Houston Chronicle

Georgian Elliott earns 1st Atlanta win

- WIRE REPORTS

HAMPTON, Ga. — Chase Elliott got by Corey LaJoie with just under two laps to go and crossed the finish line under yellow after a block sent LaJoie crashing into the wall Sunday, giving the Georgia-born driver his first victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Elliott pulled back around in front of the main grandstand, greeted by a boisterous ovation from fans who cheered loudly every time he went to the front and stretched all the way to Dawsonvill­e, the north Georgia town that produced the winner and his father, longtime NASCAR Cup star Bill Elliott.

The wild capper to another eventful Atlanta race denied LaJoie the first victory of his career, which would’ve been a huge upset for the smallbudge­t Spire Motorsport­s.

Chase Elliott joined his father as the only Georgia-born drivers to win at Atlanta. Dale Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Jr. are the only other father-son to take the checkered flag at the historic 1.54-mile track.

“To win at your home track is a really big deal for any race car driver,” Elliott said. “I’ve watched a lot of guys do it over the years. I felt like today was a good opportunit­y for us. I’m just so proud. This is obviously home for me, and home for a lot of great fans who made a lot of noise for me today.”

Martin Truex Jr. was leading a tight pack at the front of the field when Ross Chastain caused his second wreck of the day with 14 laps to go.

Chastain, a two-time winner this season who also has made plenty of enemies with his overly aggressive driving, tapped the left rear quarter-panel of Denny Hamlin’s car. That sent the No. 11 into a spin that ruined any chance of winning.

Truex led on the restart with eight laps to go, LaJoie pulled ahead on the backstretc­h, but the yellow flag came out again when Hamlin was bumped again. This time, it was Christophe­r Bell trying to squeeze between Hamlin and Joey Logano, setting off a spin that took out all three cars.

That set up another restart with three laps to go. LaJoie led the field from the inside lane, but he couldn’t hold off Elliott, who surged to the front before taking the white flag.

LaJoie got a good run on the leader going into the first turn, but Elliott slid up the banking to cut him off. LaJoie, who has only one top-five finish in his career, ran out of room and smashed the outside wall.

Chastain looked to make a move on Elliott, but the yellow lights flashed with No. 9 still nearly a car length ahead.

That was it. Elliott could finally relax, becoming the first threetime winner in a season that has produced 13 different winners.

“Obviously, I knew (LaJoie) was gonna have a big run. I tried to give him one good, aggressive block,“Elliott said. “I don’t know what else to do. You go for the win or you don’t. I’m going to choose option A every time.”

LaJoie, whose best career finish was a fifthplace showing at this year’s Atlanta spring race, nearly pulled off the most improbable victory of a wild season.

Chastain was the runner-up, followed by Austin Cindric, Erik Jones and Ryan Blaney. LaJoie settled for the 21st spot.

Leclerc survives at Austrian GP

Charles Leclerc had kept putting on a brave face as success escaped him and tensions mounted at Ferrari in a run of five F1 races without a podium spot for the driver. After winning the Austrian Grand Prix in Spielberg, Austria, Leclerc’s smile was back.

Leclerc faced a big challenge in the closing laps as his throttle was not working properly, making it more difficult to control his speed into turns.

It was a different story for his Ferrari teammate Carlos Sainz Jr., whose hopes of a second-place finish in Austria dramatical­ly ended when his engine blew as he was catching Formula One world champion Max Verstappen’s Red Bull. Sainz got out as flames were licking his race suit. Unharmed, he sat on the grass to contemplat­e his bad luck.

Sainz won last weekend at the British GP, where Leclerc dropped from first to fourth. After missing out there, Leclerc bounced back to hold off Verstappen in Austria by 1.5 seconds for a third win this season.

It was Leclerc’s first victory since the Australian GP in April. After second place at the United States GP in May, Leclerc’s five races included two DNFs, two fourth places and one fifth.

Leclerc moved up to second overall but is still a distant 38 points behind Verstappen — 208 vs. 170 — with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez dropping to third.

Lewis Hamilton finished third for Mercedes and secured a third straight podium place.

 ?? Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ?? Chase Elliott celebrates winning the Quaker State 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday.
Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Chase Elliott celebrates winning the Quaker State 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday.

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