Tag: DC Solar 300

  • First Career Win for Chastain in the DC Solar 300 at Vegas

    First Career Win for Chastain in the DC Solar 300 at Vegas

    Ross Chastain wins the final race of the NASCAR XFINITY Series regular season and the first of his career at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the DC Solar 300.

    “We did it!” Chastain yelled on the frontstretch after celebrating with donuts over the race sponsor’s logo on the frontstretch grass, who also sponsored his car for that race.

    Chastain first made headline news in NASCAR media a few weeks ago after the run-in with Kevin Harvick at Darlington. Harvick pinched him into the outside wall, and Chastain immediately retaliated by spinning him out on the same straightaway. His main concern was quickly turned to car owner Chip Ganassi, as he wasn’t sure how his boss would take his reaction on track. A tweet and a phone call showed nothing but pride and confidence in his driver.

    “It was so scary when the call was made to take this deal,” Chastain shared in the media center. “[Johnny Davis] believed in me to drive the 4 car and to put me in that car years ago. That’s what my career needed. This [win] is bigger than the playoffs. I’m not trying to spin the story, but this is literally a kid from Florida, eighth generation farmer who started hobby racing when I was 13. It was never supposed to be this way, so that’s why it’s so much bigger.”

    Runner-up finisher, Justin Allgaier, was the regular series champion, and will take 15 additional points into the playoffs, but isn’t planning to relax going into the Playoffs.

    “Yes and no,” Allgaier said when asked if he felt comfortable with the extra point cushion. “I wanted those extra five bonus points. You gotta go for race wins, you gotta go for stage wins because it’s so challenging to keep the speed but also execute.”

    Cole Custer was the third driver that battled at the front all race long, but finished in the third position after what he called a race with insane restarts.

    “The restarts were insane,” Custer stated. “If you were fourth on back, you were fighting for your life to try to stay in front of guys because the track position was so important. So you’re trying to block and get as many runs as you can. I feel like every track we go to, we compete for a win but it’s about having it all fall into place.”

    Christopher Bell and Elliott Sadler rounded out the top five. Ryan Preece, Brandon Jones, Ryan Truex, Austin Cindric and Spencer Gallagher finished in the remaining top ten positions.

    Chastain wins both stages at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the DC Solar 300. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.
    Chastain wins both stages at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the DC Solar 300. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.

    Chastain Leads Most Laps, Wins Stage 1

    Cole Custer started on pole and led the opening two laps, but Ross Chastain was able to get by him. Matt Tifft failed post-qualifying inspection four times, so had to serve a pass-through penalty on Lap 1, putting his car one lap down early on.

    On Lap 5, the No. 5 JR Motorsports Chevrolet of Michael Annett slid through the grass after contact with Ryan Preece. A three-wide pass was attempted on the exit of Turn 4 with Ryan Sieg to the far outside. Annett noticed this at the last second and tried to turn sharper. This caused the rear tires to lose grip, and as he caught the car, he made contact with Ryan Preece which sent his car into the grass. Annett tried to drive around onto pit road, but his car expired on the apron of Turn 1. He finished 40th with his fifth DNF.

    The track was slick all stage long, but Ross Chastain was able to lead the most laps and win the first stage. He lifted off the throttle to allow Ryan Preece to get a lap back. John Jackson, Jeff Green and Annett were the only three cars out of the race at this point.

    The Field Continued to Hunt Down Chastain in Stage 2

    Ryan Reed takes heavy damage after contact with Matt Tifft on the exit of Turn 4 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Both drivers were treated and released from the infield care center. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.
    Ryan Reed takes heavy damage after contact with Matt Tifft on the exit of Turn 4 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Both drivers were treated and released from the infield care center. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.

    Chastain’s pit crew were able to keep their driver in the lead. Most of the front runners kept their positions, except for Christopher Bell who lost a couple spots on pit road.

    On Lap 65, Matt Tifft and Ryan Reed made heavy contact. In the middle of Turns 3 and 4, Tifft got loose and Reed had nowhere to go, as Reed drove into the left front of Tifft’s No. 2 car. That sent Tifft spinning in the opposite direction, and Reed with no right front panels and heavy damage to his right front wheel. His car rested along the frontstretch. Reed sat next to his car to catch his breath, but thankfully was able to walk away under his own power. Tifft took longer to get out of his car because his car rested with the driver’s side against the frontstretch wall. Both drivers were checked and released from the infield car center.

    On the restart, Daniel Hemric got a great push from Custer to lead a couple laps, but Chastain was able to quickly hunt him down and put his No. 42 Chevrolet in the lead. He led the rest of the laps to close out the stage. Three more cars were declared out of the race: Stan Mullis, Matt Tifft and Ryan Reed. Timmy Hill spent 24 laps behind the wall to make some repairs, but was able to rejoin the race.

