Neil Paine writes about sports using data and analytics. Previously, he was Sports Editor at FiveThirtyEight.
Starting at next weekend’s Quaker State 400 in Atlanta, the NASCAR Cup Series will be following the lead of other sports leagues — from European soccer to the NBA — by launching its own in-season tournament to spice up the regular-season schedule.
Seeding for the inaugural In-Season Challenge came from a three-race stretch (Michigan, Mexico City and Pocono), using a mix of highest finishes and points earned. Now, 32 drivers are locked into one big single-elimination bracket, ready to square off head-to-head until one is crowned champion — and handed a $1 million check.
Whether you’re a weekly watcher or a casual fan, this guide will help you get up to speed on the bracket, the favorites and long shots, and the winners or losers of the seeding process. To help us along the way, we also dusted off a retooled version of my Cup Series playoffs forecast model, which uses each driver’s track type-specific projected ratings to simulate the tournament 2,000 times and estimate each driver’s odds of advancing.
Here are the current favorites:
With the bracket and odds in hand, let’s take a closer look at how the field shapes up:
The favorites
Despite being seeded just 18th in the wake of uncharacteristically low finishes in two of three qualifying races, William Byron has been the best driver in Cup racing this season — he’s No. 1 in the standings and in average Driver Rating — and that makes him the biggest threat to win here.
The two-time defending Daytona 500 winner will get a favorable first-round matchup against Ryan Preece (a good but not great superspeedway guy), potentially be slotted against much less consistent road course drivers in both Round 2 (Chase Briscoe) and Round 3 (Kyle Larson), and would face a lesser oval driver (Chris Buescher) in the Championship 4 if things came down to that. Byron ought to be favored at each step until the championship.
Of course, chaos reigns at drafting-style tracks, so being the favorite is hardly a guarantee, right from the get-go. If we look deeper into the field, 5% or better odds also belong to Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin, Chase Elliott, Briscoe, Buescher and Larson. (Plus Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano if we want to round the percentages up to the nearest whole number.) Of those, No. 1 Hamlin and No. 5 Elliott have the best chances to make the Sweet 16, having drawn lopsided first-round matchups with the Dillon Bros. — No. 32 Ty and No. 28 Austin, respectively.
Elliott also has the best chance to make the Elite 8, as he would face either John Hunter Nemechek or Josh Berry, neither of whom is good on road courses, in Round 2.
The Cinderellas
If we consider Byron a “Cinderella” by virtue of his bottom-half seed number, he has by far the best odds to make and/or win the championship round of any driver in that category. But it feels odd to call the No. 1 ranked driver in standings a long shot.
Similarly, Logano and Tyler Reddick have the next-best odds of that group, but the former is the defending Cup Series champ and the latter was in last year’s Championship 4; neither would really shock with a deep run, even though Reddick would have to go through Larson and then (most likely) Blaney right away.
Conversely, could we consider Ty Gibbs a sleeper pick? He’s 23rd in the main standings… but he’s also the No. 6 seed in the In-Season Challenge bracket, and his performance has been ticking up lately (after we graded his season a “D+” at the All-Star race last month). Winnable matchups with No. 27 Justin Haley and No. 11 Michael McDowell could very well land Gibbs in the Round of 8, which would feel both expected (given his seed) and surprising (given his level of performance during the season to date).
If we limit things to drivers who are currently 15th or lower in both the Challenge seeding and the regular standings, four drivers have a 10% chance or better to win at least two rounds: No. 19 Austin Cindric, No. 22 A.J. Allmendinger, No. 16 Kyle Busch and No. 17 Brad Keselowski. All are known as aces at either drafting-type tracks or road courses (or in the case of Cindric, both), and those tracks make up each of the first three races in this tournament.
Longtime championship rivals Busch and Keselowski can’t both make deep runs — they face each other in Round 1 — but the winner would likely catch Hamlin at a road course (where he hasn’t been elite during the Next Gen car era), while Cindric and Allmendinger would be on a potential collision course at Sonoma in the Round of 8.
