For the final time this year, the Team Conti Sim Performance Cup Series made its way to the iconic Daytona for the Coke Zero Sugar 250. Daytona, with its 200+ MPH racing and the dramatic wrecks that always bring a new level of excitement, was a pivotal moment for the fans of the Crown Jewel Racing Community, marking the beginning of the end of an exhilarating regular season.
QUICK RACE STATS
- Location: Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida
- Weather: 80 Degrees, Partly Cloudy, South Wind @ 1-2 MPH
- Race Length: 106 Laps, 1 HR 47 MINS
- 13 Leaders – 23 Lead Changes
- Oskar Jensen-31 Laps
- Braedyn Carrol-19 Laps
- Cody Leach-9 Laps
- Cory Mott-8 Laps
- Tommy Carroll Jr.-8Laps
- Daniel Jursza-8 Laps
- Nishil Condoor-6 Laps
- Johnny Avila-5 Laps
- Ben Lawson-4 Laps
- Wyatt Sadler- 3 Laps
- Russell Bratka-2 Laps
- Zach Johnson- 2 Laps
- Jonathan Leger-1 Lap
- 12 Cautions – 37 Laps
Qualifying
Daytona Qualifying, a spectacle of intense competition, is always a thrill. The drivers, separated by a mere one-thousandth of a second, know that one-hundredth of a second could be the difference between the pole and starting in the 15th position. The times were so close this week that it came down to a tie for the pole position, with newcomer Brenden Koehler seizing the pole position and Stewart Harding Walker taking second, with a qualifying time of 49.532. Russell Bratka and Wyatt Sadler would qualify third and fourth with a matching time of 49.539, and Tommy Carroll Jr. would qualify fifth with a time of 49.544.
STAGE 1
The green flag would fly as the #36 Koehler would lead the field to start the race, but the #56 Carroll Jr. would take the lead on the first lap of racing. The inside line formed well at the beginning and took off from the outside line with single file racing back to almost 10th place. Eventually, the outside line figured it out and ran back to the front, with the #45 Oskar Jensen taking the lead as the field went two by two behind him.
The drivers started to get extra spicy on the final lap of the stage on Lap 20, and the ‘BIG ONE’ happened in Turns 3-4. This term refers to a significant multi-car crash often occurring in NASCAR races. Carroll Jr. was trying to push the #68 Alexander Hodge to the front, but he got underneath him and into the quarter panel, sending Hodge around. Ten drivers got black-flagged for damage from this chaos, sending them down the pit road to end the stage.
Jensen would secure the Stage 1 win by leading twelve out of the twenty-stage laps. Koehler would take second place, followed by Braedyn Carroll in third. Steven Carlile and Wyatt Sadler would follow behind with fourth—and fifth-place finishes. It was all the fans could ask for in Stage 1: green flag racing throughout the stage, building excitement for the end, and witnessing utter destruction coming to the line to end the stage.
STAGE 1 RESULTS
STAGE 2
At the end of the stage, #11 Russell Bratka was the only one to stay on the race track and chose not to pit with everyone else. Bratka led the field back to green flag racing to begin Stage 2. The race would stay green until Lap 24 when the #63 Johnny Avila and the #40 Wyatt Sadler made contact coming out of Turn 2. They would collect the #55 Cameron Romano on the backstretch and turn him down to the apron.
On Lap 27, Jensen took back the lead to bring the race back to green, and the drivers tried to settle back in and went two by two with almost 20 cars staying in the lead pack. On Lap 31, Braedyn Carroll would take Jensen’s lead before another caution came out. The #1 Cory Mott and the #29 Stewart Harding Walker would make contact down the backstretch as Mott was attempting to change lanes. They would spin to the inside, but neither would get any damage from the incident.
When Carroll brought the field back to green on Lap 37, we would have a four-lap shootout to end Stage 2. Jensen would get a great push off the line and take the lead but couldn’t hold on to it for long, as the #63 Johnny Avila would take the lead and the green-white-checkered to end Stage 2. Several drivers wouldn’t pit at the stage break, and #8 Zach Johnson would take the lead spot.
STAGE 2 RESULTS
STAGE 3
Johnson would bring the field to the start-finish line to begin the final stage, as his Palmetto Motorsports teammate Cory Mott would line up to his inside. Johnson would rely on his other teammate, the #77 Jim Mott, to give him a push to keep him out front. But Mott would stay with the bottom line and get the better push to leave the top line in the dust. Mott would maintain the lead through the halfway point in the race, but the #15 Cody Leach would transition to the Highline in front of Johnson to try and capture the lead. Mott would also move to the Highline to block Leach’s run before Mott would change back to the low line. Leach would keep the top line moving, taking the lead from Mott on Lap 53 in a series of strategic moves that kept the audience on the edge of their seats.
Leach would keep control until Lap 58 when the #77 Jim Mott would get a little too close on the side draft and make contact with the #61 Nishil Condoor. Jim Mott would get turned to the inside while Cory Mott would move high to miss the incident and collect the #6 Stephen Menke, who would get smacked left and right by other cars as they tried to get around. Menke would be involved in another incident on Lap 63, and he couldn’t get his luck turned around for the evening as all the incidents he was involved in were not his fault. Overall, it was a tough night for all of Factory Motorsports as they all finished outside the Top 10.
The next caution would come out on Lap 74 when the #3 Ben Lawson would push the #89 Daniel Jurza to the front to take the lead from the #40 Wyatt Sadler. Jurza and Lawson would make contact down the backstretch and would move Lawson into the top line, where Condoor would meet him as they both went into the wall. This wreck would send seven cars to the pits for repairs.
Fans could tell the race was ending as the driving would get increasingly aggressive every lap that was turned. There would be four more cautions before we would come down to the first overtime on Lap 98.
OVERTIME AT DAYTONA
Jensen would control the bottom line while Russell Bratka lined up next to him on the outside row. When the green flag dropped, Jensen would get a great push, and the bottom line would pull away, heading into Turn 1. Jensen and Braedyn Carroll would link up bumpers and check out from the field, but they couldn’t get back to the line before another big wreck would happen on the backstretch when the #88 Tyler Belanger would drift down a bit too much and connect with the #63 Avila sending him into the wall.
CJR Officials would get them reracked and restacked for Overtime #2. Jensen would get the jump on the bottom line, which Carroll would push. They would lock bumpers and get around the track to bring out the white flag. They would run away with it, but coming out of Turn 4, here comes the #36 Brenden Koehler getting a big push and run from the #91 Zack Saunders. Saunders would push Koehler to Carroll’s bumper, and Jensen would move high, breaking Koehler’s run as Saunders would go low. Jensen would have enough momentum to get to the checkered flag, and Saunders would speed past Carroll for a second-place finish. Koehler would cross the line for 3rd place, and Carroll, who pushed Jensen around for the final restart, would do enough to get Jensen the win, but Carroll would finish in 4th place. At the after-race press conference, Jensen said this about the race.
“I want to say thank you to Ray. We had an incident early in the race during the choose cone, which gave me some motivation to drive my tail off and win this thing.”
Playoff Implications
The Playoff field of 16 Drivers is set, barring any unexpected race winners, miracles, or sudden departures. The regular season finale will take place next week at Darlington Raceway. Check out the Playoff Standings, and if you want to rewatch that exciting race finish, check out our race recording on the Crown Jewel Racing Network.
We will see you all next week for the Buc-ee’s Southern 500 for 367 laps at Darlington!