    Everything Goes Wild in the Final Stage at Vegas

    Again, Chastain’s pit crew, who are the same members for Kyle Larson’s NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series team, puts their Xfinity driver out on top. Custer lost five spots on this pit stop, allowing everyone else to gain a spot. However, NASCAR issued two penalties: Ryan Preece for speeding on pit road, and Cole Custer for an uncontrolled tire during his pit stop.

    Daniel Hemric edges ahead of Ross Chastain on the restart. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.
    Daniel Hemric edges ahead of Ross Chastain on the restart. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.

    On the restart, Chastain started to get pressure throughout the entire first run as Daniel Hemric started to side draft on the exit of Turns 2 and 4, getting to his rear bumper or side drafting along the straights. That didn’t last too long as Chastain was able to get back around and continue leading. As the run went longer, it appeared that Chastain’s car handled better as the run continued. Toward the beginning of the final stage, both Timmy Hill and Mike Harmon retired from the race.

    As the field was facing one of the longest green flag runs of the day so far, Ryan Preece spun on the exit of Turn 2, bringing out the yellow flag around Lap 125. The whole field came down for pit stops. Similar to the other pit stops in the day, the drivers at the front continued to keep most of their positions. Hemric lost a few spots and dropped to the fifth position. Brandon Jones received a penalty for an uncontrolled tire, and went to the back of the field for the restart from his sixth place position after his pit stops.

    On the restart, Chastain continued to hold the lead. However, about ten laps into the run, Allgaier moved himself into the second position. After a few side by side battles and pass attempts, he was able to eventually move his No. 7 Chevrolet into the lead and become the first driver besides Chastain to lead more than five laps.

    Later in the run on Lap 149, Allgaier radioed to his crew that the car was getting tight. He was passed by Chastain and Custer, but was able to keep pace with them. At the same time, David Starr went behind wall. Ten laps later, Chastain was able to battle through lap traffic faster and grow his lead to over two seconds.

    The next yellow flag came out right as green flag stops began. Vinnie Miller spun on the track to bring out that yellow flag.

    As for the green flag pit stops, Daniel Hemric, Shane Lee and Cole Custer were all on pit road. Hemric got full service, Lee elected to drive down all of pit lane by skipping his pit box, but Custer’s crew called an audible. They went from a four tire stop to a two tire stop, and with all the chaos over their radio, Custer started to leave his pit box before his jackman was able to clear his path. The crew member climbed over the hood of the car all while holding onto the jack, preventing a penalty of pit equipment leaving the pit box.

    As the field came down pit road under yellow, Custer stalled the car and was in position to be in the top three, but lost a spot from that. Hemric was able to get back on the lead lap from all the pit cycles, but had to take the ‘wave around’ before the restart.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. calling the race from Turns 3 and 4 with NBC Sports. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.
    Dale Earnhardt Jr. calling the race from Turns 3 and 4 with NBC Sports. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.

    Green flag waved for the restart with 20 laps to go. Allgaier was to the outside of Chastain as both drivers slightly spun their tires but got great pushes from Custer and Reddick. As the leaders continued to battle side by side, the field had three-wide battles behind them. They started to go four-wide on the front stretch, but Custer put a block to keep it three-wide. That allowed Christopher Bell to clear him and hold the outside line in the middle of Turns 1 and 2. Contact from the driver on his inside made him loose on the exit of Turn 2. Since the field was already so close to each other, everyone stacked up quickly, and the worse of the accordion effect was Chase Briscoe. He was sent spinning to the inside wall. His No. 60 Roush Fenway Racing Ford made heavy contact with the curvature of the safety crew’s track access. All four tires came off the ground from the impact and the car caught fire, but Briscoe was able to get out of his car under his own power.

    The next restart was similar on the front row with Chastain on the inside and Allgaier to the outside, but the second row had a new set of pushers: Bell on the outside and Gallagher to the inside. Bell was able to push Allgaier, but Chastain got a stronger restart and pulled away from Gallagher. Going into Turn 1, Chastain slammed the door on Allgaier to clear him and secure the top spot.

    On the second lap of the restart, Tyler Reddick hit the outside wall along the frontstretch while trying to block Brandon Jones, and came down in front of the second half of the field. As Reddick came down across the field, he clipped the right rear of Shane Lee, which sent him up into the field and collected his Richard Childress teammate, Daniel Hemric. Jones was the only one able to continue in the race.

    With six laps to go, the field took the final restart. Chastain seemed to be flawless everywhere with his team: setup, pit stops and restarts. This was no different. Going into Turn 1, Chastain was able to clear Allgaier once again and never looked back. He led the most laps, as well as the one that counted to take the checkered flag.

