Category: RC NASCAR Cup

Race Central NASCAR Cup Series news and information

  • Sweet redemption for Elliott at Charlotte

    Sweet redemption for Elliott at Charlotte

    After the two previous races got away from Chase Elliott, he came back on Thursday evening at Charlotte Motor Speedway and found redemption. Following a late pass for the lead and benefiting from a green flag run to the finish, Elliott notched his first elusive NASCAR Cup Series win of the season in the rain-delayed Alsco Uniforms 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The victory was the seventh of his Cup career in his 157th series start and his second at Charlotte as Elliott became the sixth Cup regular to win this season. The victory came two days after Elliott celebrated a Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series bounty win at Charlotte over Kyle Busch.

    “It feels awesome,” Elliott said. “Man, it’s been a tough week, for sure. We’ve had some tough losses, but that deal on Sunday night was a heartbreaker. It’s not the Coke 600, but any win in the Cup Series is really hard to get. Just appreciate my team. [Crew chief] Alan [Gustafson] made a great call there at the end to get it tuned up and luckily, the run went long and I think that fell in our favor.” 

    The race was postponed to Thursday evening after persistent rain canceled original plans for the event to run on Wednesday evening, May 27.

    The starting lineup was based on the results from Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte on May 24, with the top-20 finishers from Sunday being inverted for the event. William Byron, who finished 20th in the Coke 600, started on pole position while teammate Alex Bowman joined him on the front row.

    Josh Bilicki and J.J. Yeley were sent to the rear of the field due to driver changes from Sunday’s 600-mile race. Aric Almirola also started at the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments.

    When the green flag dropped, Byron launched ahead of the field followed by DiBenedetto, who was drafting Byron’s No. 24 Chevrolet from the start. After drafting Byron through Turn 1, DiBenedetto made a move on the inside lane in Turn 2 and took the lead entering Turn 3. 

    The field was feet away from starting the first lap of the race when the first caution came out as teammates Joey Gase and Garrett Smithley made contact with one another and wrecked in Turn 3. Gase sustained significant right-rear damage while Smithley entered pit road with significant right-side damage as flames engulfed the underneath of his No. 53 Chevrolet. Under caution, Ty Dillon made a pit stop after reporting power steering issues.

    Following an extensive cleanup, the race restarted on the ninth lap. On this restart, Byron benefitted from the bottom lane and a push from teammate Bowman to lead the following lap, but DiBenedetto remained dead even with Byron for the next circuit. A lap later, Byron managed to clear DiBenedetto and slowly pull away with the lead as Bowman made his move to take second over DiBenedetto. Byron would be uncontested as he remained in the lead at the time of the competition caution on Lap 20. By the time the caution was displayed, DiBenedetto was able to retake second over Bowman.

    Under caution, the majority of the field pitted, except for Joey Logano, Michael McDowell, Ryan Blaney and Bubba Wallace. With most of the front-runners opting to have two tires changed on their respective cars, Byron was able to exit pit road first followed by DiBenedetto, Bowman, Kurt Busch and rookie Christopher Bell. During his stop, Byron made contact with Corey LaJoie, who was turning left to enter his pit stall, while turning right to exit his pit stall. While Byron sustained minimal right-side damage to his car from the contact, he made an extra pit stop to have his left-side tires changed. During the pit stops, Clint Bowyer and Denny Hamlin were sent to the rear of the field after both sped on pit road.

    On the following restart on Lap 24, Logano received a push from teammate Blaney and DiBenedetto on the bottom lane to inherit the lead as the field expanded to racing three-wide through Turns 2 and 3.

    The caution flew five laps later, when Matt Kenseth spun in Turn 3, but was able to straighten and drive his No. 42 Chevrolet back to his pit stall. Just in front of him, Brad Keselowski, who was 16th, fell off the pace when he sustained a flat right-front tire.

    Shortly after, the cars made their way to pit road and the race was red-flagged due to lightning and severe thunderstorms surrounding the racetrack. With the rain progressing, the Air Titans were dispatched on track.

    Following a delay that spanned 74 minutes, the drivers returned to their cars and the race resumed under the lights as the skies fell into darkness. Under caution, Bell, Jimmie Johnson, rookie Custer, Bowyer and Daniel Suarez pitted while the others remained on track. Keselowski, Kenseth and Byron also pitted to have the damage to their respective machines repaired.

    When the race restarted on Lap 34, Logano maintained the lead and was able to maintain a decent pace over DiBenedetto and Blaney. By Lap 45, Harvick, who started 16th, was fourth, Kyle Busch, who started 17th, was 11th and Elliott, who started 19th, was ninth. Jimmie Johnson, who started at the rear of the field, was in 19th. Hamlin and Bowyer, following their early pit road spending penalties, were running outside the top 20. Byron and Keselowski, following their pit stops for repairs under the previous caution, had made their way only up to 24th and 27th while Kenseth was trapped in 38th, one lap behind.

    For the final 22-lap green-flag run, Logano was uncontested as he was able to win the first stage. Blaney made his way to second followed by DiBenedetto, Harvick and Bowman. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Austin Dillon, Kurt Busch, Elliott and Chris Buescher rounded out the top 10 at the conclusion of the first stage.

    Under the stage break, the lead lap cars pitted for four tires, fuel and adjustments. Logano was able to maintain his lead by exiting pit road first followed by Blaney, Harvick, Bowman and Kurt Busch. DiBenedetto, Buescher, Elliott, Austin Dillon and Kyle Busch exited in the top 10.

    The restart on Lap 63 to start the second stage was where the fireworks on the track started to ignite as Logano maintained his advantage while being challenged by Blaney. While racing four-wide with Erik Jones, Stenhouse and Almirola through Turn 2, Kyle Busch and Almirola made contact in Turn 3, which cut Busch’s left rear tire and damaged his left rear quarter panel. Following the contact, Busch fell off the pace as everyone behind him scattered through Turns 3 and 4 to avoid hitting Busch’s No. 18 Toyota. The damage was enough to force Busch to make an unscheduled stop the following lap, where he fell out of the lead lap. During the tight racing, Ryan Newman also sustained a tire rub, but remained on track. 

    In the midst of the tight racing behind him, three laps later, Harvick was able to take the lead from Logano while Busch, two laps behind, still had damage to the left rear quarter panel. By Lap 70, Harvick checked out to a lead above a second over Logano. Two laps later, Bowman moved into second over Logano.

    The caution returned on Lap 74, when rookies Quin Houff and Brennan Poole tangled in Turn 1, with both drivers making contact with the wall. Under caution, Harvick surrendered the lead to pit for four tires and fuel, giving the lead to Bowman, who was one of 14 cars who opted not to pit.

    When the race restarted on Lap 79, Bowman received a push from Blaney to maintain the lead over the field. By Lap 93, Blaney moved to second after passing teammate Logano and was trailing Bowman by less than two seconds. Additionally, Elliott moved into fourth after passing Kurt Busch and Harvick, who restarted 17th, rallied his way to eighth. With all four Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas running outside the top 10, Hamlin was the highest-running JGR competitor in 17th while Kyle Busch was back in 37th, still trapped two laps behind and with a damaged left rear quarter panel.

    The 100-lap mark featured unique names running inside the top 10 on track, with Austin Dillon in seventh followed by Bell and Wallace while Nemechek and Reddick were 11th and 12th.

    While the majority of competitors continued jostling one another for positions, Bowman was able to drive his No. 88 Chevrolet to the win in the second stage over two seconds over Blaney. Logano held off Elliott to finish third followed by Harvick. Kurt Busch, Austin Dillon, Nemechek, Bell and Wallace finished in the top 10.

    Under the stage break, the leaders pitted and Bowman exited first over Logano followed by Harvick, Blaney and Kurt Busch. Elliott exited sixth followed by Hamlin, who gained five positions following a stellar pit stop from his pit crew. Austin Dillon, Bowyer and Wallace exited in the top 10. During the pit stops, Bowyer was tabbed with a second pit road speeding penalty and was sent to the rear.

    The restart of the final stage occurred with 86 laps remaining as Bowman maintained the lead over Logano after clearing him in Turn 3. A lap later, Harvick made his way to second. Three laps later, Harvick made a bold move on the outside lane entering Turn 4 to reassume the lead over Bowman. Additionally, Elliott passed Blaney and Logano to move to third. 

