A massive fine left Chase Briscoe facing a huge points deficit heading into today’s NASCAR Cup Ambetter Health 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Even so, Briscoe insists he feels no new pressure. He says he already felt an urgency to win this week because those are the expectations at Joe Gibbs Racing, his new NASCAR home.

“I mean, I feel like I’m in a must-win situation just starting at JGR,” Briscoe said Saturday. “Like you need to be winning at JGR. ... So yeah, I don’t feel like it changes anything from that standpoint.”

Ryan Blaney won the pole Saturday for today’s race. Two other Team Penske drivers, Austin Cindric and Joey Logano, will start second and fourth, respectively.

“Hopefully the first stage you can control but it’s not going to stay that way the whole race,” Blaney said of the potential for the teammates to help each other.

Briscoe won the pole for last week’s Daytona 500 and then finished fourth before NASCAR announced on Wednesday its inspection found Briscoe used a modified spoiler on the No. 19 Toyota in time trials. Joe Gibbs Racing was docked 100 driver/owner points and 10 playoff points and fined $100,000. Also, crew chief James Small was suspended for four races.

Small is still coordinating Briscoe’s plan for today’s race as the team appeals the devastating penalties. Briscoe was left with negative 67 points and dropped from 10th to 39th in the standings.

“You know, if we don’t win the appeal, you’ve kind of used up your mulligans,” Briscoe said.

Briscoe acknowledged “I was bummed” on Wednesday before realizing he had to approach the Atlanta race with the same goal for his No. 19 Toyota.

William Byron surged from ninth on the final lap of overtime to win the Daytona 500, giving the Hendrick Motorsports driver a repeat win in the sport’s biggest race.

Daniel Suarez won in Atlanta last February, edging Blaney and Kyle Busch in Atlanta’s closest finish. Suarez beat Blaney by only 0.003 seconds, the narrowest margin at any 1.5-mile track.

Logano won Atlanta’s second race last year in the opener of the NASCAR playoffs.

Briscoe qualified 25th in his Toyota. Suarez will start 29th.

Josh Berry qualified third as Ford drivers earned 10 of the top 11 spots in the lineup. Kyle Busch qualified sixth in his Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing.

Hendrick drivers aim for 3 straight wins

Chase Elliott, who won in Atlanta, his home track, in 2022, opened this season by winning the Clash. Byron will start 16th, Kyle Larson will be 17th and Elliott 19th as Hendrick Motorsports drivers will be looking for a third straight win to launch the season.

The last year a team won the Clash and the first two points races was in 1997 when Hendrick Motorsports’ Jeff Gordon won the first three races.

Preece looking to stay grounded

Ryan Preece, who will start 11th, said “I feel fine” following a scary crash at Daytona in which his No. 60 Ford became airborne and flipped. It was the second time his car flipped at Daytona, following another terrifying crash in 2023 that left him with two black eyes the following week.

Preece had no black eyes Saturday but said he hopes he doesn’t have another similar scare.

“I joke with my wife that I’m like a cat with nine lives right now,” Preece said. “You don’t want to use all nine of them.”

New iron man

Martin Truex Jr., who retired from full-time racing after last season and finished 38th in the Daytona 500, will have his Cup Series-leading streak of consecutive starts end at 685, the sixth-longest all-time. The streak began at the 2006 Daytona 500.

Logano now holds the longest active start streak in the Cup. Atlanta is his 578th consecutive race.

Busch wins Trucks race in photo finish

NASCAR Cup regular Kyle Bush outdrove a bevy of challengers late to win in a wild finish in the Fr8Racing 208 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Despite several lead changes over the final 25 laps, Busch grabbed the lead and held off a last-ditch effort from Stewart Friesen on the last lap, winning in a photo finish.

“I kept trying to battle back to the front and control it as best I could,” said Busch, who led 80 laps.

Tyler Ankrum was third, followed by Bayley Currey and Chandler Smith.

Busch will now turn his attention to today’s Cup race, where he qualified sixth.

Hill dominates in Xfinity race win

Austin Hill won both stages and led 146 of 163 laps in a dominating win in the Bennett Transportation & Logistics 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Hill, who started second, never ran worse than fourth in the race to claim his first win of the season.

His victory comes a week after he was dominant at Daytona until a mechanical issue sidelined him.

Justin Allgaier finished second, followed by Aric Almirola, Sammy Smith and Nick Sanchez.