    “With two laps to go, I had a tear come down my face and I told myself, ‘Don’t cry,’” the Florida watermelon farmer told himself as he completed the closing laps.

    The NASCAR XFINITY Series holds their Playoff opener at Richmond Raceway on September 21.

    NASCAR Xfinity Series Race
    Unofficial Race Results for the Inaugural Dc Solar 300 – Saturday, September 15, 2018
    Las Vegas Motor Speedway – Las Vegas, NV

    Pos St Car Driver Team Make
    1 5 42 Ross Chastain DC Solar Chevrolet
    2 8 7 Justin Allgaier BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
    3 1 00 Cole Custer Code 3 Associates Ford
    4 4 20 Christopher Bell # GameStop Tomb Raider Toyota
    5 3 1 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Chevrolet
    6 34 18 Ryan Preece Rheem Toyota
    7 36 19 Brandon Jones Menards Mastercraft Doors Toyota
    8 38 11 Ryan Truex LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet
    9 2 22 Austin Cindric # MoneyLion Ford
    10 14 23 Spencer Gallagher Allegiant Chevrolet
    11 18 38 JJ Yeley RSS Racing Chevrolet
    12 10 39 Ryan Sieg Big Valley Towing Chevrolet
    13 12 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicales.com Chevrolet
    14 16 4 Landon Cassill Chevrolet
    15 17 35 Joey Gase Sparks Chevrolet
    16 15 36 Alex Labbe # Sticky-stuff.com/James Carter Attorney Chevrolet
    17 21 8 Ray Black II Chevrolet
    18 39 0 Garrett Smithley FAME-USA.com Chevrolet
    19 23 15 BJ McLeod teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet
    20 31 90 Josh Williams Sleep Well/Star Tron Chevrolet
    21 22 78 Cole Rouse Chevrolet
    22 27 76 Spencer Boyd # Grunt Style Chevrolet
    23 20 26 Max Tullman Yurpal.com Ford
    24 19 55 Bayley Currey(i) Prevagen Toyota
    25 29 40 Chad Finchum # Smithbilt Homes Chevrolet
    26 33 01 Vinnie Miller # JAS Expedited Trucking Chevrolet
    27 26 45 Josh Bilicki # Prevagen Toyota
    28 7 9 Tyler Reddick # Nationwide Children’s Chevrolet
    29 35 21 Daniel Hemric South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
    30 6 3 Shane Lee Childress Vineyards Chevrolet
    31 13 60 Chase Briscoe Ford
    32 24 52 David Starr Chevrolet
    33 28 74 Mike Harmon Shadow Warriors Project Chevrolet
    34 25 66 Timmy Hill CrashClaimsR.Us Dodge
    35 11 16 Ryan Reed Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford
    36 37 2 Matt Tifft KCMG Chevrolet
    37 40 13 Stan Mullis OCR Gaz Bar Dodge
    38 32 72 John Jackson CrashClaimsR.Us/James Carter Attorney Toyota
    39 30 93 Jeff Green RSS Racing Chevrolet
    40 9 5 Michael Annett Allstate Parts & Service Group Chevrolet
  • Cole Custer Sweeps All Rounds of Xfinity Qualifying for DC Solar 300

    Cole Custer Sweeps All Rounds of Xfinity Qualifying for DC Solar 300

    In the last race of the NASCAR Xfinity Series regular season, Cole Custer sets the pace for the pole position at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the inaugural DC Solar 300 with a speed of 179.295 mph at 30.118 seconds.

    “Yeah, that was one of the craziest qualifying sessions I’ve had,” Custer shared on pit road after winning his fifth career pole in the XFINITY Series.

    Custer was over two-tenths faster than Austin Cindric, who edged out Elliott Sadler and Christopher Bell by thousands of a second between those three drivers. Ross Chastain fought his way to a fifth place effort.

    Shane Lee in his first 1.5 mile oval attempt stayed in the top ten of qualifying all day, and will start in sixth. JR Motorsports teammates Tyler Reddick, Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett will start seventh through ninth respectively. The last two drivers to attempt a qualifying time in the final round were Ryan Sieg and Ryan Reed.

    Jeremy Clements was the only driver in the final round that did not make an attempt to qualify, so his No. 51 Chevrolet will start in the 12th spot in today’s race.

    Last Second Lap gives Custer the Pole in the First Round of Qualifying

    The No. 00 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford set the pace early in qualifying with a speed of 177.032 mph in the first round of qualifying. After struggling to get through the inspection line, Custer was able to finally pass inspection, finish their final preparations and cross the start/finish line to begin their qualifying attempt with 40 seconds left on the clock. JR Motorsports teammates Justin Allgaier and Tyler Reddick were close in the top three. Christopher Bell and Elliott Sadler completed the top five, but Shane Lee was the one who held the top spot the longest for his first 1.5 mile race.

