With only seven races remaining before the NASCAR Cup Series regular season comes to a close, every point has become more valuable than ever. That makes Sunday’s Quaker State 400 at EchoPark Speedway far more than just another race on the calendar.
For Team Penske, it could be the beginning of a late-season turnaround that the organization has become famous for over the years. Saturday’s qualifying session certainly offered plenty of encouragement.
Ryan Blaney bagged his second pole position of the 2026 season with a lap of 179.912 mph, narrowly edging teammate Joey Logano by just 0.016 seconds to secure a Team Penske front-row lockout.
Austin Cindric also advanced into the final qualifying round before settling for eighth, meaning all three Penske Fords displayed race-winning speed on one of NASCAR’s most unpredictable drafting tracks.
While Blaney has comfortably established himself among the championship favorites, sitting third in the standings, his teammates are fighting a very different battle.
Austin Cindric currently occupies 15th in the standings, only 27 points above the playoff cutline, while three-time champion Joey Logano remains outside the top 16 in 18th, just 16 points behind Erik Jones.
With merely seven opportunities left to change that picture, every strong run now carries enormous playoff implications.
That makes this situation unusual for Roger Penske’s organization.
Looking at Penske’s playoff history over the last two decades, consistency has almost become routine. Since NASCAR adopted the Chase format in 2004, Penske has rarely failed to place all of its primary entries into the postseason.
For example, between 2018 and 2025, every Penske driver reached the playoffs except for Joey Logano in 2017 and Austin Cindric in 2023.
Before that, Brad Keselowski, Ryan Newman, Kurt Busch and Joey Logano repeatedly carried the organization into NASCAR’s championship battle. Missing the playoffs has been the exception for the Penske team. That is why 2026 stands out for the team.
If the playoffs began today, Blaney would comfortably make the field, Cindric would barely sneak in, and Logano would miss entirely. According to the season simulations, Penske’s most likely outcome is finishing with only two playoff drivers.
Out of 10,000 simulated seasons, the organization ended up with two Chase participants nearly 60 percent of the time.
Even more concerning is that almost one in five simulations resulted in Penske fielding just a single driver in the postseason, while all three cars made it to the postseason only 22 percent of the time.
The biggest reason for that gap has been Ryan Blaney’s extraordinary form.
Meanwhile, Team Penske is fighting an internal battle. Blaney has absolutely dominated the head-to-head competition against his teammates this season, winning 81.6 percent of those matchups. By comparison, Joey Logano sits at just 42.1 percent while Austin Cindric has managed only 26.3 percent.
The numbers show one of the biggest performance gaps Penske has seen within its own garage in years.
Historically, Penske drivers usually operate much closer together. Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano and Blaney have all posted seasons hovering around the 50 to 60 percent mark against teammates.
Blaney’s current 81.6 percent is the strongest intra-team performance since Keselowski completely outclassed AJ Allmendinger and Sam Hornish Jr. back in 2012.
In fact, Blaney has been remarkably consistent compared to his teammates throughout the season. While Logano and Cindric have bounced between top-five finishes one week and results in the 30s the next, Blaney has steadily produced strong finishes almost every weekend.
That consistency explains why he currently owns seven consecutive top-10 finishes, the longest streak of his Cup Series career. Still, there are reasons for optimism inside Penske’s camp.
Both Logano and Cindric have quietly begun trending in the right direction over the past several races. Earlier in the season, both drivers experienced long stretches of finishes outside the top 25, dragging down their average results.
Recently, however, the trend line has begun to rise, showing a noticeable improvement in finishing positions. Their combined performance at Chicagoland produced one of Penske’s strongest weekends in months, and Saturday’s qualifying at EchoPark only reinforced that momentum.
For Logano especially, qualifying second may prove significant.
The three-time Cup champion has always excelled on drafting tracks, including two previous wins at EchoPark. Starting alongside Blaney will give him an opportunity to collect valuable stage points early while staying near the front, something he desperately needs with only seven races left to erase his 16-point deficit.
Austin Cindric also finds himself in a favorable position. Beginning eighth keeps him close enough to the leaders without exposing him to some of the chaos that often happens deeper in the field.
His primary objective will likely be protecting his narrow playoff cushion while capitalizing if trouble strikes drivers around him.
Meanwhile, several championship contenders begin Sunday’s race with unexpected challenges.
Despite Toyota dominating much of the 2026 season, not a single Toyota driver reached the final round of qualifying.
Championship leader Denny Hamlin starts 28th, Tyler Reddick rolls off 31st despite winning the spring race at EchoPark, Christopher Bell starts 32nd, Ty Gibbs lines up 23rd, Bubba Wallace 22nd, and Riley Herbst 29th.
Blaney, however, isn’t reading too much into Toyota’s disappointing qualifying effort.
He acknowledged that Toyotas have traditionally struggled over a single qualifying lap on drafting tracks but often become much stronger once the race begins.
