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2023 Coca-Cola 600 winner, results: Ryan Blaney holds on after late restarts to win, end 59-race drought

CONCORD, N.C. -- Ryan Blaney earned the biggest win of his career with a victory in Monday's Coca-Cola 600, giving the third-generation star his first win of 2023 and his first win in one of NASCAR's crown jewel races. Blaney's win is the eighth of his career, and it ends a 59-race winless streak that had extended back to his last win at Daytona in August of 2021.

Blaney's victory is a significant one for both him and car owner Roger Penske, as it marks the first time that Team Penske has ever won the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 in the same year. Blaney's Coke 600 victory comes one day after Josef Newgarden won the Indy 500 driving for Team Penske.

Coca-Cola 600 unofficial results

  1. #12 - Ryan Blaney
  2. #24 - William Byron
  3. #19 - Martin Truex Jr.
  4. #23 - Bubba Wallace
  5. #45 - Tyler Reddick
  6. #8 - Kyle Busch
  7. #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  8. #17 - Chris Buescher
  9. #3 - Austin Dillon
  10. #38 - Zane Smith

In a long race made even longer by 16 caution flags and a mid-race red flag for rain, Blaney would establish himself as the driver to beat by leading seven times for 163 laps, many of which came in the second half of the 400-lap event. Blaney seized control of the race for good on a restart with 26 laps to go, taking the lead from William Byron as the caution came out for a four-car crash involving Kyle Larson and other frontrunners.

Blaney's victory was an emotional one in addition to a popular one, as the third-generation racer claimed his first victory in a race that he attended many times growing up as the son of longtime Cup Series driver Dave Blaney. Blaney also replicated his company teammate Josef Newgarden's Indy 500 celebration, running into the grandstands to celebrate his win with the fans.

"I might shed a tear. Man, this has been a cool weekend," Blaney told Fox Sports. "Obviously Memorial Day weekend means a lot, growing up here watching Dad run this race for a long time. And it was so cool to just be a part of it, let alone win it. I was able to get the lead on the restart, and then just kind of -- our car was so good that I could kind of bide my time a little bit and we were gonna drive off.

"I was hoping no caution, just because you never know. I knew we had the car to do it, but restarts can be crazy ... You start to feel like you can't win anymore when you don't win in awhile. It can kind of get hard. So just super thankful to the 12 guys for believing in me."

Long race, short tempers

Call it the result of stir-craziness from a weekend that saw all on-track activity scheduled for Saturday and Sunday get rained out, or whatever else you will. But for NASCAR's longest race, there were a pair of incidents that brought out the worst in prominent drivers' temperaments, particularly in the case of the sport's Most Popular Driver.

On lap 185, Chase Elliott and Denny Hamlin were racing for sixth coming off of turn four when Hamlin slid up the track and into Elliott, putting the No. 9 Chevrolet into the outside wall. Elliott then -- seemingly in retaliation -- hooked a left into Hamlin's right rear fender, sending Hamlin head-on and hard into the outside wall before spinning in oncoming traffic.

Hamlin, one of NASCAR's most outspoken personalities, was furious. In a terse interview with Fox Sports, Hamlin directly called for Elliott to be suspended, comparing the incident to Bubba Wallace's intentional wreck of Kyle Larson that earned him a one-week suspension last fall, and later posted SMT data on Twitter suggesting that Elliott had hooked a left into him on purpose.

"It's a tantrum, and he shouldn't be racing next week," Hamlin said. "Right rear hooks are absolutely unacceptable. I don't care, it's the same thing that Bubba Wallace did with Kyle Larson. The exact same. He shouldn't be racing. It's a tantrum."

When pressed on whether or not he had spun Hamlin intentionally, Elliott denied the accusation by claiming that his car would not steer properly after hitting the wall.

"Once you hit the wall in these things, you can't drive them anymore," Elliott said. "Unfortunately not, no. Just an unfortunate circumstance."

While his name was invoked by his car owner, Wallace was also involved in a separate testy exchange. After a hotly contested battle for position with Aric Almirola prior to the red flag for rain, Wallace and Almirola were spotted having a non-cordial conversation that resulted in Almirola shoving Wallace. The incident was spotted by race fan Sarah Davis, and the video was subsequently picked up on by media.