    With 74 laps remaining, Bowman’s race fell apart after he slipped entering Turn 4 and slapped the outside wall, damaging the right side of his No. 88 Chevrolet while attempting to narrow his deficit from Harvick. A lap later, Bowman pitted to have the damage repaired, which cost him a lead-lap finish, as the race remained green. During this time, Blaney moved to second followed by Elliott, Logano, Hamlin and Kurt Busch.

    The caution returned with 64 laps remaining when Timmy Hill’s car fell off the pace in Turn 4. Under caution and following the pit stops, Harvick led the field off pit road while Hamlin gained three spots to move into second. Blaney, Kurt Busch, Elliott and Logano followed in pursuit. Jones was assessed a penalty and was held a lap in his pit box for pitting outside his box.

    When the race restarted with 59 laps remaining, Harvick maintained his advantage with a bump from Blaney. Behind Harvick, the front-runners raced two-by-two through Turn 2 before Blaney cleared the field to move into second and Elliott pursued Hamlin for third. Behind, Stenhouse, making a late rally, took fifth from Kurt Busch. 

    With 50 laps remaining, Elliott and Blaney engaged in a heated battle for second behind Harvick while Stenhouse battled Hamlin for fourth.

    With 43 laps remaining, Wallace, who spent the majority of the event running inside the top 10, made an unscheduled pit stop for a flat right-rear tire that was initiated from making contact with the wall. Shortly after, braking issues forced Wallace to park his car in the garage and end his race in the late stages.

    With 27 laps remaining, Elliott, who persevered over his battle with Blaney and started to reel in Harvick, made a move on the inside lane in Turn 2 and used the lapped car of Suarez, running on the high lane, to take the lead. From there, Elliott started pulling away as Harvick started losing ground and positions.

    For the final 27-lap stretch, Elliott placed himself in a familiar position from last Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600, leading over the field. Unlike Sunday, Elliott, who increased his advantage above two seconds, was able to take the white flag and start the final lap of the race, thus ensuring the race would not fall into a late caution and overtime. For a final circuit, Elliott was able to navigate his No. 9 Chevrolet patiently behind lapped traffic and cross the finish line first under checkers to win as the lapped car of McDowell spun behind him.

    “I was just waiting for the caution to come out, to be honest with you,” Elliott humorously said. “I thought either the caution was gonna come out, I was gonna break something or I was gonna crash. Just after the last couple of weeks, I just didn’t think surely it wast gonna go green to the end. Just glad it did and glad we’re, hopefully, back on the right path.”

    Hamlin passed Blaney on the final lap to finish second in his first of four races with interim crew chief Samuel Mcaulay. Stenhouse Jr. finished fourth for his second top-five result of the season and Kurt Busch settled in fifth for his third top-five result of 2020.

    Rounding out the top 10 were Logano, Keselowski, Austin Dillon, Truex Jr. and Harvick.

    The race featured 14 lead changes with eight different leaders. There were seven cautions for 37 laps.

    Harvick continues to lead the regular-season series standings by 14 points over Logano, 41 over Elliott and 43 over Bowman.

    Results:

    1. Chase Elliott, 28 laps led
    2. Denny Hamlin
    3. Ryan Blaney, two laps led
    4. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    5. Kurt Busch
    6. Joey Logano, 42 laps led, Stage 1 winner
    7. Brad Keselowski
    8. Austin Dillon
    9. Martin Truex Jr.
    10. Kevin Harvick, 63 laps led
    11. Jimmie Johnson
    12. William Byron, 11 laps led
    13. John Hunter Nemechek
    14. Tyler Reddick
    15. Matt DiBenedetto, 10 laps led
    16. Clint Bowyer
    17. Ryan Newman
    18. Cole Custer
    19. Corey LaJoie
    20. Aric Almirola
    21. Christopher Bell
    22. Chris Buescher
    23. Matt Kenseth, one lap down
    24. Ryan Preece, one lap down
    25. Michael McDowell, one lap down, one lap led
    26. Erik Jones, one lap down
    27. Ty Dillon, one lap down
    28. Daniel Suarez, one lap down
    29. Kyle Busch, one lap down
    30. Gray Gaulding, two laps down
    31. Alex Bowman, two laps down, 51 laps led, Stage 2 winner
    32. Quin Houff, three laps down
    33. Timmy Hill, three laps down
    34. J.J. Yeley, four laps down
    35. B.J. McLeod, five laps down
    36. Josh Bilicki, eight laps down
    37. Bubba Wallace – OUT, Accident
    38. Brennan Poole – OUT, Accident
    39. Joey Gase – OUT, DVP
    40. Garrett Smithley – OUT, Accident

    With the Carolina spring stretch complete in NASCAR’s return to on-track racing, the Cup Series will travel to Bristol, Tennessee, to race at Bristol Motor Speedway on May 31. The race can be seen at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

  • Keselowski captures the Coca-Cola 600 in overtime

    Keselowski captures the Coca-Cola 600 in overtime

    Seizing a late opportunity when it counted most, Brad Keselowski fought his way from the rear of the field and held off Jimmie Johnson in overtime to win the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The victory was Keselowski’s 31st of his NASCAR Cup Series career, his second at Charlotte and his third crown jewel win after claiming the Southern 500 and the Brickyard 400 in 2018. With his victory, Keselowski became the fifth competitor to win a race in the 2020 Cup season and the 36th to win NASCAR’s longest event of the season. He also captured his first Cup victory with crew chief Jeremy Bullins.

    Qualifying was held earlier in the day with Kurt Busch starting on pole position and Johnson starting alongside on the front row. Matt DiBenedetto started at the rear of the field in a backup car after damaging his primary car entering Turn 4 while qualifying. Keselowski, Aric Almirola, Timmy Hill and J.J. Yeley also dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments.

    When the engines fired, early drama unfolded for recent Cup winner Denny Hamlin when a chunk of ballast/tungsten weight came out of the side rails of his No. 11 FedEx Toyota and fell on the race track while the field was exiting pit road and starting the pace laps. Following the opening pace laps, Hamlin surrendered his 13th-starting spot and made his way to his pit stall as his crew went to work to replace the component while the on-track safety workers removed the ballast from the racing surface.

    When the green flag waved, Busch launched ahead and maintained a steady advantage over Johnson as the field ran single file. By the eighth lap, Hamlin’s crew repaired the missing component and he rejoined the field, but was eight laps behind the leaders.

    A competition caution flew on Lap 20 with Busch having led all of the opening laps. The field made their way to pit road for four tires, fuel and adjustments. Once the stops concluded, Busch maintained the lead. Behind him, Martin Truex Jr. jumped from sixth to second while Johnson dropped from second to fourth. Chris Buescher and Daniel Suarez were sent to the rear of the field due to a pit road penalty as their respective crew members were over the pit wall too early prior to the stops. Erik Jones was also sent to the rear due to an uncontrolled tire violation.

    On a Lap 28 restart, Busch launched ahead followed by Truex and Chase Elliott while Johnson and rookie Tyler Reddick raced side by side, battling for fourth. The following lap, Johnson slipped up the racing groove in Turn 2 and dropped all the way back to 13th. Johnson’s misfortune moved Reddick to fourth and Joey Logano to fifth.

    The second caution came out on Lap 49 due to rain. The field made their way to pit road, where the crew covered the cars and the competitors were allowed to exit their respective rides as the race was red-flagged in a rain delay.

    Following a rain delay of 68 minutes, the drivers returned to their cars, restarted their engines and returned on track under caution as the sky darkened and the speedway lights came on. The field pitted on Lap 55 and Alex Bowman, who was 13th, exited pit road first following a gusty two-tire pit call made by crew chief Greg Ives. Truex, the first to take four tires, exited second followed by Elliott, Kurt Busch and Reddick. During the pit stop, Logano’s rear-tire changer slipped while making his way to change the right-rear tire, but the driver of the No. 22 Ford was able to exit out in sixth.

    When the race restarted on Lap 58, teammates Bowman and Elliott pulled away from the field as the field scattered with a multitude of competitors duking side-by-side toward one another for position. On Lap 61, Elliott narrowed the gap to be within a tenth of a second behind Bowman, but his Hendrick Motorsports teammate retained the lead on two fresh tires. 

