in March 2023 and is the only Hendrick driver
in the championship. But he hasn’t won a Cup race since April and
has a 27-race winless streak headed into Sunday.
Tyler Reddick, No. 45 Toyota, 23XI Racing:
Reddick is the only driver making his first appearance in the
championship four and doing it with a team that is only three years
old. His team is owned by both NBA great Michael Jordan and
three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, who was eliminated last
week from title contention.
The 28-year-old from California was the regular-season champion and
has led more laps this year than any other driver in the finale. He
was also married earlier this season, making this one of the biggest
years of Reddick's life.
But to cap it off, he'll need a Cup title. Both Reddick and crew
chief Billy Scott are in the finale for the first time and Phoenix
is not one of his best tracks: Reddick's wins this season have been
on tracks 1.5-miles in length or longer.
Reddick did win a pair of Xfinity Series titles in this elimination
format.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|