2023 Grant Park 220 Explained

Type:CUST
Description:Race 18 of 36 in the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series
Race Name:Grant Park 220
Details Ref:[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
Year:2023
Location:Chicago Street Course in Chicago, Illinois
Course:Temporary street course
Course Mi:2.2
Course Km:3.5
Distance Laps:78
Distance Mi:171.6
Distance Km:276.163
Scheduled Laps:100
Scheduled Mi:220
Scheduled Km:354.056
Avg:60.281mph
Pole Driver:Denny Hamlin
Pole Team:Joe Gibbs Racing
Pole Time:1:28.435
Most Driver:Christopher Bell
Most Team:Joe Gibbs Racing
Most Laps:37
Car:91
First Driver:Shane van Gisbergen
First Team:Trackhouse Racing
Network:NBC
Announcers:Rick Allen, Steve Letarte (booth), Mike Bagley (Turns 1 & 6), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (Turn 4) and Jeff Burton (Turn 11)
Ratings:2.52 (4.795 Million Viewers)
Radio:MRN
Booth Ann:Alex Hayden and Jeff Striegle
Turn Ann:Dave Moody (Turns 1 & 6) and Kurt Becker (Turns 2–5)

The 2023 Grant Park 220 was a NASCAR Cup Series race held on July 2, 2023, at the Chicago Street Course in Chicago, Illinois. Originally scheduled for 100 laps, the race was shortened to originally 75 laps due to darkness before being extended to 78 laps due to an overtime finish on the 2.2mile street course. It was the 18th race of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season. It was the first street race contested for the series.[9] The race was won by reigning Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen, making his NASCAR debut.

Report

Background

The Chicago Street Course is a street circuit located in the city of Chicago, Illinois, United States. It hosts the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series. The track was initially a conceptual track on iRacing made for the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series in 2021.

The track for the actual race in 2023 ended up being the exact same layout as the version used in 2021 for the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series. The start/finish line is located on South Columbus Drive in front of Buckingham Fountain in Grant Park. The cars will go south and then turn left onto East Balbo Drive and then right onto South Lake Shore Drive (also part of U.S. Route 41), which is alongside Lake Michigan. The cars will then turn right onto East Roosevelt Road and then make another right, which gets them back onto South Columbus Drive where they are going north. They will then reach the intersection of South Columbus Drive and East Balbo Drive again and will make a left turn. When they are back on East Balbo Drive, they will cross a bridge over the Metra Electric District tracks. Next, the cars will turn right onto South Michigan Avenue and go north, go onto East Congress Plaza Drive and back onto South Michigan Ave. Lastly, they will make a right turn onto East Jackson Drive, go back across the Metra Electric tracks, and right back onto South Columbus Drive to the start/finish line.[9]

Entry list

DriverTeamManufacturer
1 Chevrolet
2 Ford
3 Chevrolet
4 Ford
5 Chevrolet
6 Ford
7 Chevrolet
8 nowrapChevrolet
9 Chevrolet
10 Ford
11 Toyota
12 Ford
14 Ford
15 Ford
16 Chevrolet
17 Ford
19 Toyota
20 Toyota
21 Ford
22 Ford
23 Toyota
24 Chevrolet
31 Chevrolet
34 Ford
38 Ford
41 Ford
42 Noah Gragson (R) Chevrolet
43 Chevrolet
45 Toyota
47 Chevrolet
48 Chevrolet
51 Ford
54 Ty Gibbs (R) Toyota
77 Chevrolet
78 Josh Bilicki (i) Chevrolet
91 nowrapChevrolet
99 Chevrolet
Official entry list

Note: Jimmie Johnson was due to enter the race in the No. 84 Carvana Chevrolet for Legacy Motor Club, but the team withdrew from the race after his mother-in-law committed a double murder-suicide.[10]

Practice

Shane van Gisbergen was the fastest in the practice session with a time of 1:29.419 and a speed of 88.572mph.[11]

Practice results

PosDriverTeamManufacturerTime
191 1:29.419 88.572
211 1:29.732 88.263
315 1:29.734 88.261
Official practice results

Qualifying

Denny Hamlin scored the pole for the race with a time of and a 1:28.435 speed of 89.557mph.[12]

