RECAP: Corey Day Grabs Another NASCAR O’Reilly Series Victory at Dover

DOVER, DELAWARE – MAY 16: Corey Day, driver of the #17 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series BetRivers 200 at Dover Motor Speedway on May 16, 2026, in Dover, Delaware. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)

Corey Day grabs another NASCAR O’Reilly Series victory at Dover Motor Speedway on Saturday afternoon in the BetRivers 200.

DOVER, Del. – Twenty-year-old Californian Corey Day took the lead from veteran Justin Allgaier with four laps remaining to claim his second career NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victory Saturday in the BetRivers 200 in his first Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway start.

Corey Day Victory at Dover

Allgaier, a three-time winner already this season and the current championship leader, looked poised to add yet another trophy at Dover’s famed Monster Mile. Still, ultimately Day was able to run up high against the outside wall – he and Allgaier splitting Blake Lothian’s lapped car – with Day pulling ahead of the three cars and driving away from Allgaier.

It was enough momentum to propel Day’s No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to a 0.461-second victory over Allgaier, who led a race-high 71 of the 200 laps, and it answers Day’s career-first victory at the series’ largest track, Talladega (Ala.). Superspeedway came only three weeks ago.


“Man, I was hoping that’s how it would play out, I saved so hard there early in the last run once we put on tires and the yellow came out and I thought, awe, this is just going to be a caution fest and it was all for nothing, but oh man, it all just worked out good,” said an elated Day, who screamed congratulations to his crew on the cool-down lap. His “mentor” reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson, sitting in the pit stand, was all smiles watching the outcome.

“This one feels really, really good,” Day said. “The Talladega one [win] was unexpected at a superspeedway, but we earned this one.”

The BetRivers 200 Results

Allgaier acknowledged he was disappointed – perhaps frustrated – with a lapped car playing such a crucial role in deciding Saturday’s outcome.

“Good teaching moment,” Allgaier said after speaking with Lothian on pit road. “He kind of made a move to inside, then back outside, and I just didn’t know which lane he was going to go in. And unfortunately, it allowed the 17 (Day) to get to my outside.

“But hats off to Corey and that whole 17 team. He was running me down there at the end. Proud of our team. It wasn’t the day we wanted early on, but the team worked really hard all day long.

“Just disappointed to walk out of here with a second after leading that many laps at the end, but hats off to Corey and everyone on that team.”

The race featured nine caution periods and a lot of short-run strategy.

Creed’s Haas teammate Sam Mayer finished third. Joe Gibbs Racing’s William Sawalich was fourth and Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill claimed fifth place – the perennial championship contender’s best finish since a runner-up showing on the Austin road course back in March.

JGR’s Brendan Jones won the first stage, and NASCAR Cup Series regular Ross Chastain won the second stage after pacing the field four different times for a combined 68 laps. His shot at a trophy ended just past the race’s midpoint when he and JGR’s Taylor Gray collided and spun out.

JR Motorsports’ Carson Kvapil finished sixth and extended the team’s top ten streak to an amazing 71 races. Ryan Sieg, Sammy Smith, and Anthony Alfredo rounded out the top ten.

The NASCAR O’Reilly Series Point Standings

Already a series-best three-race winner this season, Allgaier’s effort Saturday boosted his championship points advantage to an amazing 175 points over Haas Factory Team’s Sheldon Creed, who finished 18th.

Up Next

The O’Reilly Auto Parts Series moves to the 1.5-mile Charlotte Motor Speedway for the next race. Saturday’s Charbroil 300 starts at 5 p.m. ET on the CW, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. NASCAR Cup Series full-time driver William Byron is the defending race winner.