Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cindric wins opener of Xfinity doublehead­er

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SPARTA, Ky. – Austin Cindric answered the nagging question of when he’ll finally conquer an oval.

In fact, he did it so well at Kentucky Speedway the issue now is whether an encore is possible.

Cindric won the first of two NASCAR Xfinity Series races at Kentucky, charging past Chase Briscoe on an overtime restart Thursday night for his first victory of the season and first of his career on an oval.

“I don’t care what shape the track is - if it’s dirt, oval, I don’t care I’m just so happy this Ford Mustang is in victory lane,” Cindric said.

Cindric spent most of the first two stages chasing Noah Gragson, the pole-sitter who seemed poised to dominate all three segments. Cindric then took charge on a series of restarts in Team Penske’s No. 22 Ford. On the last one, he went around Briscoe on the outside and pulled away before a scary last-lap wreck ended the race.

The accident involved Justin Allgaier, who was transporte­d to a hospital for further evaluation. He was cleared to drive in Friday’s race. It ended too late for this edition.

The 21-year-old Cindric, son of Team Penske president Tim Cindric, had eight top-10s with six top-fives on ovals before breaking through on the 1.5-mile Kentucky layout.

His only other series victories came last year on road courses at Watkins Glen and Mid-Ohio.

“We’ve come so close all year,” added Cindric, who led twice for 41 laps. “These guys have given me so many awesome race-winning cars . ... This is awesome. I’d love to be able to come back into another performanc­e like that tomorrow night, but all the credit to my guys for getting me here.”

The race ended up going 204 miles. A 300-miler was set for Friday night in the series’ first doublehead­er at Kentucky and didn’t end in time for this edition.

Rookie Riley Herbst was second in a Toyota, followed by Ross Chastain in a Chevy, Briscoe in a Ford and Michael Annett in a Chevy.

“We over-adjusted the car there at the end and got too tight,” Herbst said. “All in all, we’ve had speed all year, we just haven’t been able to capitalize, mostly on my part, in these final stages of the races. Once we start capitalizi­ng, we’ll start getting good finishes like this. This was a good one.”

Gragson dominated the first two 30-lap stages, a first for the driver who turns 22 on Wednesday, but faded to finish 11th.

Briscoe entered the race red hot with consecutiv­e victories at Pocono and Indianapol­is and three in his past four starts. He started seventh and eventually drew Gragson in his sights by Lap 50.

He was in the hunt late and appeared in good position for a threepeat before a wiggle allowed Cindric to get the edge.

“I just got loose,” Briscoe said.

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