Qualifying results

PosDriverTeamManufacturer
111 Toyota 1:28.369 1:28.435
245 Toyota 1:29.372 1:28.479
391 Chevrolet 1:28.509 1:28.588
420 Toyota 1:28.963 1:29.224
599 Chevrolet 1:28.755 1:29.322
634 Ford 1:29.046 1:29.328
75 Chevrolet 1:29.289 1:29.512
815 Ford 1:29.420 1:29.571
922 Ford 1:29.242 1:30.219
1016 Chevrolet 1:29.488 1:30.283
1119 Toyota 1:29.404
1254 Ty Gibbs (R) Toyota 1:29.613
1348 Chevrolet 1:29.617
1423 Toyota 1:29.667
1517 Ford 1:29.687
1614 Ford 1:29.687
1712 Ford 1:29.756
188 Chevrolet 1:29.805
197 Chevrolet 1:29.859
206 Ford 1:29.878
2143 Chevrolet 1:30.046
2224 Chevrolet 1:30.169
2342 Noah Gragson (R) Chevrolet 1:30.225
2410 Ford 1:30.232
2538 Ford 1:30.235
269 Chevrolet 1:30.283
2778 Josh Bilicki (i) Chevrolet 1:30.331
2841 Ford 1:30.408
293 Chevrolet 1:30.521
3051 Ford 1:30.575
312 Ford 1:30.718
3221 Ford 1:30.759
3377 Chevrolet 1:30.799
341 Chevrolet 1:30.856
354 Ford 1:30.980
3647 Chevrolet 0.000
3731 Chevrolet 0.000
Official qualifying results

Race

Report

The NASCAR Cup in Chicago started in wet conditions after a delay of over an hour due to rain. Denny Hamlin started in the pole position on the starting grid.

Tyler Reddick made a move on Hamlin in a turn 1 and they were side by side for the next four turns before Reddick took the lead of the race.

Several incidents occurred in the first three laps. In the first lap, Aric Almirola lost control of his car and spun out, causing him to lose positions and struggle to stay in the race. Shortly after, in turn 6, a massive collision involving the two Legacy Motor Club cars and Brad Keselowski occurred. Meanwhile, Hamlin, one of the prominent drivers in the competition, crashed into the wall, slightly damaging his car.

On the other hand, Reddick managed to establish a five-second lead over his competitors in the following three laps. However, the lead faded away when Kyle Busch, who ended up under a tire barrier after losing control of his car in a turn, caused the first yellow flag.

The race restarted on lap 5, but Reddick couldn't pull away from Christopher Bell as before. In fact, on lap 8, Bell overtook him to take the first position.

The second yellow flag was shown on lap 12 after Noah Gragson crashed heavily into the tire barriers in turn 6, with significant damage and smoke coming out of the car.

The first stage ended with Bell winning it and earning 10 points. The top 10 was completed by Reddick, Shane van Gisbergen, Martin Truex Jr., Michael McDowell, Daniel Suárez, Kyle Larson, A.J. Allmendinger, Ty Gibbs, and Jenson Button, who also received stage points. The track started to dry, and Chase Briscoe and Alex Bowman took advantage of lap 21 to enter the pits and put on slick tires, becoming the first ones to do so.

Van Gisbergen surpassed Reddick to take the second position and closed in on the leader Bell, although he was still two seconds behind.

The leaders started making pit stops to switch to slick tires. Bell and Reddick did so on lap 25, and van Gisbergen on lap 26. There were no changes in the top three positions.

Bell led with a 9-second advantage over the second-place driver when Gragson crashed again in turn 6 on lap 30, triggering the third yellow flag.

The race restarted on lap 33, with Bell leading and widening the gap with van Gisbergen, who was also overtaken by Reddick for the second position. Suárez and Larson moved up to fourth and fifth, surpassing Truex. Later, Larson climbed to fourth place by passing Suárez and to third place by overtaking van Gisbergen, who also lost position to Suárez.

Larson continued his progress and on lap 38, he moved into second place by overtaking Reddick. Only Bell remained ahead, leading by over 3 seconds.

Alex Bowman spun out in turn 11 on lap 40, due to contact with Denny Hamlin, causing the fourth yellow flag.

The race restarted on lap 43, with 2 laps remaining in the second stage. Suárez went wide in turn 1, hit the wall, and was overtaken by van Gisbergen, McDowell, and Gibbs. Larson went after Bell for the lead, but Stage 2 ended under yellow with Alex Bowman stopped alongside the track due to engine problems.

The second stage concluded with Bell in first place, followed by Larson, Reddick, van Gisbergen, McDowell, Gibbs, Suárez, Truex Jr., Allmendinger, and Chase Briscoe, who completed the top 10.

Due to the impending sunset and lack of natural light, NASCAR decided to shorten the race from 100 to 75 laps, which would create interesting strategies.

There were massive pit stops on lap 47. Bell came out first, followed by Larson and Reddick. Gibbs gained two positions to place himself in fourth, while van Gisbergen lost three positions and ended up in seventh.

