Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Burton surges to win after restart

- Tim Reynolds

MIAMI – A late caution flag gave Harrison Burton new life, and he took advantage.

Burton took the inside line on the way to the lead in the final lap, and held on to win the Xfinity Series race Saturday at HomesteadM­iami Speedway – denying, among others, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Noah Gragson, who seemed to be in full command with seven laps remaining.

Burton, Gragson and Austin Cindric were three-wide going into that last lap, and it was Burton – the 19-year-old son of former Cup star Jeff Burton, who wound up in front in a wild finish.

“Omg !!!!!! What a bad assss restart,” Burton's mother, Kim, tweeted. “You are the damn man kid !!!! I love you.”

Cindric was second and Gragson third, two spots ahead of Earnhardt – part of his JR Motorsport­s ownership.

“I don't know what I was doing, either, honestly,” Burton said of the three-wide fight going into that final lap. “What a race.”

It was shaping up to be a runaway, with Gragson leading by more than 10 seconds before a caution came out with about seven laps remaining. But he couldn't recapture that magic on the restart, and what would have been his third win of the season quickly slipped away.

“Restarts were just the biggest struggle. … Just couldn't get it going,” Gragson said.

It was Earnhardt's third Xfinity Series appearance since retiring as a full-time Cup Series driver in 2017. He's been top-five in all three of those cameos, and was sitting second behind only Gragson when that late flag came out.

“I was rusty, all the through,” Earnhardt said.

Earnhardt was winless in 17 Cup Series starts at Homestead in his career, with only one finish better than 10th in those. He'd also raced there five times in the Xfinity Series, placing second in 1999 for his best finish.

Either way, Saturday was a memorable day for Earnhardt.

Tuesday might become considerab­ly more memorable.

He's one of 15 nominees for the

way 2021 class that will go into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. The votes have been cast, with results scheduled to be revealed Tuesday afternoon. Earnhardt said he will document how he gets the call – if he's in or not – on his popular podcast.

“If we are chosen, we'll talk about that,” Earnhardt said. “If we are not chosen, we'll talk about the ones that are and celebrate those people.”

Talking on his radio while taking pace laps Saturday before the race started, Earnhardt somewhat comically revealed that he was anxious about being behind the wheel again.

“There ought to be something in the rule book to keep this from happening,” Earnhardt said. “I haven't been in a race car since Darlington last year. I've got no laps. I have no idea what's going to happen. I've been nervous as hell for a week.”

It didn't show. He was right there, all the way to the end.

But the day belonged to Burton, who grabbed his second victory of the season. The Xfinity cars are back on the track Sunday before the Cup Series race at Homestead. Earnhardt is not driving Sunday, insisted that Saturday's race will be his lone appearance as a driver this season, and said this appearance might have been his final one for good before he shifts to broadcasti­ng full-time.

“We'll just see how Earnhardt said.

it

goes,”

He's winding down. Burton is just getting started.

“I'm just ready to go again tomorrow,” Burton said. “I want to get two.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Harrison Burton is all smiles after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Harrison Burton is all smiles after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States