The spoilers
Sometimes it’s not about winning the title as much as it’s about being a thorn in the side of the favorites. In this bracket, that might be the case for Keselowski, Reddick, Erik Jones and Carson Hocevar — each of whom has at least a 44% chance to knock off drivers who are both better-seeded here and more highly ranked in the 2025 Cup standings.
We already mentioned Brad K’s battle with Busch (that one’s a virtual toss-up between seeds 16-17), but Reddick is a solid plate racer with a real chance to end Larson’s run immediately, while there’s a roughly 50% chance that either Jones or Hocevar upset Ross Chastain or Blaney, respectively, and nearly a 21% chance that both move on.
Looking further ahead, we could see Logano giving trouble to No. 9 Bubba Wallace in the second round if Joey survives Alex Bowman in Round 1, as Bubba is not a strong road course driver. Also, McDowell would nearly be a coin-flip to defeat Gibbs in a Round 2 fight between drivers who have shown an aptitude for making left and right turns during their careers.
And if we ignore the seeds for a moment, Briscoe does have the potential to turn Byron from the favorite to an afterthought if he gets a good run on the streets of Chicago. Briscoe ran well with a 96.3 Driver Rating at the last road course race, at Mexico City a few weeks ago.
The tough draws
In contrast with the spoilers, some good drivers just landed in a bad spot thanks to the seeding formula. Preece might be exhibit A — he’s been having a breakout season, but he ended up in the No. 15 slot while Byron’s 27th-place finish at Pocono dropped him to No. 18, directly in Preece’s path. The underdog could still win, since Atlanta is a comparatively chaotic track now, but it’s a rough thing to start the In-Season Challenge off against the standings leader.
Bowman fits that mold as well: He’s seeded eighth, which matches with the No. 25 in a 32-driver bracket. But unfortunately for him, that means facing Logano at a place where Joey won in last year’s playoffs and is always a threat. If Bowman wins, he would get his own favorable draw against No. 9 Wallace as a much better road course driver in Round 2, but he has to get through Round 1 first.
Then there’s just the way the seeds can lie about the relative quality of the drivers. Zane Smith is seeded 14th, but he would be an underdog most anywhere against No. 19 Cindric — particularly at Atlanta, where Cindric had a streak of five straight races finishing 12th or better from 2022-2024. Similarly, No. 12 Nemechek got No. 21 Berry in Round 1, a seeding anomaly that isn’t really reflective of how they’ve been doing all season long.
And while they’re all still favorites to advance past Round 1, the trio of Chastain, Blaney and Larson may not have it as easy as we might think at a glance. For Ross, that’s because drafting tracks are a clear weakness in his driving portfolio, setting him up on comparatively shaky ground right away in his matchup against Jones.
And for Blaney and Larson, their respective first-round opponents — Hocevar and Reddick — are tougher than the rest of the Top 10 (save for Bowman) have to face. Not only that, but even if both favorites win, Blaney and Larson will then have to face each other in Round 2, quite possibly for the right to face Byron in Round 3.
And maybe that’s the point. In this format, even the big names aren’t guaranteed more than a single race in contention before the bracket starts scrambling everything up. With its chaotic seeding and track types, as well as the inherent unpredictability of single-elimination racing, this new In-Season Challenge promises to be as wild and experimental as anything NASCAR has tried in years — which is really saying something for this sport.
Judge led the major leagues with 4,012,983 votes in the first round of fan balloting, and the outfielder was picked for his seventh American League start in eight All-Star Games, though he missed the 2023 game because of a sprained right big toe. He was also the leading vote-getter during the first phase in 2022 and last year.
Ohtani topped the National League and was second in the big leagues with 3,967,668 votes, becoming the first designated hitter to start in five straight All-Star Games.
