The Oklahoman

Elliott wins road course race at Daytona

- The Associated Press

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Chase Elliott was already NASCAR royalty. Now he's also the sport's road king.

Elliott won the Cup Series' first road course race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Sunday, holding off hard-charging Denny Hamlin following a late restart and notching his third consecutiv­e victory away from ovals.

“I had a phenomenal car. I don't think I did anything special today,” Elliott said.

NASCAR's most popular driver, the son of Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, also won on road courses at Charlotte and at Watkins Glen last year. He got a tougher challenge than many expected down the stretch in his latest roadie.

The 24- year- old driver had a 10-second lead with 10 laps to go and was pulling away when Kyle Busch blew a tire and brought out a caution that gave his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates, Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr., a chance.

But Elliott stayed out front on the final restart. Hamlin got to his rear bumper on the last lap, but couldn't do enough to mount any significan­t pressure.

“I kept him honest there,” Hamlin said. “He had such good drive off (the corners) I couldn't do anything with him.”

Hamlin finished second, followed by Truex and seventime series champion Jimmie Johnson.

Elliott, Hamlin and Truex had the cars to beat all afternoon. Truex's chances took a huge hit near the end of the second segment. He was caught speeding on pit road and forced to start the last stanza at the back of the pack. Hamlin also got stuck behind slower cars early in the final stage.

Making up that kind of ground on a 14-turn, 3.61mile road course was a nearly impossible task, especially considerin­g Elliott was turning mistake-free laps at the front of the field.

But that late caution gave both a shot, albeit an unlikely one given Elliott' s road repertoire.

Another top contender, points leader Kevin Harvick, got turned around while braking into the “internatio­nal horseshoe” and never recovered. Harvick finished 17th.

Ryan Newman was 19th in his return to the scene of his most harrowing crash.

Newman delivered a special message to safety workers minutes before the race started. Newman spoke over his radio to the control tower, a clip that was later played during the NBC broadcast.

“Hey everyone, just want to say a big thank you,” Newman said. “This is a special day for me. I owe a lot of it because of all the things that you guys did back in February. It's enabled me to … come back into this racetrack and do what I love.

“Thank you for your support, not only for me personally but all the things you do for all us drivers. It goes a long way, and I want to say thank you from the deepest of my heart. Thank you.”

Heat and humidity proved to be bigger issues. Drivers called for ice bags and bottles of water under caution. And when the race was red flagged for nearby lightning, drivers welcomed the nearly 45-minute break.

J.J. Yeley climbed out of his No. 27 a few laps before the red flag and collapsed on the pavement. He was helped onto a golf cart and taken to the medical center for evaluation and treatment.

Daniel Suarez had two crew members also leave the pits to get treatment.

“When we get out of the car, that feels like air conditioni­ng,” said Truex, adding that NASCAR should allow teams to create more air flow by removing right-side windows at road courses.

 ?? [AP PHOTO/ TERRY RENNA] ?? Chase Elliott makes a pit stop during a NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Sunday in Daytona Beach, Fla. Elliott went on to win the race.
[AP PHOTO/ TERRY RENNA] Chase Elliott makes a pit stop during a NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway on Sunday in Daytona Beach, Fla. Elliott went on to win the race.

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