Wallace would go on to finish fourth after a late rally from issues on pit road, while Almirola claimed after a 16th place finish that he had shoved Wallace after the driver of the No. 23 Toyota had cussed him out.

"I felt like I was running him pretty clean, and I felt like he was racing me really dirty. I let him go, and then he shot me the bird," Almirola told PRN. "So I just went to go ask him why he shot me the bird, and he started mouthing off and cussing at me. And I just told him I wasn't gonna have that."

Wallace offered little on what transpired during a post-race scrum with reporters, only saying he was not surprised that Almirola -- who usually projects a gentlemanly, family man image -- had shoved him.

"When you walk around with two faces, that's what you get," Wallace said.

Nifty driving

Back in 1987, the exit of turn four at Charlotte Motor Speedway became the site of one of Dale Earnhardt's greatest moments of individual driving, as The Intimidator held the lead in the 1987 Winston despite getting turned into the infield by Bill Elliott. It became known as "The Pass in the Grass" and became a significant part of Earnhardt's lore, even though Earnhardt passed no one.

The infield grass at Charlotte is now the same synthetic surface you'd find on a football field, but Tyler Reddick ended up going for a very similar excursion. Running second and trying to catch Blaney for the lead, Reddick's car lurched sideways on the exit of turn four, sending him driving through the infield turf as he caught and saved his car from spinning.

Reddick would eventually finish fifth just ahead of Kyle Busch, who put his own driving abilities on display after a lap 176 spin on the backstretch. After his car settled facing in the wrong direction, Busch proceeded to put his car in reverse and drive backwards into turns three and four, finally spinning it around before coming to pit road.

For longtime race fans, it was a highlight straight out of the climatic final race in the movie Days of Thunder, where Cole Trickle drove backwards to pit road after being spun in the Daytona 500 -- a scene that was actually based on a real life incident involving Tim Richmond at Pocono in 1986.

Race results rundown

  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr. followed up his win in the Daytona 500 with another exceptional run in a crown jewel race, starting 10th and staying in the top 10 for much of the night on his way to finishing seventh. It marks Stenhouse's fifth top 10 of the 2023 season, matching his season total from all of 2022.
  • In his fifth start as part of a limited schedule of Cup races, Craftsman Truck Seires champion Zane Smith fared extremely well in his first Coke 600. Smith drove up into the top 15 by late in the race, led three laps by staying out on a late restart, and came across the finish line in 10th for his first Cup top 10 in just his fifth start.
  • Despite a momentary late-race scare, Kaulig Racing would put both of their cars in the top 15 by the finish. A.J. Allmendinger would recover from an accident on a late restart to finish 14th, just ahead of Justin Haley in 15th.
  • Journeyman driver J.J. Yeley's relative hot streak continues, as he enjoyed a very solid night that saw him take home a 16th place finish. That marks Yeley's third top 20 finish in his last six starts dating back to Bristol in April.
  • Ross Chastain finally avoided a weekend where he angered another driver, but it came at a cost: Chastain was never truly a factor on his way to a 22nd place finish, just ahead of Trackhouse Racing teammate Daniel Suarez who finished 23rd.
  • However poorly Trackhouse's Coke 600 went, Legacy Motor Club's was even worse. All three of their cars went to the garage area, and team co-owner Jimmie Johnson was involved in two separate accidents before dropping out after 115 laps and finishing 37th. The seven-time Cup champion has now failed to finish all three Cup races he's entered this season.

Next race

After a three week series of races in the Carolinas, the NASCAR Cup Series heads to the Gateway to the west and World Wide Technology Raceway in St. Louis for the Enjoy Illinois 300 next Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

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Live updates
 
Pinned

Ryan Blaney's winless streak has come to an end, and it's going to end in big fashion! Blaney earns his first victory in one of NASCAR's crown jewel races and wins the Coca-Cola 600, ending a 59-race winless streak and picking up his first win of 2023!

1 - #12 - Ryan Blaney
2 - #24 - William Byron
3 - #19 - Martin Truex Jr.
4 - #23 - Bubba Wallace
5 - #45 - Tyler Reddick
6 - #8 - Kyle Busch
7 - #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
8 - #17 - Chris Buescher
9 - #3 - Austin Dillon
10 - #38 - Zane Smith

 

What's driven everyone nuts about today is that the weather that moved in was barely detectable -- if seen at all -- on any radars. But now, the weather outlook is starting to look much better.