The pair was selected under rules that began in 2022 and give starting spots to the top vote-getter in each league in the first phase of online voting, which began June 4 and ended Thursday. Two finalists at every other position advanced to the second phase, which runs from noon ET on Monday to noon ET on July 2. Votes from the first phase do not carry over.
An individual can vote once per 24-hour period.
Remaining starters will be announced July 2. Pitchers and reserves will be revealed July 6.
SAN FRANCISCO — Barry Bonds will be getting a statue outside the San Francisco Giants‘ home stadium where he set baseball’s career home run record, the team’s CEO said Thursday.
Larry Baer, Giants president and chief executive officer, was asked during a radio interview about a statue for Bonds, and he responded that it was “on the radar.” But Baer didn’t have any details of when it would happen.
“Barry is certainly deserving of a statue, and I would say should be next up,” Baer said during an appearance on San Francisco’s 95.7 The Game. “We don’t have the exact location and the exact date and the exact timing. … It’s coming. All I can say is it’s coming.”
Bonds played for San Francisco the last 15 of his 22 big league seasons, hitting 586 of his 762 homers while with the Giants from 1993 to 2007. He set the single-season MLB record with 73 homers in 2001, and hit his record-breaking 756th homer to pass Hank Aaron in a home game off Washington’s Mike Bacsik on Aug. 7, 2007.
There are currently five statues outside Oracle Park, those of Hall of Famers Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, Juan Marichal, Gaylord Perry and Orlando Cepeda. The Giants retired Bonds’ No. 25 jersey in 2018.
Bonds, a seven-time MVP and 14-time All-Star, is not in the Hall of Fame. He failed to reach the 75% threshold required during his 10 years on the Baseball Writers Association of America’s Hall of Fame ballot, mostly because of steroids allegations that dogged him during his final years with the Giants. The Contemporary Player Committee also passed on electing Bonds in 2022, though the committee could reconsider Bonds’ status.
Kershaw has 2,997 strikeouts in his 18-year career, three short of becoming the 20th major leaguer to reach the milestone.
Kershaw’s next scheduled start is expected at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday against the Chicago White Sox.
“I knew I had eight to go,” Kershaw said. “Eight in Colorado is never going to be easy to do. I felt good. But pitched well, got through six. A chance to strike out three at home would be really cool.”
The 37-year-old will be the third active pitcher to reach the mark behind Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer. Verlander, in his 20th season, has 3,468 strikeouts. Scherzer has 3,412 in 18 seasons.
“He’s certainly competing, making pitches,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I think he has gotten better each time out, even with not the best of stuff. He just found a way to be efficient.”
Kershaw struck out three in the first two innings Thursday and got his fourth for the final out of the fifth. He struck out Tyler Freeman for the second out of the sixth inning and left the game after retiring the next batter. Kershaw threw 69 pitches, 41 for strikes.
“You always want to be efficient, no matter what,” Kershaw said. “My days of throwing 115 pitches is probably over. Getting through six is probably the biggest thing at Coors Field.
“Doc [Roberts] is doing a good job of protecting me, which I appreciate. I just want to be able to go back out there every fifth, sixth day. Whatever that means is good for now.”
Kershaw recorded two strikeouts on his 73 mph curve and got three more on sliders against a Rockies lineup that had all right-handed batters. He earned his fourth straight win and helped the Dodgers finish a three-game sweep with a 3-1 victory.
The three-time National League Cy Young Award winner and 10-time All-Star received plenty of crowd support in Colorado, getting a standing ovation from some in the Coors Field crowd when he left the mound after the sixth inning.
Kershaw has made eight starts this season after being activated from the injured list May 17 following offseason left knee and foot surgeries. His ERA dropped to a season-low 3.03 after Thursday’s game.
“He has given us a shot in the arm,” Roberts said. “We’re sort of ailing on the starting pitching side. Coming in and giving us valuable innings, I just love that kind of edge that he gives on start day. We certainly feed off that.”