Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Chase Elliott going for three-peat

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WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Three-peat at Watkins Glen? Not on Chase Elliott’s radar.

OK, maybe a little bit. “I’m just excited to be going back. I’m looking forward to the challenge,” Elliott, the reigning NASCAR Cup champion, said this week on a Zoom call. “Every time you go to the track, look, it’s always going to be tough. As I’ve said many times before, past success doesn’t equal future success and I don’t think that’s any different this weekend. I anticipate everybody else will be better than they were last time we were up there. And we just try to make sure we match it ourselves to have another shot.”

The NASCAR Cup Series resumes at Watkins Glen Internatio­nal on Sunday after a two-week break for the Tokyo Olympics, and Elliott will be chasing a little history.

He’s won the past two races at the natural terrain road course in the Finger Lakes region of New York — last year’s race was moved to the road course at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway because of the pandemic and Elliott won that one, too — and another victory would put him in select company. Only Mark Martin (1993-95) and Jeff Gordon (1997-99) have won three in a row at The Glen since NASCAR began racing there annually in 1986.

Brad Keselowski starts on pole alongside Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney is third, giving Team Penske the top three spots. Kyle Larson will go off fourth, Kevin Harvick fifth, points leader Denny Hamlin sixth, and Elliott 11th. There was no practice or qualifying.

Elliott will be making his 17th Cup road course start for Hendrick Motorsport­s. What he, crew chief Alan Gustafson and the rest of the team have accomplish­ed with the No. 9 Chevrolet on the circuitous layouts is remarkable: seven wins across five different tracks, nine top-five finishes and 326 laps led. He’s one victory shy of tying Tony Stewart for second all-time in road course wins and two behind Gordon.

And it all began at Watkins Glen in 2018, when he started third and led the final 33 laps to score his first career Cup victory after finishing second eight times.

“I think, for me, it’s a great honor to be even on the same page as Tony or Jeff,” said Elliott, who had to hold off Martin Truex Jr. in both his wins at The Glen. “Whether we can ever get there or not, to even be in the same sentence, or … on the same page, I think is very cool. While I appreciate it and I think it’s a very cool achievemen­t, it’s not at the forefront of my focus.”

Gordon figures his record will soon fall given that NASCAR has switched the schedule to include seven road courses instead of the customary two.

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