    Meanwhile, by Lap 68, Kyle Busch, who started 11th, moved up to sixth while his older brother, Kurt, fell back to seventh. Johnson, who restarted 11th, worked his way back into the top 10. 

    On Lap 76, Elliott was able to draw himself back to the rear bumper of Bowman, who was fighting loose conditions. In Turn 2, Elliott caught a whiff of a lead on the outside lane of Bowman and raced side-by-side with his teammate through the straightaway until he got loose in Turn 3. The slip by Elliott allowed Bowman to retain the lead and pull away by more than a second. Elliott was drawn back to a battle for second with Truex.

    Lap 86 featured a save of the day as Blaney bumped into the rear bumper of Christopher Bell, causing Bell to slip sideways in Turn 3. Miraculously, Bell prevented his car from spinning and was able to straighten his car below the apron and rejoin the racing surface without a scratch while dropping from 13th to 19th.

    With three laps remaining in the first stage, Truex gained a huge run on leader Bowman in Turn 4. He was establishing a possible pass for the lead when the caution came out as Clint Bowyer made hard contact into the Turn 1 wall due to a possible cut tire and parked his car against the wall in a shower of sparks. Bowyer emerged uninjured, but his night came to a disappointing end.

    The stage concluded under caution with Bowman winning his second stage of the season. Truex finished second followed by Elliott, Reddick, Logano. Kyle Busch, Austin Dillon, Johnson, William Byron and Kurt Busch were in the top 10 at the time of caution. By then, Blaney, who started 26th, was 12th. Erik Jones, who was penalized for an uncontrolled tire violation under pit stops on Lap 55, was 13th. Keselowski, who started at the rear due to unapproved adjustments, was 15th.

    Under the stage break, the leaders pitted and Bowman, again, maintained the lead. Behind him, Kyle Busch gained four spots to second followed by Truex, Elliott and Logano over Reddick.

    When the second stage started on Lap 106, Bowman received a push from Truex to pull ahead of Busch. In Turn 4, Truex cleared Busch for second, where he would settle as Bowman started to pull away from the field. 

    As the race progressed, a multitude of competitors started racing two-wide, three-wide for position. In the midst of the battle, Ryan Newman moved to eighth behind Byron while Chris Buescher moved to 12th ahead of Kevin Harvick. Jones, who restarted 12th, continued to march his way forward to eighth while Reddick fell back to ninth. Matt Kenseth, who started fourth but was shuffled to midpack following the Lap 55 pit stop, had only made his way back to 18th. Bubba Wallace, who was running within the top 20, made an unscheduled pit stop, but took his No. 43 Chevrolet to the garage due to brake issues. 

    Green flag pit stops commenced on Lap 110 as the leaders entered pit road for four tires, fuel and adjustments. During the pit sequence, Kenseth was tabbed with a speeding penalty, which cost him two laps. After most of the leaders pitted, by Lap 163, Johnson was one of seven drivers who did not stop. Johnson led three laps before he pitted for two tires. Two laps later, Ryan Preece surrendered the lead to his teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. to pit. A lap later, Bowman reassumed command of the field and was up by two seconds over Truex and more than six seconds over Kyle Busch.

    By Lap 185, Aric Almirola, who pitted on Lap 54 to have his front splitter repaired that sustained minimal damage from hitting the tungsten from Hamlin’s car, worked his way up to 16th. Hamlin, meanwhile, was back in 35th, trapped nine laps behind the leaders.

    For the final laps, no one would have anything for Bowman as the Tucson, AZ, native cruised to the second stage win by more than three seconds over Truex and nearly nine seconds over Kyle Busch. Byron made a late surge to finish fourth ahead of teammate Elliott. Jones, Logano, Austin Dillon, Blaney and Johnson finished in the top 10.

    Under caution during the halfway mark, the pace car led the field to pit road and the race halted for a 30-second silence of remembrance to pay tribute for the fallen service men and women on Memorial Day weekend.

    When the cars returned to the track and the field made their way to pit road on the following lap for service, Bowman led the field off pit road first followed by Kyle Busch, Truex, Byron and Jones while Austin Dillon gained two spots to sixth. Disaster quickly ensued for Busch, whose No. 18 Toyota was caught exiting pit road beyond the pit road speed limit and was sent to the rear of the field.

    A restart on Lap 209 featured the entire field locked in a heated side-by-side battle before Bowman cleared everyone in Turn 4. Six laps later, a three-way battle for the lead started brewing as Truex drew himself within a car length of Bowman’s No. 88 Chevrolet with Byron’s No. 24 Chevrolet lurking. In addition, Jones joined the party and remained within striking distance of Byron.

    On Lap 224, Truex used the lapped car of Joey Gase running on the outside lane to go three wide on the inside lane and, finally, pass Bowman for the lead. By Lap 235, Truex held a one and a half second lead over Bowman. During this time, Jones moved to third past Byron, Blaney moved past Austin Dillon for fifth and Kyle Busch worked his way to 16th following his penalty.

    Meanwhile, Newman, who was running inside the top 20, made a pit stop with concerns of battery issues on Lap 237. Seventeen laps later, a second round of green flag stops started when Kurt Busch pitted. Four laps later, after most of the leaders pitted, Keselowski assumed the lead, but was one of three drivers that had yet to pit. Keselowski led seven laps before making the left-hand turn to pit road, allowing Truex to regain the lead and pull away by two seconds over teammate Jones. 

    On Lap 275, as Jones and Bowman were battling for second, the caution flag was displayed when Kenseth slipped in Turn 1 and slapped the outside wall. As Kenseth made his way to pit road to have the damage repaired, most of the leaders pitted as Logano, Harvick and Elliott opted to remain on track on old tires. Truex exited pit road first and one of seven drivers who pitted for two tires while Jones, who exited eighth, was the first competitor who had four tires changed on his machine.

    With 19 laps remaining in the third stage, Logano made his way to the lead followed by Truex and Bowman as the field scattered while scrambling for positions. Logano, despite racing with only two fresh tires, was able to maintain his advantage in clean air while Harvick and Elliott slowly drifted out of the top 10 on old tires. As the laps dwindled, Bowman worked his way back to second and drew himself as close as two-tenths behind Logano, but he lost his momentum in Turn 3. With no late challenges being mounted towards him, Logano was able to win the second stage and claim his first stage victory of the season. Bowman was second followed by Blaney, Johnson, Truex. Kyle Busch, Jones, Keselowski, Austin Dillon and Byron finished in the top 10.

    Under the next round of pit stops, DiBenedetto exited first, having pitted for two tires, followed by Logano, the first on four tires. Bowman, Truex, Kyle Busch and Johnson followed in pursuit.

    The start of the final stage with 94 laps remaining provided another intense round of racing up-front as Truex shoved DiBenedetto into the lead through Turns 2 and 3. Logano, however, slipped in Turn 3 and nearly wiped out his teammate Blaney as he was shuffled all the way back to eighth. Six laps remaining, Truex reassumed the lead over DiBenedetto in Turn 3 as DiBenedetto was overtaken by Johnson for second a lap later. In the midst of the battle, Kurt Busch made an unscheduled pit stop due to a loose right-rear wheel, costing him a lap. With 75 laps remaining, Bowman moved to third while DiBenedetto dropped to fifth. Byron, Jones, Elliott and Blaney were in sixth, eighth, ninth and 10th while Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick were in 11th and 13th.

    A caution came out with 52 laps remaining when Joey Gase spun in the Turn 4 infield. A lap later, leaders pitted and Johnson exited as the leader followed by Keselowski, Truex, Elliott and Byron. Logano, who exited 11th, was too fast exiting and sent to the rear.

    While Johnson led the field to a restart with 47 laps remaining, Keselowski made his move on the inside lane to assume command in Turn 2 followed by Elliott as Johnson dropped to third. Truex, meanwhile, settled in fourth in front of teammates Byron and Bowman. With 38 laps remaining, Elliott seized an opportunity to pull alongside Keselowski in Turn 2 and he was able to snatch the lead the following turn. 

    With the laps dwindling and with a steady lead over Keselowski and Johnson, it had appeared that Elliott was en route to not only his first Coke 600 win, but also redemption following his late accident at Darlington last Wednesday.

