Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hornish Jr. feeling right at home

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Sam Hornish Jr. dominated in his home state to win the NASCAR XFinity Mid-Ohio Challenge on Saturday.

Hornish, from Defiance, Ohio, took the lead from rookie Daniel Hemric on lap 62 of 75 after the seventh caution at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. Hornish beat Hemric by 1.335 seconds for his fifth victory in 117 XFinity races.

Rookie Matt Tifft, a Hinckley, Ohio, native was third, 2.373 seconds back of Hornish. James Davison and Andy Lally completed the top five.

Series points leader Elliott Sadler overcame an early collision to finish sixth. Playoff points leader William Byron, who leads the series with three wins this year, was 25th.

Hornish led for 61 laps and avoided a 10-car pileup on lap 69 that resulted in the second red flag. There were also nine cautions.

Blake Koch of Kaulig Racing from Akron, Ohio, won the first stage ahead of Brennan Poole. Hornish, who won the pole, easily took the second 20-lap stage by 4.645 seconds over Hemric.

After Hornish lost the lead on a pit stop, he regained it on lap 46 when he went side-byside with Hemric through turns 5 through 9 before taking the inside position and pulling away.

The race got off to a rough start when it went to caution after the first lap when Cole Custer’s car dropped fluid on the track and Sheldon Creed went to the garage with mechanical problems.

On lap 15, Matt Bell went lost control and crashed into the tire barrier off turn 1, drawing another caution and the red flag came out a lap later and lasted nearly 14 minutes so the wall could be repaired.

Truck series: In his first NASCAR Truck Series race in three years, Darrell Wallace Jr. looked as if he had never left.

Wallace held off a late challenge from Christophe­r Bell to win at Michigan Internatio­nal Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich. After taking the lead in his No. 99 Chevrolet with about 10 laps remaining, Wallace had to contend with Austin Cindric and Bell toward the end. He was able to edge Bell by 0.176 seconds.

“I knew those last laps were going to be hectic,” Wallace said.

Wallace hadn’t driven in a Truck race since 2014, when he won four times. He drove full time on the Xfinity Series in 2015 and ’16. He actually has a two-race winning streak in Truck races, since he won the finale three years ago.

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