    During the first stage of qualifying, many cars failed inspection, mostly in the rear end. A few teams even failed the second time, putting the car chiefs in jeopardy. According to NASCAR’s rulebook, if a team fails inspection three times, the car chief is ejected from the race and facility for the rest of the weekend. Because of this, some teams elected to not to go through inspection. Matt Tifft was one driver that failed inspection for a third time, so his car chief was ejected for the remainder of the weekend.

    David Starr qualified 24th in the first round to be the last driver to move into the second round. He will start in that spot for Saturday's DC Solar 300. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.
    David Starr qualified 24th in the first round to be the last driver to move into the second round. He will start in that spot for Saturday’s DC Solar 300. Photo by Rachel Myers for Speedway Media.

    Qualifying was halted for a red flag incident with Garrett Smithley, who collided with the outside wall. In qualifying, any incidents that would usually be a yellow flag in race conditions is a red flag. This halts the timer, but inspections continued to give teams a little extra time. Smithley would have to start at the rear of the field in a backup car.

    David Starr held the last transferable spot going into the second round, as he beat Timmy Hill.

    The drivers that either elected to not attempt a qualifying run or were held up with tech inspection included Daniel Hemric, Stan Mullis, Matt Tifft, Brandon Jones, Ryan Preece and Ryan Truex.

    Custer Sweeps Both Stages of Qualifying

    Cole Custer kept his top spot in the second round of qualifying with a speed of 178.406 mph. Ross Chastain found himself in the top 10 of qualifying for the first time with a runner-up effort. Austin Cindric, Tyler Reddick and Christopher Bell completed the top five of the second round.

    Roughly four drivers made some last run attempts to get into the final round of qualifying but fell short of the top 12. The closest of these was Chase Briscoe, but as he took the green flag, the car got loose and was close to hitting the outside wall at the exit of Turn 4. He pulled out onto the track earlier in the session, but after he took the green flag, the car bobbled in the bumps of Turns 1 and 2, so he wisely backed out to get a better attempt later in the session.

    Four drivers in the second stage did not set a qualifying time: Ray Black II, Cole Rouse, BJ McLeod and David Starr.

    Starting Lineup
    Las Vegas Motor Speedway
    Inaugural DC Solar 300

    Pos Car Driver Team Make
    1 00 Cole Custer Code 3 Associates Ford
    2 22 Austin Cindric # MoneyLion Ford
    3 1 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Chevrolet
    4 20 Christopher Bell # GameStop Tomb Raider Toyota
    5 42 Ross Chastain DC Solar Chevrolet
    6 3 Shane Lee Childress Vineyards Chevrolet
    7 9 Tyler Reddick # Nationwide Children’s Chevrolet
    8 7 Justin Allgaier BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
    9 5 Michael Annett Allstate Parts & Service Group Chevrolet
    10 39 Ryan Sieg Big Valley Towing Chevrolet
    11 16 Ryan Reed Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford
    12 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicales.com Chevrolet
    13 60 Chase Briscoe Ford
    14 23 Spencer Gallagher Allegiant Chevrolet
    15 36 Alex Labbe # Sticky-stuff.com/JamesCarterAtty Chevrolet
    16 4 Landon Cassill Chevrolet
    17 35 Joey Gase Sparks Chevrolet
    18 38 JJ Yeley RSS Racing Chevrolet
    19 55 Bayley Currey(i) Prevagen Toyota
    20 26 Max Tullman Yurpal.com Ford
    21 8 Ray Black II Chevrolet
    22 78 Cole Rouse Chevrolet
    23 15 BJ McLeod teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet
    24 52 David Starr Chevrolet
    25 66 Timmy Hill CrashClaimsR.Us Dodge
    26 45 Josh Bilicki # Prevagen Toyota
    27 76 Spencer Boyd # Grunt Style Chevrolet
    28 74 Mike Harmon Shadow Warriors Project Chevrolet
    29 40 Chad Finchum # Smithbilt Homes Chevrolet
    30 93 Jeff Green RSS Racing Chevrolet
    31 90 Josh Williams Sleep Well/Star Tron Chevrolet
    32 72 John Jackson CrashClaimsR.Us/JamesCarterAtt Toyota
    33 01 Vinnie Miller # JAS Expedited Trucking Chevrolet
    34 18 Ryan Preece Rheem Toyota
    35 21 Daniel Hemric South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
    36 19 Brandon Jones Menards Mastercraft Doors Toyota
    37 2 Matt Tifft KCMG Chevrolet
    38 11 Ryan Truex LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet
    39 0 Garrett Smithley FAME-USA.com Chevrolet
    40 13 Stan Mullis OCR Gaz Bar Dodge