    Then, like a bomb, the caution flew with two laps remaining when teammate Byron blew a left-rear tire and spun below the apron in Turn 1. The late caution sent the race into overtime.

    When pit road opened, Elliott led Truex, Kyle Busch and a bevy of competitors to pit. Eight competitors, however, remained on track as Keselowski reassumed the lead followed by Johnson, Bowman, Blaney, Austin Dillon, Reddick, DiBenedetto and Jones.

    In overtime, Keselowski was able to clear the field in Turn 2 followed by Johnson and Blaney as the field scattered and the competitors scrambled for positions with little time remaining. On the final lap, Johnson gave it one attempt to draw himself to the rear bumper of Keselowski in Turn 2, but Keselowski managed to pull away through the final two corners and capture his first checkered flag of the 2020 season.

    “[The win] means a lot to me,” Keselowski said. “Memorial Day’s a lot more about more than racing, but we’re glad to be able to do cool things like racing because of the freedom provided by those that are willing to make those sacrifices. I feel like I’ve thrown this race away a handful of times and I thought we were gonna lose it today. I know we’ve lost it the way Chase [Elliott] lost it and that really stinks. Today, we finally won it that way and I’m so happy for my team. We might not have been the fastest car today, but wow, did we just grind this one out. It’s a major [event]. It’s the Coke 600. That leaves one major left for me, the Daytona 500. We’re checking them off. I’m tickled to death. It’s a little overwhelming, to be honest.”

    Elliott, who restarted 11th, fought his way back to third in two laps behind Johnson.

    “It’s just part of it,” Elliott said. “Just trying to make the best decision you can and those guys are gonna do the opposite of whatever you do. You make decisions and live with’em. That was the decision we were put in. Part of it.”

    During post-race inspection, however, disaster struck for Johnson when his No. 48 Chevrolet failed the rear alignment numbers in the Optical Scanning Station portion according to the NASCAR Rule Book. As a result, Johnson’s runner-up finish and 39 points earned, including 11 stage points, were stripped, leaving him with no points and a last-place finish of the 40-car field while marked disqualified. With Johnson’s disqualification, Elliott was promoted into the runner-up position followed by Blaney, Kyle Busch and Harvick. Truex, Kurt Busch, Reddick, Bell and Buescher finished in the top 10.

    The race featured lead 20 changes with 11 different leaders. There were eight cautions for 52 laps. At 405 laps, 607.6 miles, this marked the longest Cup race ever in mileage.

    Harvick continues to lead in the regular-season series standings by 23 points over Logano and 25 over Bowman.

    Results:

    1. Brad Keselowski, 21 laps led

    2. Chase Elliott, 38 laps led

    3. Ryan Blaney

    4. Kyle Busch

    5. Kevin Harvick

    6. Martin Truex Jr., 87 laps led

    7. Kurt Busch, 54 laps led

    8. Tyler Reddick

    9. Christopher Bell 

    10. Chris Buescher

    11. Erik Jones

    12. Cole Custer

    13. Joey Logano, 26 laps led, Stage 3 winner

    14. Austin Dillon

    15. Aric Almirola

    16. John Hunter Nemechek, one lap led

    17. Matt DiBenedetto, six laps led

    18. Michael McDowell

    19. Alex Bowman, 164 laps led, Stage 1 & 2 winner

    20. William Byron – one lap down

    21. Ross Chastain – two laps down

    22. Ryan Preece – one lap led, two laps down

    23. Corey LaJoie – two laps down

    24. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – one lap led, three laps down

    25. Ty Dillon – four laps down

    26. Matt Kenseth – four laps down

    27. Ryan Newman – five laps down

    28. Daniel Suarez – six laps down

    29. Denny Hamlin – seven laps down

    30. Brennan Poole – seven laps down

    31. Gray Gaulding – eight laps down

    32. B.J. McLeod – 12 laps down

    33. Garrett Smithley – 14 laps down

    34. Timmy Hill – 15 laps down

    35. Quin Houff – 15 laps down

    36. Joey Gase – 20 laps down

    37. J.J. Yeley – OUT

    38. Bubba Wallace – OUT

    39. Clint Bowyer – OUT

    40. Jimmie Johnson – six laps led, DQ’d

  • Kurt Busch wins the pole for the Coca-Cola 600

    Kurt Busch wins the pole for the Coca-Cola 600

    In the first qualifying session since NASCAR’s return to on-track racing amid the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic, Kurt Busch claimed the pole position for Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Busch, driver of the No. 1 GEARWRENCH Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE for Chip Ganassi Racing, secured the pole with a time of 29.79 seconds at 181.269 mph, which was 0.009 seconds faster than Jimmie Johnson (29.799 seconds/181.214 mph).

    The pole award was Busch’s 28th of his Cup Series career, second at Charlotte and first of the season. It also marked Busch’s first pole while driving for car owner Chip Ganassi and the first time the 2004 series champion won the pole since Talladega Superspeedway in October 2018.

    “I’m just so proud of [crew chief] Matt McCall and all our guys and the way we have to communicate right now, and get through everything as far as those last-minute details and those fine adjustments,” Busch said on FOX Sports. “But, wow, what a Chevrolet brigade up front. This is pretty sweet! GEARWRENCH is on our car only a few times a year and I really want to push them up front. This is an awesome pole. I was more geared up, in my mind, towards downforce and being ready for 600 miles, so this means Matt McCall has something up his sleeve and we should be good tonight. This is a great run and happy birthday, Chip [Ganassi]!”

    Johnson, an eight-time winner at Charlotte and four-time Coke 600 champion, will start on the front row in his 19th and final start in the 600-mile event.

    Matt DiBenedetto will start the main event at the rear of the field in a backup car after he slapped the outside wall entering Turn 4 while attempting to complete his qualifying lap. Aric Almirola was also involved in an incident, where he spun entering Turn 4 and made the slightest of contact to the outside wall before spinning toward the infield. While the damage was repairable and prevented Almirola from dropping at the rear of the field in a backup car, he will start at the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments. Brad Keselowski, J.J. Yeley and Timmy Hill will also drop to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments.

    The race will commence on May 24 at 6:28 p.m. ET on FOX.

    Starting lineup:

    1. Kurt Busch

    2. Jimmie Johnson

    3. Chase Elliott

    4. Matt Kenseth

    5. Tyler Reddick

    6. Austin Dillon

    7. Joey Logano

    8. Martin Truex Jr.

    9. Brad Keselowski – will start at the rear of the field

    10. William Byron

    11. Kyle Busch

    12. Alex Bowman

    13. Denny Hamlin

    14. Erik Jones

    15. Christopher Bell

    16. Ty Dillon

    17. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

    18. Ryan Newman

    19. Chris Buescher

    20. Clint Bowyer

    21. Ross Chastain

    22. Kevin Harvick

    23. Bubba Wallace

    24. Corey LaJoie

    25. John Hunter Nemechek

    26. Ryan Blaney

    27. Michael McDowell

    28. Cole Custer

    29. Ryan Preece

    30. Quin Houff

    31. Gray Gaulding

    32. Timmy Hill – will start at the rear of the field

    33. Matt DiBenedetto – will start at the rear of the field

    34. J.J. Yeley – will start at the rear of the field

    35. Brennan Poole

    36. B.J. McLeod

    37. Daniel Suarez

    38. Garrett Smithley

    39. Joey Gase

    40. Aric Almirola – will start at the rear of the field

  • Kevin Harvick tames the Lady in Black on NASCAR’s return to racing

    Kevin Harvick tames the Lady in Black on NASCAR’s return to racing

    Kevin Harvick found victory in the Real Heroes 400 at Darlington Raceway earning his 50th win in the series.

    Brad Keselowski would start on the pole based upon a random draw. Kyle Busch would have to drop to the back due to failing inspection twice.

    As the field took the green flag, trouble would strike early as Ricky Stenhouse Jr. crashed off Turn 2, knocking the No. 47 out of the race early on.

    Keselowski would remain unchallenged before a competition caution on Lap 30 would bunch the field back up. Alex Bowman would surge to the front, passing the No. 2. Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jimmie Johnson and William Byron followed right behind the No. 88.