 

The plan for today was for the NASCAR Xfinity Series to get their race run and out of the way first, but the weather had other ideas. A consistent mist turned into a steady rain that has paused the Xfinity race after 48 laps, and that race will be completed following the Coke 600.

Ty Gibbs currently leads John Hunter Nemechek, Justin Allgaier, Daniel Hemric and Sheldon Creed with 48 of 200 laps complete.

 

And we're back!

We're not quite out of the woods yet weather-wise at Charlotte Motor Speedway, but there's great reason to feel good about an on-time start to this race. The sun has come out at Charlotte Motor Speedway and track crews are hard at work drying the Speedway after another series of showers earlier this afternoon.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Due to rain, the Coca-Cola 600 has been postponed until tomorrow afternoon at 3 p.m. ET. Television coverage will be on Fox.

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Right now it feels like you could take a submarine around Charlotte Motor Speedway. And quite appropriately, there was a "submersive" announcement in the Media Center earlier: A new sponsor for RFK Racing emerged, as BuildSubmarines.com will sponsor both Brad Keselowski and Chris Buescher both this year and in 2024.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Just took a walk outside -- It's still raining and the rainfall is still steady, but the drops do not feel particularly heavy even if there's a lot of them. NASCAR has deployed the Air Titans and they have begun work in drying the racetrack.

 

It's going to be a long time before anyone forgets what happened this afternoon in the 107th Indianapolis 500. In a wild finish that saw three red flags in the closing laps, including one that ensured a one-lap sprint to the finish, Josef Newgarden passed Marcus Ericsson in the final run down the backstretch and then held on to win the Indy 500 for the first time.

1 - #2 - Josef Newgarden
2 - #8 - Marcus Ericsson
3 - #14 - Santino Ferucci
4 - #10 - Alex Palou
5 - #7 - Alexander Rossi

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Let's not forget, by the way, the two races that took place around the world today.

First up was the Monaco Grand Prix for Formula 1, a storied tradition that saw Red Bull continue its dominance of the 2023 season. Max Verstappen extended his lead in the World Championship by winning his fourth Grand Prix of the season and his second win at Monaco in the last three years.

1 - Max Verstappen
2 - Fernando Alonso
3 - Esteban Ocon

 

After three of the top five finishers in the ARCA race were Truck Series drivers, it was a quick turnaround for each of them to hop in their Trucks for the North Carolina Education Lottery 200. 2021 Truck Series champion Ben Rhodes would earn his first win of the season, pulling away in the closing laps for his first victory since Bristol last year.

The Xfinity Series race, which was scheduled to be run Saturday afternoon, was postponed to Monday afternoon due to rain.

1 - #99 - Ben Rhodes
2 - #11 - Corey Heim
3 - #5 - Dean Thompson
4 - #42 - Carson Hocevar
5 - #23 - Grant Enfinger

 

All the racing this weekend so far was contained to Friday evening and a double-header for the ARCA Menards Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. Jesse Love looked like he was going to cruise to his third-straight win, but an Overtime restart forced him to have to hold off Dean Thompson to earn the checkered flag in a two lap sprint to the finish.

1 - #20 - Jesse Love
2 - #15 - Dean Thompson
3 - #17 - Taylor Gray
4 - #97 - Grant Enfinger
5 - #73 - Andy Jankowiak

 

This weekend is already a good one for Alex Bowman, as he has returned to the driver's seat of the No. 48 Chevrolet after missing the last three races due to a fractured vertebra suffered in a sprint car accident. Josh Berry kept Bowman's seat warm over the past month, including last week when he won the All-Star Open.

Bowman, who was a contender for the Cup Series points lead prior to his injury, will start 31st tonight.

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Bubba Wallace enters Coke 600 weekend on a hot streak, with two top five finishes in a row to go with a runner-up finish in last week's All-Star Race. Wallace starts 7th today, but his team had issues in pre-race tech inspection yesterday and failed twice, leading to the ejection of his car chief.

