Ryan Blaney wins thrilling NASCAR regular-season finale at Daytona

Ryan Blaney wins a thrilling four-wide race at Daytona International Speedway, securing NASCAR's regular-season finale
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Ryan Blaney won a four-wide race across the Daytona International Speedway finish line Saturday night in NASCAR's regular-season finale — a victory that denied a long-shot driver a spot in the playoffs and gave Alex Bowman postseason life.
Blaney was 13th with two laps to go but muscled his Team Penske Ford to the front and surged slightly ahead as he led the pack to the checkered flag. He beat Daniel Suarez by 0.031 seconds, Justin Haley by 0.036 seconds and Cole Custer by 0.049 seconds.
Erik Jones was fifth and Chris Buescher sixth. Any of the drivers behind Blaney would have been first-time winners this season and claimed the final spot in the 16-driver playoff field.
But Blaney — a former series champion already locked into the field — denied them of the Cinderella moment. His victory assured Bowman, who crashed early in the race and had to watch for more than three hours on TV to learn his fate, would race for the championship this season.
Tyler Reddick crashed early in and still clinched a spot in the playoffs.
How?
Just nine laps later, Bowman wrecked at Daytona and, with Bowman out of the race, it automatically locked Reddick into the 16-driver field.
Reddick and Bowman both started the race trying to claim the final two spots in the playoffs. Reddick, last year's regular-season champion, held a 29-point cushion over Bowman. But when he wrecked 18 laps into the race, he suddenly became in danger of missing out on racing for the championship just nine months after he made it to the title-deciding finale.
His worries went away on Lap 27 when Bowman was collected in a multi-car crash that ended the Hendrick Motorsports drivers' race. Bowman can still claim the final spot in the playoffs if there is not a first-time winner Saturday night.
“There's just nothing you can do, welcome to superspeedway racing,” Bowman said about the crash. “We feel like it was out of our control and it is what it is. I am going to sit in front of a TV and watch, unfortunately we are on the sidelines watching and we're going to find out here in a couple of hours.”
Hours before the race began Team Penske noted the death of Karl Kainhofer, the first employee Penske hired when he launched the motorsports juggernaut in 1966.
Kainhofer was was part of 10 of Penske's 20 Indianapolis 500 wins, including Mark Donohue’s 1972 win as chief mechanic. Donohue was Penske's second hire.
Team Penske said Kainhofer died Friday night. He was 94.
“Karl Kainhofer’s contributions to Team Penske are immeasurable,” Penske said.
The playoffs open next Sunday at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. The race was the regular-season finale in 2024 and won by Chase Briscoe, who used the victory to claim the final spot in the playoffs.
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