NASCAR hits Indianapolis Motor Speedway as Cup Series drivers take on the legendary 2.5-mile oval in the Brickyard 400.
Only three active Cup Series drivers have won the Brickyard 400, with Kyle Busch winning back-to-back in 2015 and 2016, Brad Keselowski taking the checkered flag in 2018, and Kyle Larson kissing the bricks last year.
Busch will be among the winless drivers hoping to use his experience in the Brickyard to capture his first victory of the 2025 season. Another driver who has high hopes for a great day in Indianapolis is Bubba Wallace, who has two top-five and three top-10 finishes in four Cup races on the IMS oval and would be the 16th and final driver to make the playoffs if the regular season ended today.
With just five races remaining before the 10-race playoffs begin, can a winless driver catapult himself into the Top 16? USA TODAY Sports will have full coverage of Sunday’s Brickyard 400. Follow along for the latest updates.
NASCAR: Reveals new street course race in San Diego for 2026
NASCAR at Indianapolis: Brickyard 400 start time, TV, streaming
- Date: Sunday, July 27
- Location: Indianapolis Motor Speedway
- Start time: 2 p.m. ET
- TV: TNT with an altcast on truTV
- Live stream: WatchTNT, Max and Sling TV
Stream the Brickyard 400 on Sling
Brickyard 400 leaderboard
Leaderboard as of the red flag on lap 156.
- (23) Bubba Wallace
- (5) Kyle Larson
- (24) William Byron
- (11) Denny Hamlin
- (21) Josh Berry
- (45) Tyler Reddick
- (19) Chase Briscoe
- (20) Christopher Bell
- (17) Chris Buescher
- (77) Carson Hocevar
- (6) Brad Keselowski
- (42) John Hunter Nemechek
- (60) Ryan Preece
- (48) Alex Bowman
- (38) Zane Smith
- (34) Todd Gilliland
- (7) Justin Haley
- (9) Chase Elliott
- (54) Ty Gibbs
- (2) Austin Cindric
- (88) Shane van Gisbergen
- (12) Ryan Blaney
- (78) Katherine Legge
- (41) Cole Custer
- (62) Jesse Love
- (16) AJ Allmendinger
- (8) Kyle Busch
- (22) Joey Logano
- (35) Riley Herbst
- (10) Ty Dillon
- (99) Daniel Suarez
- (71) Michael McDowell
- (4) Noah Gragson
- (66) Josh Bilicki
- (43) Erik Jones
- (47) Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
- (51) Cody Ware
- (3) Austin Dillon
- (1) Ross Chastain
Bubba Wallace holds on for victoy
The 23XI Racing driver earned his first win of the season by a slim margin over Kyle Larson.
White flag is out
Bubba Wallace leads Kyle Larson on the restart with low fuel and just one lap to go.
Zane Smith gets turned around, hits Tyler Reddick
The Front Row Motorsports driver took a tap from the rear from Christopher Bell, who was diving down to the inside, and turned up into the wall. Smith collected Tyler Reddick and took him out of contention as well. Caution flags are out again.
Overtime is underway
We’re back to green flag racing with Bubba Wallace and Kyle Larson leading the field into turn 1.
Race moved to yellow flags
The race will go to at least one overtime as the jet dryers continue around the track and the field circulates the track behind the safety car. The race will go to at least lap 164.
Race red-flagged
Organizers have thrown the red flag due to light rain that has hit one side of the track. Jet dryers are out as the grid holds on in pit road. Bubba Wallace will lead the field when this gets back to green flag running.
Caution flags come out
With six laps left in the race, organizers have thrown the caution flag for potential rain. Leader Bubba Wallace was on the radio arguing that the conditions are fine but drops could be seen on the broadcast on Ty Gibbs’ windshield.
Kyle Larson closing in on Bubba Wallace
Wallace is holding on to a four-second lead over Larson at the front with 11 laps to go. Larson is lapping faster than him but time is running out.
In-season challenge update
Ty Gibbs looks to have things all but wrapped up as Stage 3 winds down. He’s running 16th with his foe in the bracket, Ty Dillon, two laps down in 30th.
Logano loses effective lead with flat tire
The defending Cup Series champion was in prime position for the effective lead but lost his right rear tire on lap 135. Bubba Wallace leads as we’re down to 15 laps to go.
Ryan Blaney wins Stage 2
The Team Penske driver stayed at the front of a busy restart to take the stage win. Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin, William Byron and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five.
Green flag racing once again
Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski lead the field back up to speed on lap 97. Four laps to go in Stage 2.
Caution flag out for Erik Jones’ wheel
Jones lost a wheel after hitting pit road and brought out a caution flag on lap 91. Many of the frontrunners could pit under this caution flag with nine laps to go in Stage 2. Chase Briscoe leads over Tyler Reddick and Ryan Blaney.
Cindric loses lead because of flat tire
Cindric built a six-second lead over Joey Logano as drivers across the field pitted but his right rear tire gave out on lap 84. He’s dropping down the order as he makes his way to pit road.
Briscoe wins Stage 1
The Joe Gibbs Racing driver crossed the line ahead of Bubba Wallace and William Byron to earn his first stage win since Pocono. Stage 2 begins with 110 laps to go in this race.
