The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

AJ foists win on Indy road field

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The first NASCAR Cup Series road course race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway was full of drama — for AJ Allmending­er, who led only the last two laps of overtime to secure his second career Cup Series victory Sunday, and for those who fell short of the cherished trophy in an action-packed final few laps.

Denny Hamlin was leading the race on the final restart with two laps to go before being hit from behind by rookie Chase Briscoe in Turn 10, just before Briscoe was supposed to serve a penalty for running offcourse earlier in the lap. Instead of winning, Hamlin finished 23rd and Briscoe, 26th.

With those two cars derailed, Allmending­er moved up from third place to take the lead and hold off Ryan Blaney and Kyle Larson by .929-second.

Before the race, Allmending­er shrugged off any suggestion­s that he shouldn’t be considered an odds-on favorite despite his impressive road course background. This season he’s competing fulltime in the NASCAR Xfinity Series for Kaulig Racing and Sunday marked only his fourth NASCAR Cup Series start of the year.

But the former open-wheel star has an Indianapol­is 500 start, leading 27 laps in a seventh-place finish in 2013 and this iconic track has long been considered hallowed ground by the 39-year old California­n.

“We just won at Indy, what’s up,” Allmending­er yelled toward the grandstand­s after screaming in excitement on his team radio during his entire victory doughnut celebratio­n in the No. 16

Kaulig Racing Chevrolet at Indianapol­is’ famed yard of bricks start/finish line.

“I mean, it was survival of the fittest,” Allmending­er said. “We probably had like an eighth, tenth-place car, sped on pit road. I thought we were going to finish 12th to 15th and then those restarts were just insane.

“It’s great when you have a car owner that just says, ‘go get me trophies’. He doesn’t care if that thing is torn up.”

As Allmending­er was in the midst of his victory celebratio­n, Hamlin walked through the smoke, down Indianapol­is pit road to find Briscoe and discuss the incident.

“It’s just lack of awareness,” Hamlin said of Briscoe.

“I agree it’s not on purpose, but my team told me he had a penalty right away and to me, it’s obvious. If you cut the race track and end up in the lead, you’re going to have a penalty.

“Lack of awareness. Race me for a lap. He went right in the back of me. We can’t race that way. I don’t think he did it maliciousl­y. I’ve raced with him for a year now and he’s not that kind of person. Just bad judgement.”

“I can accept it [Briscoe’s explanatio­n to him],” Hamlin continued. “The roles have been reversed a couple times, I mean I’ve been doing this a long time and I’ve been on the giving end of mistakes, so I get it. To me, it’s just a lack of situationa­l awareness. Obviously, you’re going to get a penalty if you go off the race track like he did. I’m not like, furious, it just sucks.”

For his part, Briscoe acknowledg­ed his part of the incident but insisted he did not intentiona­lly wreck Hamlin. He said he was glad to try and sort things out after the race.

“I explained to him that I didn’t even know I had a penalty until I got to Turn 10,” Briscoe said. “If I knew I had a penalty, there was no need for me to even try to pass him for the win. If I would have known that earlier, I would have done my stop-and-go and went on. As I understand it, at the moment in time I could still win the race and I was going for it and got into him accidental­ly.

“I think at the end [in discussing it) he kind of started to understand. He has been there when you are trying to get your first win and especially in our Playoff situation, you have to do what you have to do.

“That is what I get paid to do and that is what I was trying to do.”

“I’m sorry it ruined his day, that was never my intention,” Briscoe continued. “I don’t want to wreck anyone for the win. I’ve never done that in my life.”

After winning seven races last season, Hamlin is winless in 2021 with only two races remaining. And his 23rd-place finish cost him the championsh­ip points lead he’d held since the second race of the year in February. Briscoe was trying to win his first career NASCAR Cup Series race which is essentiall­y the only thing that could put him in the Playoffs at this point as he is ranked.

With 11 laps to go, it appeared Kyle Larson would be picking up his fourth road course victory of the year as he held a commanding 4-second lead on the field. But a debris caution came out forcing the team’s hand in pitting or gambling on a better restart position.

 ?? (Getty Images) ?? AJ Allmending­er with the epic burnout Sunday at Indianapol­is after winning the Cup Series’ first road-course race at the iconic track.
(Getty Images) AJ Allmending­er with the epic burnout Sunday at Indianapol­is after winning the Cup Series’ first road-course race at the iconic track.

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