The drivers who made their pit stops earlier occupied the top positions. The top three (Justin Haley, Austin Dillon, and Chase Elliott) made their stops on lap 30 and hoped for yellow flags to make it to the end with enough fuel. The next eight drivers made their stops on lap 41, which allowed them to gain positions relative to the leaders. Among those who stopped on lap 46, the best was Bell, who restarted in 12th position.

The race restarted on lap 49, with Haley maintaining the lead. William Byron went wide in turn 11, and Corey LaJoie hit Kevin Harvick, blocking the track and causing a traffic jam. Interestingly, Byron, Harvick, and LaJoie gave back their positions.

There was a restart on lap 52, with Haley still in the lead. Martin Truex Jr. spun out in turn 5 due to contact with Bubba Wallace but was able to continue, although he lost positions. Meanwhile, Suárez hit the wall and suffered damage to the front left, but remained on the track, losing positions. Gragson crashed into the wall in turn 6 for the fourth time in the race, and Bell spun out and hit the tire barrier in turn 1, losing all chances of making a comeback and winning the race.

Reddick, the best among the drivers who made their pit stop on lap 46, entered the top 5, but with 18 laps remaining, he crashed in turn 6 and couldn't continue, causing the seventh yellow flag.

The race restarted with 15 laps to go, with Austin Dillon pressuring Haley more than in previous restarts, but a lap later, Dillon crashed into the inner wall of turn 12 and then hit the outer wall. He reached the end of the main straight, reversed, and headed to the pits.

Van Gisbergen reached the third position with 10 laps to go, surpassing Kyle Busch, and began reducing the gap to Haley and Elliott, being the fastest driver at that moment. He managed to pass Elliott in turn 2 with 8 laps to go, and a few turns later, he attempted to overtake Haley, but Truex crashed and caused the yellow flag. Van Gisbergen passed him seconds after the yellow flag, so he returned the position to Haley.

There was a restart with 5 laps to go, with Haley leading into the first turn, but in the next turn, van Gisbergen overtook him and took the lead. Haley tried to pass him in turn 3, but van Gisbergen overtook him again in turn 4.

With two laps remaining, Wallace lost control of his car and collided with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in turn 1, causing the yellow flag. Van Gisbergen expressed concern about his engine, but the team told him that the data was fine. Van Gisbergen acknowledged that he was being paranoid.

An overtime was attempted, and van Gisbergen had a good start and managed his lead to cross the finish line and win for the first time in the category in his debut. Shane van Gisbergen was the second driver in Cup Series history to win in his debut joining Johnny Rutherford who did it in 1963 at Daytona.

Race results

Stage results

Stage OneLaps: 20

PosDriverTeamManufacturerPoints
1 20 Christopher Bell Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 10
2 45 Tyler Reddick 23XI Racing Toyota 9
3 91 Shane van Gisbergen Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 8
4 19 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 7
5 34 Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports Ford 6
6 99 Daniel Suárez Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 5
7 5 Kyle Larson Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 4
8 16 A. J. Allmendinger Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 3
9 54 Ty Gibbs (R) Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 2
10 15 Jenson Button Rick Ware Racing Ford 1
Official stage one results
Stage TwoLaps: 25
PosDriverTeamManufacturerPoints
1 20 Christopher Bell Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 10
2 5 Kyle Larson Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 9
3 45 Tyler Reddick 23XI Racing Toyota 8
4 91 Shane van Gisbergen Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 7
5 34 Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports Ford 6
6 54 Ty Gibbs (R) Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 5
7 99 Daniel Suárez Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 4
8 19 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 3
9 16 A. J. Allmendinger Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 2
10 14 Chase Briscoe Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 1
Official stage two results

