Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Late flap paves way for Busch
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Chase Elliott could have won at Martinsville Speedway. Same for Brad Keselowski, and Denny Hamlin, too.
It was Kyle Busch, though, who punched his ticket into NASCAR’s championship race with the victory.
Busch moved Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Hamlin out of his way in overtime to win at Martinsville and earn a spot in the championship race for the third consecutive year. He won the series title in 2015.
It was a ho-hum race that got very intense, very quickly, in the waning laps and ended with a multicar wreck after Busch took the checkered flag.
Keselowski was in position to win when Joey Logano developed a tire problem with about 10 laps remaining in regulation. Had his Team Penske teammate pitted under green to fix the tire, Keselowski likely would have coasted to the victory and earned the spot in the finale.
Instead, Logano spun and brought out a caution.
Keselowski was moved out of the way by Elliott after a restart, and Hamlin spun Elliott out of the lead with two laps remaining in
regulation. Elliott wrecked, chased Hamlin down on the cool-down lap to show his displeasure, and the drivers had a heated exchange after they climbed from their cars. It was a disastrous result for Elliott — from potential race winner to 27th, lowest of the eight remaining playoff driv- ers.
“My mom always said if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all,” Elliott said. “He’s not worth my time. I got punted from behind and wrecked in Turn 3 leading the race. I don’t know what his problem was. It was unnecessary and I hadn’t raced him dirty allday long.
“We had the best car I’ve ever had here at Martinsville, and had an opportunity to go straight to Homestead and because of him we don’t.”
Elliott could repeatedly be seen saying ‘You wrecked me,’ to Hamlin as the crowd roared its approval over the tension.
Hamlin, meanwhile, faded to seventh after Busch bumped him for the victory. Busch crew chief Adam Stevens wasn’t sure how that will play out going forward in the playoffs.
“That was our chance to move to Homestead,” Busch said.
Keselowski wound up fourth in a race his team believed he had to win.
Instead, he was simply darting his way around a huge pileup on the final lap that ended an emotional opening race of the third round of the playoffs.
“Yeah, everybody is just desperate,” Keselowski said.
Martin Truex Jr. wound up second in a 1-2 sweep for Toyota, which has won six of the seven playoff races. Truex and Busch have won three playoff races each.
The favorite to win the title, Truex said he is confident enough he will make it to next month’s finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway without having to bump Busch out of his way to grab the automatic berth.
“I don’t know that I would have done anything differently,” Truex said. “I think we
can get to Homestead without making too many enemies. We’ll let everybody else fight and we’ll try to do our own thing.”
Clint Bowyer, not eligible for the playoffs, finished third.
Kevin Harvick was fifth in a Ford, Ryan Blaney eighth for the Wood Brothers of nearby Stuart, Virginia, and the manufacturer placed six drivers in the top 10.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was the highest-finishing Chevrolet driver in 11th and was dumbfounded by the last-lap chaos.
“Man, I can’t believe how everybody crossed the finish line. I ain’t seen nothing like that. I ain’t seen it. I don’t know if I ever have seen it,” Earnhardt said. “There was a wreck one time at Richmond before they ever reconfigured
it in the Xfinity race on the front straightaway in like 1982 — that is the only thing I ever seen like it. Crazy finish.”
Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson finished 12th.
That was a near victory for Johnson, who spun in Sunday morning qualifying and needed to make repairs to his Chevrolet that forced him to start last. A nine-time Martinsville winner, he used this race last year to vault him toward his record-tying seventh championship.
At one point late in Sunday’s race, Johnson was put a lap down by Hendrick Motorsports teammate Elliott.
“We were just terrible all day,” Johnson said. “Oh, what a bummer. We had high hopes for this weekend.”