Their ability to move through the draft and execute aggressive strategy has repeatedly turned poor starting positions into race-winning performances. In fact, Reddick did exactly that earlier this season by winning from outside the front rows.
Full qualifying results for the EchoPark Speedway race:
| Pos. | Driver | Behind | Lap Time | Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ryan Blaney | Leader | 30.815 | Team Penske |
| 2 | Joey Logano | -0.036 | 30.851 | Team Penske |
| 3 | Kyle Larson | -0.087 | 30.902 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 4 | Austin Dillon | -0.089 | 30.904 | Richard Childress Racing |
| 5 | Daniel Suárez | -0.095 | 30.910 | Spire Motorsports |
| 6 | Alex Bowman | -0.118 | 30.933 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 7 | Chase Elliott | -0.122 | 30.937 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 8 | Austin Cindric | -0.124 | 30.939 | Team Penske |
| 9 | Ross Chastain | -0.161 | 30.976 | Trackhouse Racing |
| 10 | Brad Keselowski | -0.204 | 31.019 | RFK Racing |
| 11 | Erik Jones | -0.212 | 31.027 | Legacy Motor Club |
| 12 | Shane van Gisbergen | -0.216 | 31.031 | Trackhouse Racing |
| 13 | Chris Buescher | -0.250 | 31.065 | RFK Racing |
| 14 | Carson Hocevar | -0.259 | 31.074 | Spire Motorsports |
| 15 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | -0.265 | 31.080 | Hyak Motorsports |
| 16 | Ty Dillon | -0.268 | 31.083 | Kaulig Racing |
| 17 | Josh Berry | -0.280 | 31.095 | Wood Brothers Racing |
| 18 | Michael McDowell | -0.285 | 31.100 | Spire Motorsports |
| 19 | Ryan Preece | -0.294 | 31.109 | RFK Racing |
| 20 | Chase Briscoe | -0.297 | 31.112 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 21 | Todd Gilliland | -0.304 | 31.119 | Front Row Motorsports |
| 22 | Bubba Wallace | -0.314 | 31.129 | 23XI Racing |
| 23 | Ty Gibbs | -0.334 | 31.149 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 24 | John Hunter Nemechek | -0.361 | 31.176 | Legacy Motor Club |
| 25 | Connor Zilisch | -0.384 | 31.199 | Trackhouse Racing |
| 26 | William Byron | -0.390 | 31.205 | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 27 | AJ Allmendinger | -0.397 | 31.212 | Kaulig Racing |
| 28 | Denny Hamlin | -0.443 | 31.258 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 29 | Riley Herbst | -0.453 | 31.268 | 23XI Racing |
| 30 | Austin Hill | -0.469 | 31.284 | Richard Childress Racing |
| 31 | Tyler Reddick | -0.491 | 31.306 | 23XI Racing |
| 32 | Christopher Bell | -0.504 | 31.319 | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 33 | Cole Custer | -0.508 | 31.323 | Haas Factory Team |
| 34 | Zane Smith | -0.516 | 31.331 | Front Row Motorsports |
| 35 | Cody Ware | -0.600 | 31.415 | Rick Ware Racing |
| 36 | Noah Gragson | -0.648 | 31.463 | Front Row Motorsports |
| 37 | BJ McLeod | -0.928 | 31.743 | Live Fast Motorsports |
| 38 | Chad Finchum | — | 30.815 | MBM Motorsports |
The EchoPark Speedway Track’s uncertainties
That uncertainty is exactly what makes EchoPark Speedway one of NASCAR’s most unpredictable venues.
Since its reconfiguration in 2022, the track has developed a reputation unlike almost any other on the schedule. Seven of the last eight races have featured the winning pass inside the final two laps, while four were decided on the final lap itself. Simply leading laps guarantees nothing here.
Crashes are equally common. Every race on the reconfigured layout has seen at least 16 cars involved in accidents, including one event in which an astonishing 36 drivers were caught up in incidents.
Even pit road presents its own challenge, with EchoPark’s unusually long pit lane producing more speeding penalties than any other track since its extension in 2023.
Yet despite all that chaos, Team Penske has quietly mastered this circuit.
No organization has led more laps at the reconfigured EchoPark than Penske’s 698, and its drivers have captured nine of the eighteen available stage victories. Ford has also won every qualifying session held at the reconfigured track, further emphasizing how well Penske unloads with speed.
The challenge has been finishing the job.
Although Ford has led more laps than any manufacturer at EchoPark, Chevrolet has converted more of those opportunities into victories. Clean air helps, but timing the final move often matters much more than leading the most laps.
That is exactly the dilemma Penske faces entering Sunday night.
The speed is finally returning. The front-row sweep proves it. Blaney continues performing like a championship contender, while Logano and Cindric appear to be climbing out of their early-season slump just as the playoff pressure reaches its peak.
But with a handful of races remaining, Penske’s traditional second-half surge needs to begin immediately. Otherwise, one of NASCAR’s most successful organizations could find itself sending fewer playoff drivers than its reputation suggests.