
NASCAR Cup Series carries season-opening momentum to Atlanta
Yesterday at 11:17 AM
ATLANTA, Ga. – While last weekend‘s 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season-opening DAYTONA 500 provided all the drama expected of The Great American race, fans have every reason to anticipate the same sort of high-excitement in Sunday‘s Ambetter Health 400 (3 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Last year‘s three-wide photo finish among winner Daniel Suarez and runners-up, Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch creates huge excitement for both fans and teams returning to the recently-revised 1.5-mile Atlanta high-banks that race like a small superspeedway.
Suarez‘s 2024 victory — by less than the blink-of-the-eye at .003-second — actually turned out to be just one of the amazingly close finishes of the season topped only by Kyle Larson‘s win at Kansas by .001-second over Chris Buescher last May. Suarez has now finished first or second in the last three Atlanta races.
"It was a lot of fun,” Suarez smiled and recalled of the Atlanta race. "Even more fun for me, right, because I was the one that won the race. Probably wouldn’t have been that much fun if I finished second or third."
Teams arrive this weekend after a full contact edition of the DAYTONA 500, won for the second consecutive year by Hendrick Motorsports‘ William Byron. Tyler Reddick, last year‘s Regular Season Champion, was runner-up and seven-time series champion Jimmie Johnson was third in his best outing since stepping back from fulltime competition.
Last year‘s Atlanta February race final standings read like a typical superspeedway event — those drivers who are up front at Daytona, were largely in the group up front that next week at Atlanta.
For example, reigning series champion, Team Penske‘s Joey Logano, who led 43 laps last week in the 500, has a pair of Atlanta wins (2023-24) as does Daytona winner Byron (2022 and 23). They along with Hendrick‘s Chase Elliott (2022) and Penske‘s Blaney (2021) are the other most recent Atlanta winners — always contending for wins at Daytona as well.
Austin Cindric, whose 59 laps out front were most in the DAYTONA 500, was fourth in this spring Atlanta race last year. 23XI Racing‘s Bubba Wallace, who also led laps Sunday, was fifth at Atlanta. Former DAYTONA 500 winners Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Michael McDowell, as well as Daytona summer race winner Chris Buescher all had top-10s at Atlanta as well.
Joe Gibbs Racing‘s Denny Hamlin (2012), RFK Racing owner-driver Brad Keselowski (2017 and 2019) and Richard Childress Racing‘s Kyle Busch (2008 and 2013) are the other active drivers with Atlanta trophies too.
This race last year, featured a record 48 lead changes by 14 drivers — a full-on day of tight racing. And that‘s exactly what the field expects Sunday. The pass for the win at Atlanta has come in the final two laps in four of the last five races there; including this one a year ago.
The work out front last week by Austin Cindric, Logano and Team Penske teammate Blaney was impressive at Daytona and makes them favorites again this week. They all three led at least 20 laps on the superspeedway — something a team has accomplished only four times in series history. In just the last two years, the Penske team has combined to lead 898 laps – more three times that of any other team on drafting tracks such as Daytona, Atlanta and Talladega, Ala.
“It’s amazing how much Atlanta has changed from the repave, and then to the new version of the car and how much we’ve had to adapt to the new style of racing at Atlanta,” Suarez‘s Trackhouse Racing teammate Ross Chastain said. "It’s kind of wild to think how Atlanta is now a drafting a track but it has created some exciting finishes. You look back at last year’s race with my teammate Daniel’s win and how close that finish was. It‘s cool to see the fan’s excited for the racing at Atlanta and I hope to be the guy in Victory Lane this weekend.”
Blaney‘s seventh-place finish at Daytona combined with good stage points, gives him a single-point edge over Byron and three-point lead over his teammate Cindric atop the NASCAR Cup Series championship standings.
There is no practice session this week and Busch Light Pole Qualifying is set for 11 a.m. ET on Saturday — the broadcast available on Amazon Prime.
— NASCAR News Wire —
Michael McDowell won the pole position at both Atlanta races in 2024 driving a Ford. However, this year Toyota returns to the track hoping to extend a mark of six consecutive poles dating back to October last year, when JGR‘s Christopher Bell started the streak at Las Vegas. Chase Briscoe won the pole position for last week‘s DAYTONA 500 in his first start for the JGR Toyota team.