The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Contenders want traffic to pull over

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KANSAS CITY, Kansas — Daniel Suarez refused to get out of Martin Truex Jr.’s way and it ultimately ruined Truex’s race. Tyler Reddick did the same to William Byron, and Chase Briscoe held firm to his right to race hard when battling with Denny Hamlin.

A conversati­on on driver code and on-track etiquette is raging right now in NASCAR, and with it comes a heated debate on the expectatio­ns of nonplayoff drivers. If a title contender is trying to gain track position, should another driver clear the lane for an easy pass?

It’s been a touchy topic since the playoff format was introduced in 2004. NASCAR, unlike any stickand-ball sports, permits everyone to race in the postseason even if they aren’t in title contention. It puts a mix of slow cars and mediocre drivers on the same track as the superstars racing for the final trophy.

With two races remaining to lock in the championsh­ip field, conversati­on has turned to how nonplayoff drivers should be expected to race Sunday at Kansas Speedway. It’s the middle race of the third round of the playoffs and only Kyle Larson has earned a slot in the Nov. 7 winner-take-all finale at Phoenix.

Seven others are vying for the remaining three berths in the championsh­ip round — at minimum Truex and Joey Logano are in must-win situations — and there’s a high probabilit­y of desperate racing come Sunday.

Especially when they encounter stubborn drivers who won’t heed way on the racetrack.

When Briscoe raced Hamlin hard for position late in last week’s race at Texas, Hamlin fumed about a lack of situationa­l awareness.

“There’s cars racing for a championsh­ip,” Hamlin wrote to Briscoe on Instagram. “Perhaps when you learn give and take you will start to finish better.”

But Briscoe, a rookie driving for Stewart-Haas Racing, held his ground.

“I get paid to race, just because you guys are racing in the playoffs doesn’t mean I’m just gonna wave you by,” Briscoe wrote back to Hamlin. “One of the best cars we’ve had all year and I was trying to take advantage of it. I understand you guys are racing for a championsh­ip which is awesome for you guys but I’m racing for a job and results let me keep that job.”

Suarez had a similar attitude after his contact with Truex knocked Truex out of the race.

“I have a lot of respect for the guys in the playoffs, but one thing is respect and (another) is taking advantage of the situation,” Suarez said.

The schism is widening between today’s veterans — many of whom were browbeaten in their early years about driver etiquette by Hall of Famers Dale Jarrett, Rusty Wallace, Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart, to name a few — and a younger crop of drivers who don’t really seem to care about tearing up race cars or playing by an unwritten set of rules.

“There’s a complete lack of respect everywhere, all over the place, so it doesn’t matter if it’s a playoff driver or a non-playoff driver,” Kyle Busch said. “The way all this has gone on the last four or five years with the newer generation coming in has completely ruined it from what it used to be. It might be exciting for the fans, but all you get is more torn up stuff.”

ODDS AND ENDS

Larson is the 10/11 favorite to win Kansas, per FanDuel. … Kansas marks the final race of the season in which the rules package of 550 horsepower will be used this season. Seven drivers have combined for 11 victories in that configurat­ion. Larson has three 550 wins, followed by Blaney and Kyle Busch with two each. Hamlin is the only other playoff driver with a win on a 550 track — at Las Vegas in the second round of the playoffs. … NBC Sports pit reporter Parker Kligerman will race Sunday for Gaunt Brothers Racing in his first Cup start since 2019.

 ?? Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images ?? Kyle Larson drives during the NASCAR Cup Series Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway last Sunday.
Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images Kyle Larson drives during the NASCAR Cup Series Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway last Sunday.

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