    As tire wear kicked in, some drivers would march their way forward. Denny Hamlin would catch Byron, while Johnson would inherit the race lead over Bowman. Johnson’s lead would be short-lived.

    On the final lap of the first stage, Johnson would try to lap Chris Buescher but the two collided off Turn 2, putting Johnson into the inside wall. After Johnson’s wreck, Byron would win Stage One. Hamlin, Bowman and Harvick would round out the rest of the top five while Keselowski, Aric Almirola, Clint Bowyer, Tyler Reddick, Ryan Newman, and Chase Elliott would round the rest of the top 10.

    Harvick would beat the leaders off pit lane, launching the No. 4 to the front. Elliott and Ryan Newman were penalized for speeding on pit road.

    On the restart to begin Stage Two Harvick would hold off Bowman to keep the race lead. Byron would smack the Turn 3 wall, and with an injured car would later spin into Turn 1 to bring out the yellow.

    Harvick would once again lead the field to the green with Kurt Busch and Bowman rounding out the Top 3. Daniel Suarez spun out on Lap 124 due to a right rear tire going down, creating the fifth caution of the day.

    Kyle Busch hit the wall, giving the No. 18 substantial damage to the right side.

    Parts of the Turn 3 banner would fly onto Hamlin’s car but he shortly got it off the front of his grille by drafting Bowyer. However, Reddick would have the remnants of the banner fly onto his Chevy. A yellow would fly due to the loose Blue-Emu wrapping on the Turn 3 wall.

    Harvick led on the restart with a push from Martin Truex Jr.

    On Lap 172 Christopher Bell would spin off Turn 4 to bring out another yellow. Keselowski inherited the race lead after pit stops while Harvick would lose seven positions on pit lane.

    Keselowski would win Stage Two with Bowman, Truex, Harvick, and Bowyer rounding the top five. Kurt Busch, Ryan Preece, Joey Logano, Hamlin, and Erik Jones would round out the top 10.

    The No. 2 would bring the field together to begin the final stage with Bowman and Truex in hot pursuit. Matt Kenseth’s car would come to life as the No. 42 would move upward into the top 10. Buescher would spin out on the front stretch to bring out the caution.

    Harvick would win the race off pit road with Keselowski and Truex behind him.

    During the green flag stint, Kyle Busch had issues with his M&M’s Toyota, bringing the car down pit lane, knocking him out of a top 10 spot.

    With 41 laps to go Newman would spin out in Turn 1 to bring out another yellow.

    The No. 4 would continue to hold his ground on the rest of the field and there would be no challenges from the opposition as Harvick would cruise on to win at Darlington.

    Results:

    1. Kevin Harvick
    2. Alex Bowman
    3. Kurt Busch
    4. Chase Elliott
    5. Denny Hamlin
    6. Martin Truex Jr.
    7. Tyler Reddick
    8. Erik Jones
    9. John Hunter Nemechek
    10. Matt Kenseth
    11. Austin Dillon
    12. Aric Almirola
    13. Brad Keselowski
    14. Matt DiBenedetto
    15. Ryan Newman
    16. Ryan Blaney
    17. Clint Bowyer
    18. Joey Logano
    19. Ty Dillon
    20. Ryan Preece
    21. Bubba Wallace
    22. Cole Custer
    23. Michael McDowell
    24. Christopher Bell
    25. Daniel Suarez – one lap down
    26. Kyle Busch – one lap down
    27. Brennan Poole – one lap down
    28. JJ Yeley – two laps down
    29. Reed Sorenson – two laps down
    30. Joey Gase – four laps down
    31. Corey LaJoie – four laps down
    32. Chris Buescher – six laps down
    33. Timmy Hill – seven laps down
    34. Josh Bilicki – seven laps down
    35. William Byron – 14 laps down
    36. Quin Houff – OUT
    37. Garrett Smithley – OUT
    38. Jimmie Johnson – OUT
    39. BJ McLeod – OUT
    40. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – OUT

  • Harvick wins Darlington in NASCAR’s comeback

    Harvick wins Darlington in NASCAR’s comeback

    RAINELLE, WV – Sitting at home to cover a race on television is not the ideal place to be on race day, but one could not fail to realize how important this had become.

    NASCAR was the first major sport to go back live with an event since most everyone was staying home to avoid the Coronavirus. The stands were empty, drivers and crews wore masks, and so did reporters, as few as there was.

    A big audience of viewers saw a good race. It worked! The image of winner Kevin Harvick saying to his crew, “I don’t know what to do,” after winning the Toyota 500 at Darlington Raceway and an even starker scene as we saw Harvick alone in victory lane, all alone as the trophy sat on a stand.

    Racing was back! Everyone wore facemasks, but you could tell who was behind the masks. The racing was good between drivers who had not been on a track since early March. It was a joy, and surely the grades will be good on how the sanctioning body handled the event. One had to wonder, though, when on the first lap, Ricky Stenhouse crashed, but all went well.

    As usual, there were mishaps, unusual events that happen at most races but magnified on the first time back after a pandemic. Seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson crashed while leading on the final lap of the first stage, a better result than Stenhouse, but not much. A fire broke out on the property that gave us a smoke show, which was surprising because there was no crowd. This is could only happen to NASCAR, but the smoke went harmlessly away.

    To make this safe, there were lots of rules. Teams were required to submit rosters in advance with only 16 members allotted per car. Names were on a list at a checkpoint at the end of a gravel road near the speedway and everyone who passed through had their temperature checked and logged before they could enter. Everyone passed inspection and prepared to race with no practice and no qualifying. The field was determined by a draw. Unusual times for sure.

    Ryan Newman was back for the first time since he suffered a head injury exactly three months ago in a wreck on the final lap of the Daytona 500. Newman missed only three races because of NASCAR’s shutdown and finished 15th in his return. Matt Kenseth was back after replacing Kyle Larson in Chip Ganassi’s No. 42 Chevrolet. He finished in 10th place.

    It all came down to Harvick and Alex Bowman. They battled closely for the first few laps, but The Closer, as Harvick is called, always ran out to multi-second leads. Harvick led 159 laps and Bowman led 41. Brad Keselowski led 80 laps, but he faltered late and finished 13th. Bowman, who signed a one-year contract extension with Hendrick Motorsports on Saturday, was second. Kurt Busch, winner of the closest finish in Darlington history, was third for Ganassi.

    It was the 50th career victory for Harvick, in a Ford for Stewart-Haas Racing. A previous winner at Darlington, Harvick joins Joey Logano, Bowman, and Denny Hamlin as 2020 winners. Harvick tied Hall of Famers Junior Johnson and Ned Jarrett for 12th on NASCAR’s all-time wins list.

    NASCAR’s elite Cup Series next races Wednesday night at Darlington Raceway which is hosting three events in four days before the sport shifts to Charlotte Motor Speedway.

  • Hamlin delivers at virtual North Wilkesboro

    Hamlin delivers at virtual North Wilkesboro

    iRacing has brought North Wilkesboro, one of NASCAR’s historical tracks, into the virtual world for the Pro Invitational drivers after being recently scanned.

    Denny Hamlin would find victory lane at virtual North Wilkesboro after making an aggressive move on Ross Chastain within the final laps.

    “We’ve had a thing over the last few years of winning very important races,” Hamlin said. “It’s pretty awesome to be able to have success, be competitive, and race for wins whether it be real life or virtual.”

    Cole Custer led the field down to the green, but Ryan Preece would immediately move down to the inside line to try and take the top spot.

    The No. 37 would try for the first two laps, but Custer would fend him off.

    On Lap 5 the first caution would fly when Hamlin would turn John Hunter Nemechek off Turn 2. Erik Jones and Martin Truex Jr. would get collected in the carnage.

    Custer would lead, but Preece would take the first position immediately, Garrett Smithley would follow behind in second.

    Chastain would march his way to the third position. On Lap 31 another caution would fly when Timmy Hill would get spun around, collecting several drivers.

    Preece and Chastain would be door to door on the restart, while Custer would spin off of Turn 2 to bring out another yellow flag.

    The No. 37 would lead once again on the restart, but shortly afterwards more trouble would plague the field, bunching the field up once again.

    Pit stops would change the order up drastically, and Christopher Bell would lead the way with Earnhardt Jr. following behind.

