RECAP: Aric Almirola Beats Zilisch in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff Race

Aric Almirola beats Zilisch in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Saturday evening in the Focused Health 302.

LAS VEGAS – An incredible race-long scramble among the day’s front-running trio of veteran Aric Almirola and young talents Connor Zilisch and Jesse Love ended in favor of the experienced Almirola. Still, he really had to earn this trophy in Saturday’s Focused Health 302 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Aric Almirola Beats Zilisch

Almirola, who led a race-best 107 of the 201 laps, took the lead for good from the season’s most dominant driver, Zilisch, with nine laps remaining, and he held off the championship leader by .696-second in one of the most competitive races of the season.

The win for the 41-year-old Almirola – who is racing part-time this season – gives his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota the first automatic berth for the owners’ championship in the Nov. 1 season-ending Championship Four finale in Phoenix.

It was the third win of the 2025 season and tenth of his career for Almirola, who made the dramatic race-winning move – diving low on the 19-year-old Zilisch – and then had to out-run and out-maneuver the talented young star in the closing laps.

Almirola’s victory settles an owner’s championship position but also means the final four championship race is still open to four drivers – at least two of which will now advance based on points.

“Such an awesome opportunity to go race for an owner’s championship with [Gibbs’ late son] J.D. Gibbs’ name on the car,” Almirola said. “I’m having so much fun. This is the time of my life.

“Our car was good. Our car was really good, but the longer I ran, the tighter I got, and I was just struggling on the long run at the beginning of Stage 3, and finally on that re-start [with 23 laps remaining] I took off incredibly tight and couldn’t get going and was able to go chase the 88 [Zilisch] down. He looked pretty loose, and I was able to capitalize on that.

“It was awesome racing them.”

Connor Zilisch Still Making History

Zilisch’s runner-up finish extends his series record consecutive top-five efforts to 18 races. He’s finished first or second place an incredible 11 of the last 13 races. However, that streak of success was no comfort in the immediate moments after Saturday’s checkered flag. He even apologized to his JR Motorsports team on the cool-down lap for not being more aggressive in the race’s closing laps.

“The frustration just comes from the fact this means so much to me and the chance to lock into Phoenix,” said Zilisch, who boosted his advantage in the championship to 82 points above the four-driver Playoff cutoff line.

“I gave it my all, and I drove as hard as I could. But I guess that’s all we had today. I just have to do a better job.”

“We put ourselves in the right spots, but unfortunately, I just didn’t come away with it,” he added. “Plus, 82 [points] is not bad; it could have been a lot worse, but having another “win” sticker on this thing would have been a lot better.

The Focused Health 302 Results

Zilisch’s JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier, Saturday’s polesitter and the defending race winner, finished third, followed by Hendrick Motorsports’ development driver Corey Day and Big Machine Racing’s Nick Sanchez.

Love, who led three times for 22 laps, finished sixth in the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet. He got caught up racing hard with Sanchez in the closing laps after running among the top three for most of the day. He was frustrated, and he and Sanchez had words on pit road following the checkered flag.

“I had words with him and obviously I’m extremely pissed off,” said Love, who is now 20 points above the cutoff line. “It was my fault, I was in the spot racing him. … I don’t run into people and don’t put people in bad spots for no reason, and that’s why I’m upset about it.

“I did a lot of things really, really good tonight and I did a lot of things really, really bad tonight,” Love added.

For his part, Sanchez said he was just racing hard, and even though he is no longer Playoff-eligible, he still intends to race hard for wins in these final races of the season.

Ryan Sieg, Taylor Gray, Playoff driver Sam Mayer, and Austin Hill rounded out the top ten.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff Point Standings

Beyond Zilisch’s huge lead in the Playoff standings, Allgaier is second, 44 points up on the cutoff. Love’s sixth-place showing moved him from fifth place into third place, and Mayer is fourth, eight points above the line.

JGR’s Brandon Jones, who finished 13th Saturday, is now fifth in points, minus eight. Mayer’s Haas Factory Team teammate Sheldon Creed, who finished 11th, is now 21 points off the cutline. Zilisch’s JR Motorsports teammates, Carson Kvapil, who finished 15th, and Sammy Smith, who finished 20th, are now 22 and 24 points, respectively, below the four-drive cutoff.

Up Next

The series returns to Playoff action next week at the 2.66-mile Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway for next Saturday’s United Rentals 250 (4 p.m. ET, CW Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Sammy Smith is the defending race winner.

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