Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Martin Truex Jr. won his second consecutiv­e NASCAR Cup Series playoff race.

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RICHMOND, Va. — Martin Truex Jr. seemed to have a “pinch me” moment as he climbed from his car in Victory Lane.

Nudged off the lead with 87 laps to go, Truex rallied Saturday night, ultimately passing teammate Kyle Busch with 25 laps to go and winning the Federated Auto Parts 400, his second consecutiv­e NASCAR Cup Series race. That it came in the series’ playoffs, it seemed, made it all the more surreal.

“To spin and win is pretty incredible. I’ve never done anything like that in my life,” Truex said. “When things are rolling, they just are.”

The victory completed a redemptive finish for Truex, the championsh­ip leader coming into the race. The bump from Ricky Stenhouse, who was running on fresher tires, seemed inadverten­t, and came in Turn Four, but Truex was still running third when the caution flew.

He gradually reeled in his teammate, got a nudge from Busch as he passed, and pulled away.

“I think any time you’re winning at this level, there’s a little bit of a ‘pinch me’ feeling,” Truex said. “Look, this is really, really difficult.

These races are hard to win. … You’ve got to have some things go your way sometimes and we’ve certainly had that the last two weeks.”

The victory was his series-high sixth of the season and the 15th in 28 races for the Gibbs cars. They also finished in the top four spots, a first for the company, with Busch hanging on for second followed by teammates Denny Hamlin and Erik Jones.

“We led a lot of laps. We were up front a lot. But when I was out front, he could keep the closest distance to me,” Busch said of Truex. “That kind of worried me for a finish like that in the long run.”

Pole-sitter Brad Keselowski was fifth.

“We just weren’t quite as fast as the Gibbs cars,” Keselowski said, especially on long green-flag runs.

Truex swept the season at Richmond, where his victory in April was his first in 81 career starts on a short track.

Kevin Harvick and Busch, meanwhile, assured themselves of spots in the second stage of the playoffs, which begins next week.

Hamlin said he was not at all surprised by his team’s domination.

“I think I knew that’s who we were going to be racing when it was all said and done,” he said. “The 19 just had such a strong car here on the long run over the last few years, we knew that was going to be the one to beat. … Great team day overall. Great points day for us.”

Joe Gibbs won three Super Bowls as coach of the Washington Redskins, and his NASCAR teams have won four driver championsh­ips.

He was not inclined to say Saturday which career has been more successful.

“Let me say this: Over here, I don’t do anything,” he said, laughing. “In football, at least I could scream at people and everything.”

WHO’S HOT, WHO’S NOT

Hot: Truex, the Gibbs team and Ryan Newman, who squeaked into the playoffs and finished sixth.

Also, while still running up front, Kyle Busch has now gone 14 races since his last victory on June 2 at Pocono.

Not: Hendrick Motorsport­s teammates William Byron and Alex Bowman.

Byron started the night ninth in points but finished 25th. Bowman started the night 11th in points and finished 24th.

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 ?? AP/STEVE HELBER ?? Martin Truex Jr. celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Va. on Saturday night.
AP/STEVE HELBER Martin Truex Jr. celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Va. on Saturday night.

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