Josh Berry races to 1st Cup Series
victory, gives Wood Brothers 101st win with Las Vegas score
[March 17, 2025]
By JENNA FRYER
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Josh Berry spent much of his career content as a
journeyman racer who probably would never make it beyond the local
short-track scene.
When he got a break in NASCAR — Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. has
believed in Berry for years — he made the most of it by winning five
Xfinity Series races for JR Motorsports. That led to a shot in the
Cup Series, then a full-time job last year with Stewart-Haas Racing.
But when SHR decided to shutter at the end of last season, Berry was
dumped into the free agent market and immediately grabbed by Wood
Brothers Racing. In his fifth race with his new team, Berry scored
the first Cup Series victory of his career by taking NASCAR's oldest
team to victory lane Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
“I'm just thankful to be in the situation I am driving fast race
cars,” Berry said. “With my experience on the short tracks, you
think that's where you're going to win. But if I've learned anything
in this sport it is that you never know when it's going to be your
day.”
Berry, driving the famed No. 21, had the first victory for a Ford
team through five races this season. William Byron opened the year
with a Daytona 500 victory in a Chevrolet and Christopher Bell in a
Toyota won the next three races.
Berry, meanwhile, had to run down Daniel Suarez following a restart
with 19 laps remaining to take control. Although Harrison Burton won
at Daytona last summer for the Wood Brothers, Berry's victory is the
first not at a superspeedway since Ryan Blaney won for the team in
2017 at Pocono.

“This one was legit,” team president Jon Wood said. “You know
sometimes they'll put an asterisk besides a speedway race and say
‘Well, it’s speedway racing.' But (Berry) dominated those last 20
laps."
The Wood Brothers are celebrating their 75th season in NASCAR.
“Everybody with Wood Brothers Racing gave me a great car and we just
battled and battled, and man, it was our day,” Berry said. “I just
can't believe it. It was such a battle with Daniel there at the end.
Beating and banging at a mile-and-a-half (track) is crazy. But
whoever was going to get out front was probably going to win.”
It was the 101st victory for the organization spanning 20 drivers.
Suarez in a Chevrolet for Trackhouse Racing finished second.
“Definitely a little disappointed, but congratulations to the 21
team and Josh. They did a great job,” said Suarez. “They’ve been
fast lately. They’ve been in contention. So congratulations to
them.”
Ryan Preece was third in a Ford for RFK Racing. Byron was fourth for
Hendrick Motorsports, followed by Ross Chastain of Trackhouse,
Austin Cindric of Team Penske and Alex Bowman of Hendrick.
AJ Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing was eighth and Hendrick drivers
Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott rounded out the top 10. Seven Chevy
drivers finished in the top 10.
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Josh Berry celebrates after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race
Sunday, March 16, 2025, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)

Joey Logano had late control of the race until Las
Vegas native Noah Gragson hit the wall with 25 laps remaining to
bring out the ninth caution of the race. Berry was in second when
the caution came out and second behind Suarez on the restart.
Berry won in his 53rd Cup race and just his fifth
race with the Wood Brothers. The 34-year-old Tennessee driver was a
40-1 underdog to win Sunday and his win put the Wood Brothers back
into the playoffs for a second consecutive season. The team has a
tight alliance with Team Penske, which has input in who drives the
No. 21.
Bell to the back
Bell came to Las Vegas on a three-race winning streak with an
opportunity to become the first driver since Jimmie Johnson in 2007
to win four consecutive Cup races.
But his chance to extend his streak was stymied when Joe Gibbs
Racing had to change the throttle body on the No. 20 Toyota after
Bell qualified 13th and the penalty dropped him to the back of the
field for the start of the race.
He never recovered in what was an overall subpar day for the
four-driver JGR contingent.
Bell, who complained about the handling of his car most of the race,
finished a team-high 12th. Only eight drivers have won four straight
Cup races in the modern era of NASCAR that began in 1972.
“I don’t know. It’s fine. It was a grind, for sure," Bell said. “I
don’t really know how I feel yet, but we certainly didn’t do what we
did the last couple of weeks and that was just have a nice clean
race.”
Chase Briscoe was 17th and Ty Gibbs, who rolled a sprint car
Saturday night at the dirt track at Las Vegas Motor Speedway,
finished 22nd. Denny Hamlin, winner of more than $200,000 over two
nights of playing slots in a Las Vegas casino, couldn't convert his
luck to the track and finished 25th.
Up next
The Cup Series races next Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway, a
track that had been in the playoff rotation the last three years but
has now been moved to a spring race. Tyler Reddick won last October
and Bell won in 2023.
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