feature-image

Imago

feature-image

Imago

Well, it has been almost four hours, and the Cook Out Clash race has not reached an end. What was meant to be a 200-lap warm-up exhibition race for the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season turned into an exhaustive exercise for drivers. After snowstorms pushed the race date from Sunday to Wednesday, rains did not let up. And in the middle of this chaos, NASCAR’s unrelenting green flag racing also befuddled the sport’s veterans.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

Calls mount against NASCAR race decision

“This is complete bullsh**. Like, you were meant to start the race full. These mother f***rs didn’t started the race full. So it’s their own problem they’re running out of fuel,” James Small, crew chief of the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, ranted on the radio, according to Jordan Bianchi on X.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kyle Larson, who was leading for a substantial chunk of the race, ran out of fuel within less than 50 laps. He began losing pace and could not get off the track as the caution came out. The same fate visited Chase Elliott. With around 34 laps to go, NASCAR made the decision to allow more teams to take fuel. That is how the chaotic circumstances began, leading to James Small’s frustration.

Chase Briscoe was in a tight battle with Ryan Preece when NASCAR rolled out its decision. So the call had a mixed impact for teams, whose fuel tanks varied in content. Bubba Wallace, who also did not face a fuel shortage, was left furious: “This is fucking comical! Seeing everyone scurry to put fuel in. Jessssssssssus Christ!”

ADVERTISEMENT

What this also displays is a lack of preparation. The NASCAR race was already delayed due to light snowfall and rain close to the halfway mark. Then, when the teams put on wet-weather tires and started racing, spins on the slippery track and random paint-trading unfolded in the close quarters of Bowman Gray, famously called the Madhouse. So a disorganized refueling strategy for teams left drivers and veterans scratching their heads further.

Close to the end of the race, Dirty Mo Media posted a jaw-dropping picture. It showed the stats of green flag racing – 165 laps, and red flag racing – 135 laps. Even veteran driver Mark Martin posted his frustration on X: “Damn man 🤯 You can never win a race without enough gas. I know this from firsthand experience.”

ADVERTISEMENT

News served to you like never before!

Prefer us on Google, To get latest news on feed

Google News feed preview
Google News feed preview

Clearly, it was a night of utter chaos and frustration for NASCAR drivers, although Ryan Preece emerged victorious. One driver with significant expectations also suffered due to the chaos.

Slipping after a good climb

Shane van Gisbergen had good expectations after a thumping 2025 season. The Kiwi speedster picked up 5 road course wins in a row last year – but nobody was expecting him to excel at the Clash race. The 0.250 mi paved oval short track at Bowman Gray Stadium was historically not in SVG’s strong points. However, the Trackhouse Racing driver excelled.

ADVERTISEMENT

SVG surged forward from 15th to the top ten with 60 laps left. Then, around lap 140, he passed Carson Hocevar to seize the lead. He maintained his dominant form until lap 166, when the No. 97 Chevy spun out after a tap from Chase Briscoe’s No. 19.

“That’s a shame,” Shane van Gisbergen radioed to his crew during the Lap 165 caution. “It was going well.” Despite being spun and pitting under yellow for a windscreen tear-off, van Gisbergen remained on the lead lap with 35 laps to go from 18th. He finished the race eventually in 20th place.

Besides SVG, a lot of drivers’ hopes were dashed due to the NASCAR Clash’s chaotic conditions. Let’s see if the sport can learn from the mistakes of this race.

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT