Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Stenhouse captures Talladega for 1st win

- George Diaz Staff writer

TALLADEGA, ALA. — Kyle Busch was the leader of the pack Sunday afternoon as the laps clicked down to the finish.

But as always in Talladega, there were dark passengers in the rear-view mirror. They were coming for him. Two- and three-wide, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Jamie McMurray and Jimmie Johnson were in the mad scramble.

“When they have too big of a run, you can’t do anything about it,” Busch said.

Busch may as well have waved the white flag as Stenhouse took the checkered one in overtime.

Stenhouse found enough muscle on the last lap to put the squeeze on Busch and win for the first time in 158 Cup starts.

He definitely had found enough speed this weekend, starting from the pole in the Geico 500. So what was the move, Ricky? “We really didn’t have a plan,” he said. This is Talladega featuring its indiscrimi­nate madness, as seen in a 17-car wreck earlier in the day.

NASCAR Nation favorite Dale Earnhardt Jr. had a left rear-wheel come loose late in the race.

Defending race champ Brad Keselowski wasn’t close enough to make a difference.

That left Busch and Stenhouse in the rush to Victory Lane.

“We were side-drafting each other like crazy,” Stenhouse said, “so that was one heck of a race and I’m glad we came out on top.”

Naturally, everybody was a bit rusty in the Victory Lane protocol.

Ricky Stenhouse Sr. wanted to celebrate with his son but wasn’t in the pit area, so he tried to climb a fence and ended up outside the track trying to get in through the infield tunnel.

The security team stopped him and after proper vetting gave him a ride to join the festivitie­s.

Danica Patrick, Stenhouse’s girlfriend, was already there, with their two dogs.

They will have fun stories to share about their Talladega experience. Others, not so much.

The Big One — a wild and wicked tradition in Talladega — happened with 19 laps to go.

Chase Elliott’s and AJ Allmending­er’s cars got the worst of it, with Elliott’s Chevy going sideways and scraping the inside wall and ’Dinger’s Chevy going airborne and landing upside down.

Patrick’s Ford also hit the inside wall.

No one was seriously hurt.

The initial contact came when Allmending­er tapped Elliott on the left rear of his car, triggering the crashfest.

“Once I got to Chase I got loose. I tried to get off him but at the moment it was too late,” Allmending­er said. “It’s Talladega.”

“He got to my bumper and happened to be in a bad spot,” Elliott said.

A red flag came out, signifying an immediate stop to the race, which lasted just under 27 minutes.

“It kinda stinks but it is what it is,” said Joey Logano, whose car was also involved in the melee.

This was a soothing salve for a Roush Fenway Racing team that has been a bit of a train wreck with stock cars in recent seasons. The group hadn’t won a race in 101 starts and missed the postseason in 2015 and 2016.

The victory is a gamechange­r.

“I think it means everything for us,” said Steve Newmark, president of Roush Fenway Racing.

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Stenhouse Jr.

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