Wallace's team is also dealing with the unwelcome distraction of a breach of his radio communications after the All-Star Race, where an unknown person hacked into Wallace's radio in order to make disparaging remarks. NASCAR is currently investigating who is responsible and how the hack happened.

https://www.cbssports.com/nascar/news/nascar-investigating-hack-of-bubba-wallaces-radio-channel-after-all-star-race-at-north-wilkesboro/

 
@NASCARONFOX via Twitter
 

Also in this week's news cycle was a bit of industry chatter concerning who will replace one of NASCAR's greatest drivers of the last 20 years next season: Jordan Bianchi of The Athletic has reported that Stewart-Haas Racing is working towards finalizing a contract with Josh Berry, who would replace the retiring Kevin Harvick behind the wheel of the No. 4 Ford in 2024.

CBS Sports was actually over at JR Motorsports this week speaking to Berry about his season so far as the super sub for both Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman at Hendrick Motorsports. Watch this space...

 
@NASCAR via Twitter
 

The big news of the week in NASCAR came on the technical side of things, as the sanctioning body issued a bulletin to teams concerning updates to the Next Gen car made in response to a crash at Talladega where Ryan Preece's car pierced the passenger side door of Kyle Larson's.

Teams will now be able to add several gussets to the right side door of the chassis, and the V-brace in the front of the car is being removed in order to reduce stiffness. Joey Logano, who said hitting the wall in last year's Coke 600 was the hardest he'd ever hit anything, spoke about the changes answering a question posed by CBS Sports.

 

Kyle Larson is coming off of a weekend sweep at North Wilkesboro, where he dominated the All-Star Race and became the first driver to take the lift to Victory Lane since 1996. But with North Wilkesboro added to his accomplishments, Larson is aiming higher as he begins to look towards competing in next year's Indianapolis 500.

There is already a great deal of anticipation towards Larson's attempt at the Indy-Charlotte Double. So much so that it's already a topic of conversation, such as when former IndyCar and NASCAR star Danica Patrick spoke about it to USA Today's For the Win.

https://www.cbssports.com/nascar/news/danica-patrick-has-no-doubt-kyle-larson-will-have-a-chance-to-win-indy-500-in-2024/

 

This is an extremely busy week for the NASCAR industry, as most race teams and most drivers are based out of the greater Charlotte, N.C. area. That means this week is filled with media events, shop tours, and appearances ahead of the Coke 600.

One of those events was up the road at Childress Vineyards on Tuesday night, where Austin Dillon revealed his paint scheme for tonight's race. CBS Sports spoke a little with the 2017 Coca-Cola 600 champion, who always seems to show up in big races and who came within a corner of getting a second Coke 600 win last year.

 

Due to the weather yesterday, both practice and qualifying for today's race were scrubbed, meaning the first on-track laps for the entire field will come whenever the green flag drops. William Byron, by virtue of NASCAR's qualifying metric and his win at Darlington, is on the pole.

1 - #24 - William Byron
2 - #4 - Kevin Harvick
3 - #6 - Brad Keselowski
4 - #11 - Denny Hamlin
5 - #8 - Kyle Busch
6 - #9 - Chase Elliott
7 - #23 - Bubba Wallace
8 - #12 - Ryan Blaney
9 - #20 - Christopher Bell
10 - #47 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

https://www.cbssports.com/nascar/news/coca-cola-600-starting-lineup-william-byron-awarded-the-pole-after-rain-washes-out-qualifying/

 

Conditions in Charlotte, putting it mildly, are not good. It began to rain just before noon yesterday, and it has rained ever since. A steady and heavy rain has fallen all afternoon and conditions are unseasonably cool -- it feels more like mid-March than Memorial Day Weekend -- but there is optimism that we can race tonight.

The rain may reportedly let up after 6 p.m., and SMI CEO Marcus Smith says that the track is aiming for a start time of anywhere from 8-8:30 tonight.

 

The occasion of America's most solemn of holidays also marks the occasion of the single greatest day of motor racing both in the United States and around the world. After this morning's Monaco Grand Prix and a thrilling Indianapolis 500 in the afternoon, now evening has come and it's time for the Coca-Cola 600.

CBS Sports is on-site at Charlotte Motor Speedway for what -- we hope -- will be a long and exciting conclusion to racing's greatest day.

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