The ten closest finishes of the 2024 NASCAR season..

The ten closest finishes of the 2024 NASCAR season..

NASCAR is known for its nail-biting finishes, and this year was one for the history books.

All three national divisions — Truck, Xfinity, and Cup — had races come down to a winner crossing the line just a few thousandths of a second ahead of their competitor.

Now, this list is usually dominated by drafting tracks, and while they do make up about half of this year’s top ten highlight, but it was a popular 1.5-mile oval that topped this list. It’s actually the first time since 2017 that a track other than a drafting track has claimed the No.

1 spot. But before we highlight the closest finish ever, we have a few more to get to first.10. Xfinity at Talladega – Jesse Love vs. Riley Herbst – 0.141s

Note: A Truck race at Bristol also featured a 0.141s margin of victory, but we chose ‘Dega as it was the more dramatic of the two finishes

The 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series rookie of the year, Jesse Love, claimed his one and only victory of the season at Talladega. While he powered ahead of Brennan Poole, Riley Herbst charged from outside the top-five and snagged second place with a four-wide move up the middle. While those two squabbled over the first loser, Love was left to capture the checkered flag.9. Trucks at Texas – Kyle Busch vs. Corey Heim – 0.112s

No one thought this would be the last time we saw Kyle Busch in Victory Lane this year, but that would be his fate.

No driver has more wins than KB in Xfinity or Trucks, and he collected his 66th victory in the Trucks earlier this year at Texas. Though Corey Heim nearly got alongside Busch after harassing him for a few laps, he just couldn’t quite get there in the end.

8. Xfinity at Atlanta – Austin Hill vs. Chandler Smith – 0.106s

 

Cars were running out of fuel all over the place in NASCAR overtime, but not Austin Hill. He charged from fourth to first and held off Chandler Smith with oval rookie Shane van Gisbergen in tow.

Despite the chaos of the finish, it was still expected that Hill would pull it off, as he usually does at the reconfigured Atlanta.

The driver of the No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet has won four of the last five races there, and remains one of the best pack racers in the lower leagues of the sport.

7. Cup at Nashville – Joey Logano vs. Zane Smith – 0.068s

 

This is perhaps the single most significant finish of the entire season. Without it, Joey Logano does not go on to become a three-time Cup Series Champion.

It’s another race where fuel became a critical issue for most of the field, and the Team Penske star stretched the fuel to make it last for his only win in the regular season.

Perhaps just as impressive was the driver who nearly denied him — Zane Smith, who was within a tenth of a second of pulling off a stunning upset that would have shocked the NASCAR world.

But as fate would have it, Logano won the race and the championship, while Smith remains winless and yet to secure a seat for 2025.

6. Cup at Daytona – Harrison Burton vs. Kyle Busch – 0.046s

 

While Smith failed to pull off a Cinderella story for the ages, Harrison Burton was able to land that glass slipper in the iconic Wood Brothers No. 21. With a push from Parker Retzlaff, who was aiming to write his own underdog story, Burton cleared Busch and blocked hard in the run to the finish, hanging on to win for the first time in his Cup career while his father Jeff watched on from the NBC booth.

  • It was just as special for the Wood Brothers, collecting their 100th victory and their first since the 2017 season.

4. Cup at Talladega – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. vs. Brad Keselowski – 0.006s

 

It was a three-wide photo finish at Talladega in the fall but shockingly, it wasn’t even the closest three-wide photo finish of the year! After a difficult season, Ricky Stenhouse Jr was trying to spoil the playoff party in the Round of 12. Brad Keselowski was clear of him exiting Turn 4, and chose not to block. Both had Hendrick drivers pushing them, but Stenhouse had the bigger run in the final seconds of the race. He surged ahead, keeping his edge even as his pusher William Byron threw it to the far outside to make it three-wide at the line. It was a big win for one of the few single-car operations left in the sport with Stenhouse collecting his fourth career Cup win — all of those on superspeedways.

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