
LEBANON, Tenn. — Nashville Superspeedway delivered drama, action and intensity from start to finish Sunday night.
For viewers, the Music City mayhem capped a thrilling weekend in the Volunteer State. For most drivers other than Denny Hamlin, the chaos left their stomachs in knots.
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RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Nashville
Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 marked the NASCAR Cup Series’ official start to the second half of the regular season and another grueling test on both man and machine in the Tennessee heat with a new racing package, featuring lower downforce and 750 horsepower under the hood.
That added speed and reduced aerodynamic stability appeared to lead to extra wear on the brakes, resulting in numerous failures in brake rotors Sunday, including Trackhouse Racing teammates Connor Zilisch and Ross Chastain as well as then-leader AJ Allmendinger, who surged through strategy to score a Stage 1 victory.
But brakes weren’t the only source of misfortune. Mistimed contact led to multiple incidents, many collecting those around the 16th-place bubble in the Cup Series points standings where the cutoff will be determined for The Chase at the end of August. In total, 24 of Sunday’s 38 cars were involved in an accident, according to Racing Insights. That list includes Chastain, Austin Cindric and Bubba Wallace.
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Chastain, runner-up in the 2022 season standings, has fallen to 26th in points after his second consecutive DNF left him 37th at Nashville and sits 67 points behind Cindric for the provisional 16th and final spot in the 10-race postseason run. Cindric was collected in a Lap 193 crash off Turn 4 when Brad Keselowski and Austin Dillon collided, sending Keselowski into a spin and into Cindric’s door. Keselowski, 13th in points, was unable to continue and finished 34th while Cindric trudged on to a 26th-place result. Ryan Preece, Keselowski’s RFK Racing teammate, wasn’t involved in an incident but fell outside The Chase after a radiator issue sent his No. 60 Ford to the garage early, resulting in a 36th-place finish.
Wallace, meanwhile, was involved in an incident not of his doing for the fourth consecutive week, including the exhibition All-Star Race at Dover on May 17. Wallace started the year strong and sat inside the top three in the points standings for five straight weeks. But in a dismal stretch since Darlington Raceway in late March, Wallace has finished 22nd or worse in six of the last nine races, including three straight after finishing 32nd at Nashville, and now sits 15th in points, just 34 points inside The Chase bubble.
“It’s been a long couple weeks,” a dejected Wallace said after being evaluated and released from the infield care center. “Just tired. But I become the [expletive] when I let this carry over in the Mondays and Tuesdays, so I’ve got to somehow put on a face.
“Just a weird race. A lot of cautions. I’m just beyond devastated.”
View of a damage race car in garage with crew members standing around.
That frustration was not reserved for the rear of the field. Third-place finisher Chase Briscoe was gutted by not winning Sunday’s race against Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell in search of his first win of 2026, particularly because he has his eyes set on a run to the top five in points despite sitting 14th in standings post-Nashville.
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“I’ve never been so frustrated to not win a race before,” Briscoe said.
But as he inches up the standings leaderboard, Briscoe found slight solace on a night where he finished where he was running, as opposed to Charlotte one week earlier where he crashed out after a top-five day was rounding into form.
“I mean, I’m frustrated and annoyed right now, just because I felt like I certainly had a car that could have won the race, and then ended up third with it,” Briscoe said. “But to have a fast car, right? There’s been a lot of points this year where we’ve had cars that were capable of running up front and we haven’t been able to have the finish, so yeah, it’s nice to get the finish tonight.”
Briscoe said fifth place in points is the goal for the No. 19 team after a poor start to the season left him outside the top 20 for the first seven weeks of 2026. After Sunday, he trails Kyle Larson by 66 markers for sixth place and is 106 points behind teammate Ty Gibbs for fifth.
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“We’re slowly chipping away at it,” Briscoe said. “Just really want to win.”
Hendrick Motorsports, another perennial contender, has been to Victory Lane twice this season with Chase Elliott, who sits fourth in points after a seventh-place finish at Nashville. But its other three drivers — Larson, William Byron and Alex Bowman — are still seeking that first breakthrough of the year after uncharacteristic misfortune or mistakes.
MORE: Cup Series standings
Team president Jeff Andrews has no doubt the No. 24 team will sort its way up the pylon as Byron is 11th in points and Bowman in the No. 48 plays catch-up from a four-race absence for vertigo earlier this season. But this is the time of year where any weaknesses must be addressed.
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“Between now and September, you want to start seeing some consistency, and that builds confidence,” Andrews told NASCAR.com. “The 24 has just had some terrible luck here. We’ve just got to get that turned around, and it will. That’s too good of a race team not to get that turned around. And the 5 (Larson), I mean, ran over a brake rotor tonight, running fifth. Not much we can do about that. That’s not in our hands. So we’ve just got to go back and pump each other up and take the positives from the night and carry that on into September, and we will.
“We’ve got Michigan and Pocono coming up, and should be two good tracks for us. Just go race there, take it one week at a time. And as long as the momentum is going forward, and as long as the gains are going in the forward direction, by the time we get to September, I feel like we’ll be right in the middle of it.”