    Nemechek would spin in Turn 1 fighting for position, but no yellow would fly. For Parker Kligerman, he would get front end damage after colliding with Kyle Busch as they both were avoiding Smithley’s No. 51.

    Bell would continue to lead the way, but the remainder of the Top 5 would find issues as Landon Cassill would hit the Turn 3 curb, hitting Austin Dillon. A multi-car pileup would ignite, with Hill’s car hitting the pit wall.

    The No. 95 would continue to lead on the restart. Preece would nearly spin off Turn 4, but would hold onto his racecar.

    Chastain would move up towards the runner up spot, Hamlin would also reel in the No. 6 and follow in tow.

    With 63 to go, Hamlin would pass Chastain into Turn 3 to take the runner up spot. As the field would get into a run, Hamlin’s car would come to life as he would pass Bell to take over the lead.

    Bobby Labonte would bring out the next caution, as his Interstate Battieries Toyota would get loose off of Turn 2, sliding him into the path of Austin Dillon. The long green flag run would come to an end, and Hamlin’s lead would evaporate.

    Chastain would beat the field off pit road, putting the No. 6 in the top spot. As the race went green with 27 to go, Chastain would have a good restart and would try and hold off Hill.

    The middle of the pack would get chaotic as a huge domino effect would ensue on the frontstretch, creating another big pileup.

    Chastain would lead with 16 laps to go with Hill on his outside. Martin Truex Jr. would crash in Turn 3, but no yellow would fly.

    Hamlin would pressure the No 6, and Chastain would get pushed out of the way with 9 to go. The No. 6 would try and regain some lost ground, but would collide with Cassill and the two would nearly spin out.

    Hill would try and chase down Hamlin, but would run out of time as the No. 11 would cruise to victory lane at North Wilkesboro.

    Race Results:

    1. Denny Hamlin
    2. Timmy Hill
    3. Tyler Reddick
    4. Ross Chastain
    5. Austin Dillon
    6. Garrett Smithley
    7. Brennan Poole
    8. Parker Kligerman
    9. Kevin Harvick
    10. Landon Cassill
    11. JJ Yeley
    12. Clint Bowyer
    13. Jon Wood
    14. Christopher Bell
    15. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    16. Cole Custer
    17. Joey Gase
    18. Jeff Gordon
    19. Bobby Labonte
    20. Martin Truex Jr.
    21. Chris Buescher
    22. Erik Jones
    23. Kyle Busch – Disconnected
    24. John Hunter Nemechek – Disconnected
    25. Corey LaJoie – Disconnected
    26. Aric Almriola – Disconnected
    27. Ryan Preece – Disconnected
    28. Michael McDowell – Disconnected
    29. Ty Dillon – Disqualified
  • William Byron tames the virtual Monster Mile in dominating fashion

    William Byron tames the virtual Monster Mile in dominating fashion

    William Byron once again found success in the NASCAR Pro Invitational iRacing Series, winning at Dover.

    It had come down to a late race restart, and with four fresh tires, Byron passed Timmy Hill in the closing laps to take home the win.

    “It was a lot of fun today,” Byron said. “There was a lot of cautions so I just had to kind of pace myself. It was hard to predict when we were going to get a longer run so it’s hard to know what to do with the tires in terms of how much to save. My help there, Nick, Matt Holden, did a great job of really kind of leaving the strategy up to them as far as what tires to take. I think four tires at the end was the right call to be aggressive. Just thankful for their support and ready to get back to our normal racing here soon.”

    Ross Chastain led the field down to the green early on, but it would be short lived as Parker Kligerman would take over the lead.

    An early caution would fly when Daniel Suarez’s No. 96 would get loose off Turn 2, sending the Toyota into the inside wall. The car would slide up the racetrack into the back half of the field, collecting Matt DiBenedetto, Kevin Harvick, and Chad Finchum.

    Denny Hamlin would lead on the restart, with Kligerman right behind him. For Kligerman, he would find trouble as Hill would hit the No. 77 coming into Turn 1. Kligerman’s Toyota would hit the outside wall, collecting Kyle Busch.

    Byron would lead on the restart, but a yellow would fly on Lap 42 when Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Kyle Busch and Erik Jones would make contact, sending them crashing down the backstretch.

    Garrett Smithley would lead due to a two tire stop. However, William Byron would power his way around the No. 51, immediately taking the first position.

    Kurt Busch would find his troubles after battling Joey Logano. The No. 1 would check up off Turn 2, but would get hit from behind, sending the Monster Energy Chevy into the inside wall. Others behind would crash trying to check up, triggering a massive pileup.

    Smithley would be the leader on the restart, with the Hendrick cars of Alex Bowman, Jimmie Johnson, and Byron in hot pursuit.

    Logano would have a close shave with the inside wall as the No. 22 would get loose off Turn 4, nearly sending his Ford into the barrier.

    Hill would march his way towards the runner-up spot, while Chastain would begin to pressure Johnson for fourth. The No. 6 would muscle his way forwards, as Johnson’s car would begin to fade.

    J.J. Yeley’s motor would blow up, and many drivers would slam into the No. 52 trying to avoid the slow car. Multiple cars would slam into each other checking up, eventually hitting the slow Yeley. As a result another yellow would fly.

    Hill would beat Byron off pit lane, putting the No. 66 up front on the restart

    Johnson would hit the inside wall off Turn 4 shortly afterwards. The Ally Bank Chevy would slide up into Chris Buescher’s path, also collecting Kligerman in the process and bringing out another caution flag.

    Hill and Byron would lead the field down to the green, and the two would try and pull a gap on the rest of the field.

    John Hunter Nemechek would begin to move his way forwards as he would climb to the third position.

    With 51 laps to go Byron would take the lead from Hill off Turn 4. The No. 24 had set up the No. 66 off Turn 2, and with the momentum he had, he went down the inside of Hill’s Toyota, taking the top spot.

    A few laps later Suarez and Bowman would collide off Turn 4. Logano, Kyle Busch, and Austin Dillon would get swept up as Suarez’s No. 96 would slide down the track.

    Byron would have a big jump on the restart over Hill, while third on back would tussle for position with 37 to go.

    More carnage ensued as Regan Smith and Ty Dillon would crash on the frontstretch, bunching the field up yet again.

    The No. 24 would continue to lead on the restart, but as Byron neared the 15 to go mark, another yellow would fly as Nemechek and Hamlin would make contact off Turn 4, sending the No. 11 Fedex Toyota into the outside wall. Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kurt Busch, and Michael McDowell would have damage in the crash.

    With varying strategies, Hill would lead on the final restart with two tires. Landon Cassill would try and block Byron, but the No. 89 would slide up the track and into the wall. Chastain would get swept up, but no caution would fly.

    The four tires would kick in as Byron would pass Hill for the lead with seven laps to go. Christopher Bell would take over the second spot. However it wouldn’t be enough as the No. 24 would take the checkered flag at Dover.

    Results:

    1. William Byron
    2. Christopher Bell
    3. Timmy Hill
    4. Erik Jones
    5. Michael McDowell
    6. Denny Hamlin
    7. Ryan Blaney
    8. Alex Bowman
    9. Garrett Smithley
    10. Aric Almirola
    11. Brennan Poole
    12. Cole Custer
    13. Bobby Labonte
    14. Joey Logano
    15. Kyle Busch
    16. Kurt Busch
    17. Ross Chastain – Disconnected
    18. Kevin Harvick
    19. J.J. Yeley
    20. Corey LaJoie – Disconnected
    21. Landon Cassill
    22. Chad Finchum
    23. Austin Dillon
    24. Joey Gase
    25. Tyler Reddick
    26. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    27. John Hunter Nemechek – Disconnected
    28. Jimmie Johnson – Disconnected
    29. Ryan Preece – Disconnected
    30. Daniel Suarez – Disconnected
    31. Regan Smith
    32. Ty Dillon – Disconnected
    33. Brad Keselowski – Disconnected
    34. Parker Kligerman – Disconnected
    35. Chris Buescher – Disconnected
    36. Matt DiBenedetto – Disconnected
  • Joey Logano holds off the field to win at Phoenix

    Joey Logano holds off the field to win at Phoenix

    Joey Logano found victory lane Sunday afternoon at Phoenix Raceway. It was Logano’s 25th win of his career and second of the season, making him the first repeat winner of the 2020 NASCAR Cup season.

