Marysville Appeal-Democrat

William Byron wins NASCAR race at Homestead

- Tribune News Service Charlotte Observer

Charlotte native William Byron claimed his second win in his Cup Series career Sunday at Homestead-miami Speedway. He led a race-high 102 laps of the 267-lap race and won the second stage of NASCAR’S Dixie Vodka 400.

Tyler Reddick finished second, and Martin Truex Jr. finished third.

“Get used to winning, boys, get used to it,” Byron’s No. 24 Chevrolet crew chief Rudy Fugle said on the team’s radio after the win.

The pairing is a new crew chief and driver combinatio­n this year. Fugle, new to the Cup Series, and Byron worked together for one year in 2016 for Kyle Busch Motorsport­s competing in the Truck Series. They are the second new driver-crew chief pairing to win in a row this season after

Christophe­r Bell and crew chief Adam Stevens won together last weekend.

Fugle said they’re not a championsh­ip-winning team yet, but the early win bodes well for the No. 24 team.

“Over the next 20-some weeks, we’re gonna become (a championsh­ip team),” Fugle said. “So that’s what we’re gonna do.” Byron smiled.

“Yep. He said it.”

Ford drivers commanded the opening laps, but by the end of the first stage, Hendrick Motorsport­s drivers were squarely in the picture with William Byron, Alex Bowman, Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott all finishing in the top-10 in that stage. Byron capitalize­d on an opening for the lead at the end of the second stage, as Denny Hamlin slid high and picked off Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr.

Byron drove the low lane to

win the stage. He hung in the top-five for the early laps of the final stage and in the last 60 laps, he made his move to power past leader Truex for the top spot. With fresh air and a fast car, Byron, 23, maintained his first place position through the flag.

Reddick made a late-race challenge, seemingly coming out of nowhere, after finishing out of the top-10 in the first two stages. But it wasn’t enough to catch up with Byron. Reddick finished almost three seconds behind the winner and gained 10 seconds on the lead in the final 30 laps of the race.

Larson and Truex also had strong performanc­es posting third- and fourth-place finishes.

Reddick was critical of his performanc­e due to his early bottom half finishes this season, however. He placed 27th at the Daytona 500 and 38th at the Daytona road course after he was caught up in crashes.

“We had a really bad start to the year,” Reddick said. “Second’s

great, but we’re still way back in the mess, in the mix of it (in points).”

Byron needed the win just as badly. He finished 26th and 33rd, respective­ly, in the first two races of the season. Sunday was his saving grace. He is now the third different winner in a row to start the 2021 NASCAR season with a win after Michael Mcdowell and Christophe­r Bell won the first two races of the year. Byron’s first victory in the series came last year at NASCAR’S regular-season closer at Daytona to clinch a playoff berth.

He secured a playoff spot much earlier this year.

Chris Buescher led 57 laps of the race and won the first stage after challengin­g Brad Keselowski for the final laps before the green-and-white checkered flag.

He had a fast car in the long run, but dropped out of the top 10 in the final stage and finished in 19th. His Roush Fenway Racing teammate, Ryan

Newman, finished in seventh.

In addition to Newman and Buescher, who led more laps in a single race this year than in each season of his full-time Cup career, it was Michael Mcdowell and Reddick who primarily held down top-10 spots in the final stage as unexpected frontrunne­rs. Cole Custer also made a late-race appearance in the top 10 but dropped to 23rd place for the flag.

Both Mcdowell and Custer have each only ever won one

Cup race — Mcdowell’s first win in the series came a few weeks ago at the Daytona 500, in his 14th year of Cup racing, while Custer won at Kentucky last season during his rookie year in the series.

Mcdowell pulled off a sixthplace finish after finishing eighth last weekend at the Daytona road course.

“To start the season with three top-10s on three very different race tracks, like I said, Daytona, everybody knows anything can

happen there, but I’m very proud of my race team,” Mcdowell said. “We have done a great job of making big gains.”

The evening didn’t quite pan out for Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick fans. A pre-race penalty for unapproved adjustment­s, and a call by officials just before the start, sent Denny Hamlin to last place from his pole position to start the race.

He climbed back to a secondplac­e finish in the second stage and was racing in the top 10 when a caution came out and he was called for speeding on pit road to send him to the rear for the restart in the last 70 laps. Time was against him at that point. He finished 11th.

Harvick also clawed to a fifthplace finish. He placed out of the top 10 in the first stage and finished seventh in the second stage. Despite the top-five result, it was a relatively silent night for last year’s regular season winner and strong intermedia­te track driver.

 ?? Tribune News Service Getty Images ?? William Byron, driver of the #24 Axalta Chevrolet, waits on the grid prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Dixie Vodka 400 at Homestead
Miami Speedway on Sunday, February
28, in Homestead,
Florida.
Tribune News Service Getty Images William Byron, driver of the #24 Axalta Chevrolet, waits on the grid prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Dixie Vodka 400 at Homestead Miami Speedway on Sunday, February 28, in Homestead, Florida.

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