Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Roval brings unique risk to playoffs

‘Treacherou­s’ course site of eliminatio­n race

- By Jenna Fryer Associated Press

CONCORD, N.C. — The Roval at Charlotte Motor Speedway was created specifical­ly to add a unique venue to NASCAR’s playoffs and the hybrid road course doesn’t disappoint. As a reminder, last year’s inaugural event ended with the leaders crashing each other trying to win.

A return trip to this 17-turn, 2.28-mile circuit hasn’t made the course any more comfortabl­e, and a multitude of drivers have spun off track, hit the tire barriers and struggled to get through a rebuilt chicane. It makes for a curious challenge in Sunday’s eliminatio­n race, when the 16-driver playoff field will be trimmed by four.

“This place is so treacherou­s and there’s just not a lot of room for error,” Chase Elliott said Saturday.

“To make a move on somebody comes with a little bit of risk. I think it’s going to be a really aggressive race.”

The stakes are high for the championsh­ip field as only Martin Truex Jr., winner of the opening two playoff races, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch have locked themselves into the second round. Brad Keselowski advances with a 34thplace finish, Denny Hamlin moves on by finishing 33rd and Joey Logano only needs to finish 29th.

Elliott, winner on the road course at Watkins Glen in August, needs to finish 16th or better. But he had a poor qualifying effort — he was 19th while Hendrick Motorsport­s teammates William Byron, Alex Bowman and Jimmie Johnson were first, second and fourth — and knows he must deliver Sunday.

“We aren’t locked in, so we have to have a good run,” Elliott said.

But The Roval is so unlike anything else on the NASCAR circuit that drivers have struggled in every on-track session. Truex had to change his engine during Saturday’s final practice when his gears malfunctio­ned, and Johnson damaged his car when he rolled off course.

It was Truex and Johnson a year ago who wrecked each other with the checkered flag in sight, allowing Ryan Blaney to dart past them for the victory.

That precedent has the field nervous, particular­ly the four drivers at risk of eliminatio­n. Bowman, Clint Bowyer, Kurt Busch and Erik Jones will all try to race their way into the second round, but Jones almost certainly needs to win to overcome a 42-point penalty levied when his car failed inspection last weekend.

The rest of the field is bunched together with some major point shuffling possible Sunday.

Byron, a Charlotte native, starts on the pole alongside Bowman, his teammate and challenger for a spot in the second round. Byron is in the final transfer position, just two points ahead of Bowman.

“I kind of just have to run well, right?” said Bowman.

The Roval uses a twists and turns through the Charlotte Motor Speedway infield with chicanes on the backstretc­h and frontstret­ch slow the cars, and, potentiall­y increase passing on the oval portion of the track. An added wrinkle from last year is an overhauled backstretc­h chicane revamped to make it a braking and passing zone.

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