Aric Almirola wins Bristol Xfinity playoff opener on bold strategy
Last updated: September 13, 2025 | 09:43
Sam Mayer, driver of the #41 Audibel Ford, and Aric Almirola, driver of the #19 Young Life Toyota, race during the NASCAR Xfinity Series Food City 300 at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee, on Friday. AFP
Benefitting from a split-second late race strategy decision, veteran Aric Almirola held off a mightily-motivated field to claim the win in Friday night's Food City 300 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff opener at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.
While running second to the series' championship leader Connor Zilisch when a caution flag flew with 36 laps remaining, Almirola watched Zilisch pull onto pit road for fresh tires and instead of following him into the pits as his crew expected, Almirola abruptly pulled his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota back on track at the last moment.
He then had to out-run, out-maneuver and out-last the competition -- several on fresher tires -- in the closing laps to claim his second victory of the season and ninth of his career. A former fulltime NASCAR Cup Series driver who is now competing part-time in the Xfinity Series with Gibbs, Almirola ultimately beat Haas Factory Team driver Sheldon Creed to the checkered flag by .381-seconds -- marking a series record 15th runner-up finish for Creed, who is still racing for his first career win.
"Just tired of getting beat by those guys, I figured I'd try my chances with the lead," Almirola said of his race-winning pit strategy decision. "They've been so fast and they fire off so fast on new tires and I just didn't think I could beat them straight up on new tires. It took me about 20 laps to get going so I thought my best chance was to stay out on old tires.
Aric Almirola celebrates in victory lane. AFP
Creed passed his Haas Factory Team teammate Sam Mayer with a lap remaining but was unable to catch up to Almirola. JR Motorsports driver Carson Kvapil finished fourth followed by his teammate Zilisch, who was trying to become the first driver in series history to win five consecutive races.
Zilisch's fifth-place finish, however still resulted in a series record giving him 15 consecutive top-five showings. He has a series best nine victories on the season and maintains a 32-point advantage over another JR Motorsports teammate, Friday's race pole sitter and reigning series champion Justin Allgaier, who finished sixth and earned a series best 11th stage win.
Harrison Burton, Christian Eckes, Jeremy Clements and Brennan Poole rounded out a top-10 that included three rookies. The top seven finishers were all Playoff drivers. Ten of the 12 Playoff competitors finished 14th or higher.
Sammy Smith, who went into the race ranked sixth in the Playoff standings took the biggest championship hit of the night. He suffered an early problem with his No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet and had to retire to the garage only 55 laps into the race with an engine issue. He's now ranked 12th -- last among the Playoff contenders; 24 points below the cutoff line with two races remaining in this opening round.
Beyond Zilisch and Allgaier, Mayer is now 50 points off the lead and Kvapil is 69 back. Burton, in fifth place, is now separated from 10th place Taylor Gray by only six points.
Aric Almirola celebrates with a burnout after winning. AFP
Richard Childress Racing's Jesse Love and rookie Nick Sanchez are the first drivers below the cutoff line -- both three points behind Gray. Love's veteran teammate Austin Hill is 16 points back with Smith dropping into that 12th slot after round one of the seven race title run.
The series holds its second of the three opening round Playoff races on Sept. 27 at Kansas Speedway (4 p.m. ET on USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Almirola is the defending race winner.
NASCAR Xfinity Series Race -- Food City 300 Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tennessee Friday, September 12, 2025