Final Stage results

Stage ThreeLaps: 30

PosGridDriverTeamManufacturerLapsPoints
1 3 91 Shane van Gisbergen Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 78 55
2 37 31 Justin Haley Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 78 35
3 26 9 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 78 34
4 7 5 Kyle Larson Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 78 46
5 18 8 Kyle Busch Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet 78 32
6 31 2 Austin Cindric Team Penske Ford 78 31
7 6 34 Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports Ford 78 42
8 9 22 Joey Logano Team Penske Ford 78 29
9 12 54 Ty Gibbs (R) Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 78 35
10 15 17 Chris Buescher RFK Racing Ford 78 27
11 1 11 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 78 26
12 24 10 Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 78 25
13 22 24 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 78 24
14 19 7 Corey LaJoie Spire Motorsports Chevrolet 78 23
15 28 41 Ryan Preece Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 78 22
16 21 43 Erik Jones Legacy Motor Club Chevrolet 78 21
17 10 16 A. J. Allmendinger Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 78 25
18 4 20 Christopher Bell Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 78 39
19 25 38 Todd Gilliland Front Row Motorsports Ford 78 18
20 16 14 Chase Briscoe Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 78 18
21 8 15 Jenson Button Rick Ware Racing Ford 78 17
22 34 1 Ross Chastain Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 78 15
23 27 78 Josh Bilicki (i) Live Fast Motorsports Chevrolet 78 0
24 20 6 Brad Keselowski RFK Racing Ford 78 13
25 23 42 Noah Gragson (R) Legacy Motor Club Chevrolet 78 12
26 30 51 Andy Lally Rick Ware Racing Ford 78 11
27 5 99 Daniel Suárez Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet 78 19
28 2 45 Tyler Reddick 23XI Racing Toyota 78 26
29 35 4 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 78 8
30 32 21 Harrison Burton Wood Brothers Racing Ford 78 7
31 14 23 Bubba Wallace 23XI Racing Toyota 78 6
32 11 19 Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota 77 15
33 17 12 Ryan Blaney Team Penske Ford 77 4
34 36 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet 77 3
35 33 77 Ty Dillon Spire Motorsports Chevrolet 67 2
36 29 3 Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet 62 1
37 13 48 Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 40 1
Official race results

Race statistics

Media

Television

NBC Sports covered the race on the television side, as part of a radio style broadcast for the race. Rick Allen and Steve Letarte called the race from the broadcast booth. MRN broadcaster Mike Bagley called the race from Turns 1 and 6 on South Columbus Drive and East Balbo Drive, Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the call from Turn 4 on DuSable Lake Shore Drive and Roosevelt Road, and Jeff Burton had the call on Turn 11 on South Michigan Avenue and East Jackson Drive. Dave Burns, Kim Coon, Parker Kligerman and Marty Snider handled the pit road duties from pit lane.

Radio

Radio coverage of the race was broadcast by Motor Racing Network (MRN) and was simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.

Standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1Martin Truex Jr.591
2William Byron582 (–9)
3Ross Chastain573 (–18)
4Christopher Bell570 (–21)
5Kyle Busch560 (–31)
16Denny Hamlin538 (–53)
17Kevin Harvick523 (–68)
18Kyle Larson521 (–70)
19Ryan Blaney506 (–85)
10Joey Logano491 (–100)
111Chris Buescher476 (–115)
112Tyler Reddick463 (–128)
213Brad Keselowski463 (–128)
14Ricky Stenhouse Jr.418 (–173)
15Bubba Wallace387 (–204)
216Ty Gibbs378 (–213)
Official driver's standings
Manufacturers' Championship standings
PosManufacturerPoints
1Chevrolet682
2Toyota626 (–56)
3Ford603 (–79)
. – Driver has clinched a position in the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023 schedule . Jayski.com. . October 10, 2022.
  2. News: NASCAR releases 2023 Cup Series schedule highlighted by new Chicago, All-Star race stops . Taranto, Steven . September 14, 2022 . March 29, 2023 . CBS Broadcasting Inc.
  3. News: NASCAR unveils 2023 schedule for its national series . September 14, 2022 . March 29, 2023 . National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC.
  4. Web site: Entry List. Jayski.com. Jayski's Silly Season Site. June 26, 2023. June 26, 2023.
  5. Web site: Practice Results. NASCAR.com. NASCAR Media Group, LLC.. July 1, 2023. July 1, 2023.
  6. Web site: Qualifying Results. NASCAR.com. NASCAR Media Group, LLC.. July 1, 2023. July 1, 2023.
  7. Web site: Grant Park 220 Results. NASCAR.com. NASCAR. July 2, 2023. July 2, 2023.
  8. Web site: Points standings. Jayski.com. Jayski's Silly Season Site. July 2, 2023. July 2, 2023.
  9. Web site: Chicago to host first-ever NASCAR Cup Series street race in 2023 . NASCAR.com . NASCAR Digital Media, LLC . July 19, 2022 . May 26, 2023.
  10. News: Jimmie Johnson, Legacy Motor Club withdraw No. 84 entry from Chicago . June 27, 2023 . NASCAR.com . June 27, 2023 . JimmieChicago.
  11. Web site: Utter. Jim. Van Gisbergen leads Hamlin and Button in Chicago Cup practice. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. July 1, 2023. Chicago, Illinois. July 1, 2023.
  12. Web site: Utter. Jim. Hamlin snags Chicago Cup pole ahead of Reddick and Van Gisbergen. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. July 1, 2023. Chicago, Illinois. July 1, 2023.