Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Darlington’s history meets Next Gen cars

- By Pete Iacobelli

DARLINGTON, S.C. — It’s Next Gen vs. Old School when NASCAR’s new racer takes on its oldest superspeed­way Sunday at Darlington Raceway.

“It kept me up this week thinking about that,” said Ross Chastain, who has won twice this season. “The Cup carright now is just so volatile to drive, especially the first fewlaps of practice, and I don’t expectDarl­ington to be easy.”

It rarely is over 72 years of racing.

The adage is that only the most experience­d pilots succeed at the track called “Too Tough To Tame.” Only a handful of racers — Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Larson — took part in a tire test here last month, according to track president KerryTharp.

Tire falloff seemed as severe as always, Tharp said, although defending Cup champ Larson had some difficulty findinga balance at the test.

“Kyle spunt and hit wall a coupleof times,” Tharp said.

Erik Jones, who won here in 2019, believes things can’t be much different from always. Darlington is always a handful as drivers are forced to run close to the wall — and avoid the dreaded “Darlington­Stripe” — to compete.

Turns 1 and 2 are shaped

differentl­y from 3 and 4 (the result of a minnow pond that builder Harold Brasington contractua­lly could not fill in), meaning racers can’t rest easy entering the corners.

“I expect a lot of sliding around, just like always,” said Brad Keselowski, the former NASCAR champion who won theSouther­n 500 here in 2018.

TheNext Gen reviews have beenpositi­ve in the first half of this season. There have been nine drivers winning the first 11 races, with only Chastain and William Byron taking the checkered flag more than oncethis season.

Chances are strong it will be a Hendrick Motorsport­s driver out front at the end of Sunday’s293-lap race.

Chase Elliott won Dover’s rain-delayed race, becoming the last of Hendrick’s four entries to win a race this season. He likes what he’s seen of the NextGen car so far.

Elliott said he hadn’t been able to put a complete race together until last week’s win at the Monster Mile. “We just have to better execute for the entirety of the event,” he said. “I think as long as we’re doing those things we can run and compete with the best of the garage.”

Odds and ends

No surprise here: Drivers from Hendrick Motorsport­s and Joe Gibbs Racing are the favorites to win at Darlington this Mother’s Day, according to FanDuel Sportsbook. Hendrick’s Kyle Larson is the betting favorite at 5-1, followed by JGR’s Martin Truex Jr. at 6.51. Hendick’s Chase Elliott and Gibbs’ Denny Hamlin are nextat 8-1.

Throwing it back

Darlington is hosting its latest tribute to NASCAR history with its throwback weekend. Many cars competing in the Cup Series, the Xfinity Series and the truck series will have paint schemes honoring the sport’s rich history. NASCAR champion Kyle Larson will run in a car painted to look like the one run by the late Tim Richmondin 1984.

 ?? Emilee Chinn/Getty Images ?? Darlington Raceway opened in 1950 and has been haunting drivers ever since.
Emilee Chinn/Getty Images Darlington Raceway opened in 1950 and has been haunting drivers ever since.

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