
Late strategy propels Ty Gibbs to his first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday in the Food City 500.
BRISTOL, Tenn.—When Chase Elliott spun to cause the eighth caution in Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway, driver Ty Gibbs had an emphatic message for crew chief Tyler Allen.
“I don’t want to give up track position—at all,” Gibbs asserted over the team radio.
Allen acquiesced, and Gibbs restarted in the lead on lap 486. He held that track position through a ninth caution that sent the race to overtime and beat Ryan Blaney to the finish line by 0.055 seconds to claim his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory.
The margin of victory was the closest at Bristol since Rusty Wallace beat Ernie Irvan by one foot in April of 1991.
One of four leaders in the eighth race of the season, Gibbs was out front for only the final 25 laps, as reigning series champion Kyle Larson and Ryan Blaney combined to dominate the proceedings before the decisive caution.
But it was Gibbs’ No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota that found its way to Victory Lane at the 0.533-mile short track—the first Cup victory for a car numbered 54 since Lennie Pond won the only race of his career in 1979 at Talladega.
After he climbed from the car, Gibbs’ immediate thoughts turned to his father, Coy Gibbs, who passed away the night after Ty won the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (then Xfinity Series) championship in 2022.
“Yeah, it’s awesome,” Gibbs said. “It’s awesome to be with great people. To be in this position is great. I’d love for my father to have seen this. I knew he knew it was going to happen and expected it as well.
“Yeah, it was great day for us. My boys didn’t give up. Pit crew is just amazing. This is our family. It’s been great. So it’s just such great deal. Very honored to be in this situation.”
The Food City 500 Results
Under the caution that proved decisive, Gibbs, Carson Hocevar, Chase Briscoe, Denny Hamlin, and Tyler Reddick stayed out on old tires—an option Allen said he had discussed with Gibbs as they considered possible scenarios during the final stage.
Larson restarted sixth after a two-tire call, and Blaney took the green flag in seventh on four new tires.
With the benefit of fresh rubber, Blaney and Larson charged into second and third, with Gibbs holding the lead from the top lane. Gibbs was still in front on lap 497 of a scheduled 500 when Kyle Busch spun Riley Herbst in payback for an earlier incident to cause the final caution.
Gibbs held his own on the two-lap overtime shootout and narrowly beat Blaney to the finish line, with Larson just 0.229 seconds behind in third.
“Gave it my best shot the last restart,” said Blaney, who started from the pole position, led 190 laps, and posted his best career finish at Thunder Valley. “Got a good restart. Was close, but just couldn’t get it done.
“Proud of the effort by all the (No.) 12 (Team Penske) folks. Gave me a real fast car, fast car in qualifying. Got it better through the race, honestly. Halfway through the race, I thought we got to be the best car, which is really good.
“Gosh, I really wanted to win at Bristol here. I came close. But congrats to Ty. He’s been really close. Nothing is more special than your first Cup win. It’s pretty cool to win at this place.”
Larson led 284 laps and swept the first two stages at Bristol for the third time in his career, but saw his winless streak grow to 32 races, dating to May 11, 2025, at Kansas Speedway.
“Blaney had by far the best car,” Larson acknowledged. “His pit crew just kept putting him behind all day, which really allowed us to lead a lot of laps, get those stage wins. Yeah, so that was good. Happy about all of that.
“Just knew it was going to be difficult to hold him off. Seemed like every restart, he could just plow right through the field and get to second. Was just really fast.
“Then Ty got strong there the last run, too. That was probably my worst run, I think. We were making some adjustments at that point. I just got a little bit out of the track. Yeah, they were just better than me.”
Reddick finished fourth but saw his series lead over Blaney shrink to 62 points. Chase Briscoe was third, followed by Todd Gilliland, who parlayed a two-tire call into his sixth-place finish.
Joey Logano ran seventh, followed by Ryan Preece, Hamlin, and Hocevar.
The NASCAR Cup Series Point Standings
Tyler Reddick continues to lead the series’ point standings with Ryan Blaney in second. Denny Hamlin sits in third while Ty Gibbs’ victory moves him up two spots to fourth. Chase Elliott loses a spot and sits in the fifth position.
Alex Bowman Returns from Medical Leave
Alex Bowman’s return from a four-race absence because of a vertigo diagnosis came to an early end when Shane van Gisbergen spun in the fourth turn and collected the cars of John Hunter Nemechek and Bowman.
Attempts to repair the car proved futile, and Bowman exited the race in 37th place after completing 163 laps. Even before the accident, though, Bowman had been fighting an ill-handling No. 48 Chevrolet.
“I thought we were OK in practice, but to start the race, we were in trouble,” Bowman said. “It’s a bummer that we didn’t get a chance to work on it. I know (crew chief) Blake (Harris) and this No. 48 Ally Chevrolet team would have liked some pit stops to try and make the car better and get going back in the right direction.
“We were just struggling and then got caught up in somebody else’s mess. I hate it for this team, but we’ll move onto the next one (next Sunday at Kansas Speedway).”
Next Up
The series races next week at Kansas Speedway on Sunday, April 19th. The AdventHealth 400 starts at 2 pm ET on FOX, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. HBO Max offers driver views. Kyle Larson at Hendrick Motorsports is the defending winner.