    Chase Elliott earned the pole, with Kevin Harvick taking the second spot. Martin Truex Jr. would start at the rear due to an engine change.

    Stage 1:

    We saw action early when Elliott and Harvick led the field to the green. The two would nearly collide in Turn 3 of the opening laps but would keep their cars straight. The two of them would be inseparable as laps later they would battle it out for the race lead, with Harvick eventually taking the top spot.

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr. would find troubles as his No. 47 would hit the in Turn 1 going underneath J.J. Yeley. The No. 47 would receive rear damage to his Chevrolet, bringing out the first caution.

    A restart would ensue and Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney, and Brad Keselowski would find troubles as the three collided into the Turn 3 wall. Blaney would be knocked out of the race while Hamlin and Keselowski would be able to keep on going.

    Kevin Harvick would fend off the field to win Stage 1.

    Elliott, Logano, Matt DiBenedetto, Kyle Busch, Alex Bowman, Truex, Aric Almirola, Tyler Reddick, and Erik Jones would round out the rest of the Top 10.

    Stage 2:

    Elliott would lead the first few laps of the stage before Harvick would retake the race lead. However, the No. 9 would fight back and respond by taking the lead back. Keselowski would march his way forward as he would pass by Harvick for the second spot.

    Halfway into the stage, Austin Dillon would blow a right front tire, causing the No. 3 to slap the Turn 1 wall, bringing out the yellow.

    During pit stops, Logano would get a penalty due to an uncontrolled tire, Harvick would lose spots due to a lengthy pit stop.

    Keselowski and Elliott would lead the field down on the restart, but the two would have a close skirmish with each other into Turn 2, giving Truex an opportunity to lead some laps. Elliott and Keselowski would pass the No. 19 shortly after.

    Elliott’s lead would be short-lived as he would come down pit lane, reporting a loose wheel, giving Keselowski the first position.

    Rookie Tyler Reddick would climb his way toward the Top 5 as he would pass Kyle Busch for position.

    Elliott was on the hard charge, trying to pass cars left and right in order to get back onto the lead lap. A caution with two laps to go into the stage would fly when Garrett Smithley’s car would blow up.

    As a result, Keselowski got the stage win. For Elliott, he would get the free pass thanks to the yellow.

    Harvick, Truex, Reddick, Kyle Busch, Almirola, Logano, Clint Bowyer, Kyle Larson, and Cole Custer would finish out the Top 10 at the end of Stage 2.

    Stage 3:

    Keselowski and Truex would lead the field down, and Reddick would move his way towards the second position immediately.

    Reddick, Logano, and Harvick would later duke it out, going three-wide into Turn 3. Reddick would drive the car wide, dropping him all the way down to ninth.

    Elliott, who had issues back in Stage 2, lurked his way into the Top 10 with 101 laps to go. Quin Houff would blow up off of Turn 2 a few laps later, sending the StarCom Chevy into the outside wall.

    The field would immediately flood pit road. Truex was the first one off due to a two-tire stop. Reddick, Jones, and Christopher Bell would follow along with two tires as well.

    The two-tire strategy would not pay off, as Truex, Reddick, Jones, and Bell would fall backward in position, while those with four new tires would surge their way past.

    Logano and Harvick would pull away from the field until a crash in Turn 1 by Jones and Custer would bunch the field back up. A plethora of cautions would follow upon the restarts.

    Reddick, who had a promising run throughout, would have a right-front tire go down, sending the rookie into the Turn 2 wall. Chris Buescher would have a left front go down after contact with Bell, resulting with the No. 17 hitting the Turn 1 wall.

    Truex, on a restart, would get a shove from Almirola, sending his Bass Pro Shops Toyota hard into the Turn 1 wall, knocking him out of the race. Logano, who was trying to block Bowman, had a close call and saved it in the dogleg.

    Keselowski and Bowyer would lead the front row on the restart, but Logano would close in on the two and would discard them quickly. Harvick would later move Keselowski to take second away. With nine laps to go, Ross Chastain would spin off of Turn 4 after contact with William Byron.

    A four-lap shootout would arise, and Logano would have to hold off the field again when John Hunter Nemechek and Stenhouse collided off of Turn 4.

    It led to NASCAR Overtime, and with a solid restart, Logano would run away from Harvick to secure the victory at Phoenix.

    There were 20 lead changes for seven different leaders. There were 12 cautions for 73 laps.

    Results:

    1. Joey Logano – 60 laps led
    2. Kevin Harvick – 67 laps led, Stage 1 winner
    3. Kyle Busch
    4. Kyle Larson – two laps led
    5. Clint Bowyer
    6. Kurt Busch
    7. Chase Elliott – 93 laps led
    8. Aric Almirola
    9. Cole Custer
    10. William Byron
    11. Brad Keselowski – 82 laps led, Stage 2 winner
    12. Jimmie Johnson
    13. Matt DiBenedetto
    14. Alex Bowman
    15. Ty Dillon
    16. Michael McDowell
    17. Chris Buescher
    18. Ryan Preece – one lap led
    19. Bubba Wallace
    20. Denny Hamlin
    21. Daniel Suarez
    22. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    23. Ross Chastain
    24. Christopher Bell
    25. John Hunter Nemechek
    26. JJ Yeley
    27. Corey LaJoie
    28. Erik Jones – three laps down
    29. Joey Gase – three laps down
    30. Reed Sorenson – four laps down
    31. Brennan Poole – OUT
    32. Martin Truex Jr. – 11 laps led, OUT
    33. Tyler Reddick – OUT
    34. Quin Houff – OUT
    35. Garrett Smithley – OUT
    36. Austin Dillon – OUT
    37. Ryan Blaney – OUT
    38. Timmy Hill – OUT
  • Alex Bowman dominates at Auto Club

    Alex Bowman dominates at Auto Club

    After showcasing a ton of speed at Las Vegas, Alex Bowman struck gold Sunday afternoon as he found himself celebrating in victory lane at Auto Club Speedway.

    “We’ve been so good to start this season,” Bowman said. “We started the season very poorly really over the last two years, and it just means the world to show up at the racetrack and have the first run on the racetrack really be almost perfect and just be able to really fine-tune the race car. Greg Ives has made the right calls.  So, we’ve got to go win a bunch more, but man, it feels good to have one this early.”

    It was Bowman’s second win of his NASCAR Cup Series career. The Arizona native led 110 laps in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to cruise toward victory.

    Stage 1:

    Before the field took the green flag, Auto Club Speedway commemorated seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson as he led the field in a five-wide salute during the pace laps in what could be his final start at the two-mile oval.

    As the field formed back to double-file formation, it was Clint Bowyer leading the way, with Johnson starting second as the green flag waved.

    Johnson was looking for the race lead early on but would fall back as teammate Bowman would inherit the runner-up spot behind leader Bowyer.

    Bowman would also take a lunge at Bowyer but would be unable to capitalize, resulting in Kurt Busch and Johnson swiftly passing the No. 88. The three of them would spar back and forth for the second position, with Bowman holding off the two Chevrolets.

    Bowyer’s early lead would be short-lived as Bowman’s No. 88 would take the top spot, with teammate Johnson immediately following behind in second as Bowyer gradually began to fade.

    Ryan Blaney slowly marched his way forward and by the halfway point of Stage 1, he was up to the second position.

    Pit stops would ensue on Lap 27 as Martin Truex Jr. would ignite the cycle. By the end of it, Bowman would be the leader.

    Kyle Larson would find trouble after Denny Hamlin gave the No. 42 a push into Turn 1, putting the McDonald’s Chevrolet into the outside wall. It would put Larson two laps down.

    Bowman would remain unchallenged after the cycle and would win Stage 1.

    Blaney, Johnson, Aric Almirola, Busch, Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Matt DiBenedetto, Chase Elliott, and Kyle Busch would round out the top 10.

    Stage 2:

    It initially looked as though Kurt Busch was the first one off after everybody came down pit lane. However, the No. 1 missed his pit stall, putting him toward the back. As a result, it transferred the lead over to Johnson.

    Johnson took the lead on the restart but Blaney and Bowman would make it three-wide on the seven-time champ, allowing Blaney’s No. 12 to take first place.

