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NASCAR Cook Out 400: Top 20 Finishers

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Active Markets
37
Markets
37

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All Outcomes (37)
Outcome Probability Yes Bid Yes Ask 24h Change Volume
Chase Briscoe 0%
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Zane Smith 0%
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Ryan Preece 0%
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Cody Ware 0%
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Austin Cindric 0%
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William Byron 0%
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Denny Hamlin 0%
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Connor Zilisch 0%
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Ty Dillon 0%
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AJ Allmendinger 0%
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Riley Herbst 0%
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Erik Jones 0%
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Kyle Larson 0%
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Brad Keselowski 0%
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Noah Gragson 0%
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Christopher Bell 0%
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Michael McDowell 0%
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Cole Custer 0%
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Chris Buescher 0%
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Ty Gibbs 0%
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Todd Gilliland 0%
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Austin Hill 0%
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Shane Van Gisbergen 0%
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Carson Hocevar 0%
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Ricky Stenhouse 0%
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Bubba Wallace 0%
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Chase Elliott 0%
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Daniel Suárez 0%
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Joey Logano 0%
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Tyler Reddick 0%
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Kyle Busch 0%
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Austin Dillon 0%
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Ross Chastain 0%
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Josh Berry 0%
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Justin Allgaier 0%
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Ryan Blaney 0%
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John H. Nemechek 0%
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About This Market

This prediction market asks which named drivers will finish inside the top 20 at the NASCAR Cook Out 400; it matters because top-20 placement is a common performance benchmark for drivers and teams and reflects market expectations about race outcomes.

The Cook Out 400 is a NASCAR Cup Series race held at Richmond Raceway, a short, D-shaped oval where lap traffic, braking, and tire wear are central to racecraft. Short-track racing at Richmond typically produces close racing, frequent restarts, and strategic pit calls; this market lists 37 outcomes (one per entered driver) and the market close time is listed as TBD.

Market odds aggregate traders' views about each driver's chance of finishing in the top 20 and will move as new information arrives (practice, qualifying, weather, lineup changes). Final settlement is based on the official race results as declared by NASCAR and the market platform's settlement rules.

Key Factors

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the NASCAR Cook Out 400: Top 20 Finishers market close and when will it be settled?

Markets for race finish outcomes typically close at or just before the official green flag for the race; this specific market currently shows the close time as TBD. Settlement is performed after the race using NASCAR's official final classification and the market platform's settlement rules, so check the market page for any platform-specific timing updates.

How exactly is a 'Top 20 Finish' determined for the Cook Out 400 market?

A listed driver is considered to have achieved a Top 20 Finish if they are included among the top 20 positions in NASCAR's official final race results for the Cook Out 400. The market follows official timing and scoring for any tie-breaks or adjustments; consult the platform's rules for handling photo-finishes or scoring corrections.

Why does this market list 37 outcomes when only 20 drivers will score a top-20 finish?

Each outcome corresponds to an individual entered driver and asks whether that driver will finish inside the top 20. The number of outcomes equals the number of drivers listed in the market (37 in this case), because any of those drivers could end up in the top 20 on race day.

How do practice sessions, qualifying results, and starting position influence Top 20 outcomes at the Cook Out 400?

Qualifying and practice give information about setup, balance, and starting position—important at Richmond because a good start reduces early-race exposure to incidents. However, short-track strategy, pit stops, cautions, and driver skill in traffic can change finishing positions significantly, so strong qualifying is informative but not determinative.

What happens to this market if the Cook Out 400 is shortened, postponed, or canceled?

Settlement follows NASCAR's official determination: if the race is shortened but an official race result is declared by NASCAR, the market is typically settled on that official result; if the race is postponed, settlement waits for the official result when the race is completed. If the race is declared void or the platform's rules require a void, the market platform will apply its stated cancellation/refund procedures—check the market page for platform-specific contingency rules.

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