Hartford Courant

Elliott looks to take next step

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Chase Elliott again has a chance to take the next step in his young but celebrated NASCAR career. He’s back in the round of eight for a fourth consecutiv­e year, once again trying to drive through to his first championsh­ip finale.

Is he a true contender? The time has come for him to prove it.

Kyle Busch is out of the way, eliminated Sunday after Elliott won on The Roval at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Busch won’t race in the final four for the first time since 2014, and there will be a newCupcham­pion this year.

Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin, winners of a combined 16 of the 32 races this season, are heavily favored to advance to the Nov. 8 finale at Phoenix. That would leave just two remaining slots for the rest of the field; six drivers hoping to join Harvick and Hamlin in the winner-takeall desert showcase.

“We tend to see the same guys make the final four every year, the same group fighting for those spots,” Elliott said. “We’re very capable of asserting ourselves amongst them.”

Busch has cleared out after five straight appearance­s — two were title-winning years — so there’s room for a wild-card winner this November.

Elliott, who three times before has stalled his season in the round of eight, is a credible candidate. He’s won three races for the third year in a row and is

statistica­lly on pace for the best season of his career.

The Hendrick Motorsport­s No. 9 team has been solid before but always stumbled in this critical three-race round. That’s unacceptab­le for such a high-level team. Elliott is considered the centerpiec­e at Hendrick Motorsport­s, particular­ly with seventime champion Jimmie Johnson’s retirement just one month away, and he gives Chevrolet its best shot at ending a three-year title drought.

Chevy has not advanced a driver to the final four since Johnson won his last title in 2016. The bowtie brand watched as Ford

and Toyota went head-tohead for the title the last three years. Chevrolet, and cornerston­es Hendrick and Elliott, were shut out of the crowning race.

The burden falls to Elliott, NASCAR’s two-time defending most popular driver, to get Chevy a ticket to the final show. He’s long been spotlighte­d as the future of NASCAR, and the time has come for him to answer the expectatio­ns on the track.

Elliott at The Roval won his fourth straight road course race, proving he’s the best active driver in the series at that discipline. There are no road courses in this next round that begins

Sunday at Kansas Speedway.

Elliott is good enough at Kansas and even won there in 2018, but the No. 9 team struggled to a 12th-place finish there in July. He also finished 12th a week earlier at Texas Motor Speedway, the second stop in this round.

If this is the year Elliott is to race for a title, he’ll need significan­t improvemen­t at those two tracks the next two weeks.

“Both races were disappoint­ing for us,” acknowledg­ed crew chief Alan Gustafson. “We’ve got to find a way to get through. Running at the sharp end of the spear is going to be what it takes. I think wecan do it.”

There’s been attention on Elliott since before he reached the national level. His father is “Awesome Bill from Dawsonvill­e,” the Hall of Fame 1988 champion and record 16-time most popular driver. Chase has followed those footsteps the last 24 years.

When he was 13, Elliott was featured alongside golfer Jordan Spieth and tennis player Madison Keys in a 2009 Sports Illustrate­d “Where Will They Be” feature of 14 athletes. He signed a driver developmen­t deal with Hendrick Motorsport­s when he was 15 and was racing in the Truck Series two years later.

Elliott won the Xfinity Series championsh­ip as an 18-year-old rookie in 2014, and his career was fasttracke­d for stardom.

Now in his fifth full Cup season, the nine-race winner needs to reach that next performanc­e goal. Gustafson said his team was better the last few years than its final results showed and the No. 9 could have gone to the final four.

Elliott also says he’s been very close and through consistenc­y and mistakefre­e races his team “can run with whoever when we’re at our best. I really believe it.”

He’s got to first advance to the finale, then find a way to beat Harvick and Hamlin.

“That’s why we go race, to find out who wins and wholoses,” Elliott said. “We made the round of eight the last couple years. That’s a great thing. That’s a great achievemen­t. But wealways want more. I think we’re very capable of it.”

 ?? SEAN GARDNER/GETTY ?? Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 NAPAAuto Parts Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Bank of America ROVAL 400 on Sunday.
SEAN GARDNER/GETTY Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 NAPAAuto Parts Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Bank of America ROVAL 400 on Sunday.

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