    The two Hendrick Motorsports cars would put up a fight against the Team Penske car, but Blaney would fend off the duo and pull away.

    Christopher Bell suffered mechanical issues during the green flag run, knocking the No. 95 Toyota out of the race.

    Pole-sitter Bowyer had a left front tire go down on Lap 93, bringing out a yellow shortly after pit stops.

    Blaney would be in charge of the restart, and while he was able to pull away, his other competitors were duking it out. Bowman and Keselowski made aggressive moves around Logano and William Byron to gain some track position, and Elliott would march his way towards the Top 5.

    Blaney’s lead would remain unchallenged as he would cruise on to win Stage 2.

    Bowman, Johnson, Keselowski, Truex, Elliott, Kyle Busch, Hamlin, Erik Jones, and Kevin Harvick rounded out the Top 10 for stage points.

    Stage 3:

    Johnson was the leader at the beginning of the stage but was quickly hounded by Bowman as he passed the No. 48 off of Turn 2. Blaney and Truex were in hot pursuit, making it four wide among the leaders.

    Truex would briefly hold the lead, but Bowman would fight back. The two would swap back and forth, but Truex would fend off Bowman. But as the laps wound down, Bowman would reclaim the lead over the No. 19 and would pull a gap over the opposition.

    Another pit cycle would begin as everyone came in for some fresh rubber and fuel.

    Frontrunner Truex had issues during his stop, as the pit gun would malfunction when tending to the right rear tire, costing him valuable track position.

    Bowman and Blaney would be the leaders after the cycle, giving themselves plenty of distance between the fourth through sixth place drivers of Johnson, Elliott, and Kurt Busch.

    The three Chevrolets would battle for the fourth position, with Elliott edging out Kurt Busch for the spot while Johnson’s car began to fade. Truex’s day would continue to go downward when he slapped the Turn 4 wall trying to overtake Hamlin, allowing Keselowski to overtake the No. 19.

    Near the closing stages of the race, Blaney would have to come down pit lane due to a corded tire with only three laps to go, giving up a second-place run at the time.

    For Bowman, redemption was sweet as he crossed the line to secure the win. It provided a statement as he showcased his muscle around the California track.

    “You know, we started this year so strong,” Bowman said. “I feel like I’ve got a lot on my side that I’m doing better.  My life is kind of a lot more organized than it was back then, and Greg and all the guys, they’re just on point. We’ve unloaded the last two weeks, I don’t think we’ve had to make a change in the race car from how it came off the truck. That makes my job a heck of a lot easier. I’m just so proud of this team, Hendrick Motorsports, Hendrick horsepower under the hood, the whole shop back home. They work their butts off. We put a lot of effort into this new car, and it’s obviously working well.”

    There were 16 lead changes among eight different drivers and only three cautions for 13 laps.

    Blaney retains the points lead by 11, over Logano.

    1. Alex Bowman – 110 laps led, Stage 1 Winner
    2. Kyle Busch
    3. Kurt Busch
    4. Chase Elliott
    5. Brad Keselowski – six laps led
    6. Denny Hamlin
    7. Jimmie Johnson – ten laps led
    8. Aric Almirola
    9. Kevin Harvick
    10. Erik Jones
    11. Tyler Reddick
    12. Joey Logano
    13. Matt DiBenedetto
    14. Martin Truex Jr. – three laps led
    15. William Byron – one lap led
    16. Chris Buescher
    17. Ross Chastain
    18. Cole Custer – one lap down
    19. Ryan Blaney – one lap down, 54 laps led, Stage 2 winner
    20. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – one lap down, 6 laps led
    21. Kyle Larson – one lap down
    22. Michael McDowell – one lap down
    23. Clint Bowyer – one lap down, ten laps led
    24. Austin Dillon – one lap down
    25. John Hunter Nemechek – one lap down
    26. Ty Dillon – one lap down
    27. Bubba Wallace – two laps down
    28. Daniel Suarez – two laps down
    29. Corey Lajoie – three laps down
    30. Ryan Preece – three laps down
    31. JJ Yeley – three laps down
    32. Brennan Poole – five laps down
    33. Joey Gase – seven laps down
    34. Garrett Smithley – seven laps down
    35. Quin Houff – eight laps down
    36. Reed Sorenson – nine laps down
    37. Timmy Hill – 16 laps down
    38. Christopher Bell – OUT
  • Bowyer notches fourth career Cup Series pole at Auto Club Speedway

    Bowyer notches fourth career Cup Series pole at Auto Club Speedway

    With a time of 40.086 seconds and a speed of 179.614 mph, Kansas native Clint Bowyer qualified on the pole for this Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Raceway. Bowyer narrowly edged out fan-favorite Jimmie Johnson for the pole by 0.007 seconds. However, the qualifying run surprised the Stewart-Haas Racing driver.

    “Certainly that is where you want to be,” Bowyer said. “Honestly, I didn’t really see that in the car. We didn’t run a qualifying lap yesterday. We made some changes in happy hour and the car kind of woke up and showed some speed but honestly, we were kind of focused on downforce and doing what we needed to do in traffic.”

    “That being said, that thing rocketed to the top there and he told me the lap time and I was like, ‘Damn, I think that is on the pole.’ Again, the sun was coming out and that changed the qualifying day quite a bit as the sun came out and it was right before us. I was watching the Gibbs cars go and you could see on SMT with the data we have now you can visibly see everyone starting to really jerk on the wheel in the middle of one and two and get loose. I was like, ‘Oh damn, here I go. I am fixing to see the same thing.’ Sure enough, I got in there and she just kind of slid in the slot and I didn’t have to chase it up the track.”

    “I just gave it one big catch and it pointed and shot off the corner and I was able to keep the throttle down. Then you see the 48 car, the last car out, the story of his last race at home. I figured there was no way we were going to win. I was better coming to the green and then better through one and two but then all of a sudden off of two he had a really good run and got ahead of me into three and four. Honestly, he was ahead of me off of four even, but I just pulled it down just a little bit more than he did down the front straightaway and just barely got him. That is what qualifying is all about with this product where you are all but wide open. It comes down to your balance and how the car is trimmed out and things like that. It makes it interesting and nerve-wracking as well because it is all so close.”

    For now, this will be Jimmie Johnson’s last race at his hometown racetrack in Southern California. The California native just almost knocked out Bowyer for the pole but had to settle for second. Despite not getting the pole, Sunday’s race will be just as special for Johnson, as his kids will get to wave the green flag to start the race.

    “It will be super special,” Johnson said. “I wish we were one spot further ahead and clearly off turn four there I ran a little more distance to the start-finish. It is such a fine balance to try to understand how much you can open up and let the engine run. Clearly I did too much, but that’s just the competitor in me. Very special weekend for me and I can’t wait to see my girls up in the flag stand waving the green flag.”

    There was more qualifying news as both Kurt Busch and Martin Truex Jr. failed inspection. Busch failed twice and was still able to do a qualifying lap, while Truex failed three times and did not get to post a lap. Both Busch and Truex will be starting from the rear tomorrow.

    Tomorrow’s race can be seen on FOX with a start time of 3:30 p.m. ET.

    Starting lineup:

    1. Clint Bowyer
    2. Jimmie Johnson
    3. Alex Bowman
    4. Kurt Busch, will start in the rear
    5. Kevin Harvick
    6. Aric Almirola
    7. Joey Logano
    8. Michael McDowell
    9. Kyle Larson
    10. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    11. Chris Buescher
    12. Matt DiBenedetto
    13. Chase Elliott
    14. Bubba Wallace
    15. Brad Keselowski
    16. Ryan Blaney
    17. Kyle Busch
    18. Cole Custer
    19. Tyler Reddick
    20. Ryan Preece
    21. William Byron
    22. Christopher Bell
    23. John Hunter Nemechek
    24. Ty Dillon
    25. Austin Dillon
    26. Corey LaJoie
    27. Ross Chastain
    28. Denny Hamlin
    29. Erik Jones
    30. J.J. Yeley
    31. Daniel Suarez
    32. Brennan Poole
    33. Reed Sorenson
    34. Joey Gase
    35. Quin Houff
    36. Garrett Smithley
    37. Timmy Hill
    38. Martin Truex Jr. – did not make a qualifying run due to inspection failures