Briscoe takes the lead again
Austin Cindric hits pit road on lap 43, ceding the lead to polesitter Chase Briscoe. He crucially got back up to speed on the lead lap with seven laps to go in Stage 1.
Cindric stretching out gap in front
The No. 2 Team Penske driver has built a four-second lead to Joey Logano in second ahead of Chase Briscoe in third. Both Cindric and Logano need to pit as their fuel ticks down to close Stage 1.
Back to green flag racing
We’re back up to speed on lap 23 with Austin Cindric in the lead after leader Briscoe went to pit road. Cindric leads Joey Logano in second.
Ross Chastain brings out caution flag
The No. 1 Trackhouse Racing driver kept to the inside against Michael McDowell to block him making a run. McDowell hit his left rear bumper and Chastain spun up and into the wall, bringing out the caution flag on lap 18.
Briscoe leads green flag running
Polesitter and hometown hero Chase Briscoe leads the opening laps of the Brickyard 400 over Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace.
Who is on the pole for the NASCAR Brickyard 400?
Chase Briscoe will start on the pole at his hometown track after the Indiana native topped Saturday’s qualifying. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver lead a parade of Toyota drivers as the manufacturer swept the top five qualifying spots. Bubba Wallace of 23XI Racing will start alongside Briscoe on the front row. Erik Jones and Tyler Reddick will line up on the second row, followed by Ty Gibbs and Chevrolet driver William Byron on Row No. 3.
STARTING GRID: Full lineup for the 2025 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis
Weather report for NASCAR Brickyard 400
It’s a cloudy but warm day in Speedway, Indiana for today’s Cup Series race. Accuweather forecasts predict temperatures will stay in the mid- to high-80s with humidity around 70%. There’s at least a 30% chance of rain for much of the afternoon with the highest chances clearing out before green flag racing.
What is the lineup for the Brickyard 400?
(Car number in parentheses)
- (19) Chase Briscoe, Toyota
- (23) Bubba Wallace, Toyota
- (43) Erik Jones, Toyota
- (45) Tyler Reddick, Toyota
- (54) Ty Gibbs, Toyota
- (24) William Byron, Chevrolet
- (17) Chris Buescher, Ford
- (77) Carson Hocevar, Chevrolet
- (16) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet
- (2) Austin Cindric, Ford
- (88) Shane Van Gisbergen, Chevrolet
- (8) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet
- (5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet
- (6) Brad Keselowski, Ford
- (22) Joey Logano, Ford
- (20) Christopher Bell, Toyota
- (21) Josh Berry, Ford
- (4) Noah Gragson, Ford
- (34) Todd Gilliland, Ford
- (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet
- (48) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet
- (71) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet
- (60) Ryan Preece, Ford
- (12) Ryan Blaney, Ford
- (35) Riley Herbst, Toyota
- (10) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet
- (38) Zane Smith, Ford
- (7) Justin Haley, Chevrolet
- (41) Cole Custer, Ford
- (9) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet
- (99) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet
- (47) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet
- (1) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet
- (51) Cody Ware, Ford
- (62) Jesse Love, Chevrolet
- (42) John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota
- (66) Josh Bilicki, Ford
- (78) Katherine Legge, Chevrolet
- (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota
How many laps is the NASCAR Cup race at Indianapolis?
The Brickyard 400 is 160 laps around the 2.5-mile track for a total of 400 miles. The race will have three segments (laps per stage) — Stage 1: 50 laps; Stage 2: 50 laps; Stage 3: 60 laps.
NASCAR In-Season Challenge final round matchup
It took over a month but we’re down to the final round of NASCAR’s inaugural in-season challenge. Thirty-two Cup Series competitors entered the tournament starting at Atlanta, and the field was subsequently cut down to 16 for Chicago, eight for Sonoma and four for Dover.
Our final two challengers share a goal and a first name. No. 32 seed Ty Dillon won the top half of the draw and No. 6 seed Ty Gibbs made it through the bottom half of the draw to contend for the $1 million prize.
Final round matchup
- No. 6 Ty Gibbs vs. No. 32 Ty Dillon
Who won the NASCAR Cup race at Indianapolis last year?
It took multiple overtimes, but Kyle Larson won the Brickyard 400 over Tyler Reddick last year. Two months after he failed to complete NASCAR-IndyCar double duty by attempting to race both the Coca-Cola 600 and Indy 500, Larson made it through a final yellow flag for a Ryan Preece crash to secure the win. A stellar fuel strategy made the difference on the day for the former Cup Series champion. Reddick, Ryan Blaney, Christopher Bell and Bubba Wallace rounded out the top five.
When was the first NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway?
NASCAR has raced at the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway since 1994 when Indiana native Jeff Gordon won the inaugural Brickyard 400. The Cup Series raced on the IMS oval every year from 1994 through 2020. Beginning in 2021, the series used the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for three years before switching back to the oval in 2024.
Which NASCAR driver has won the Brickyard 400 the most?
Indiana native Jeff Gordon is the king of the Brickyard, winning the race at his hometown track five times in his Hall of Fame career (1194, 1998, 2001, 2004 and 2014). His former Hendrick Motorsport teammate Jimmie Johnson ranks second for Brickyard 400 wins. The Hall of Famer and seven-time Cup Series champion won the Brickyard 400 in 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2012.
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.