Miami Herald

Truex ends drought in sloppy Coliseum race

- BY JENNA FRYER

Martin Truex Jr. won NASCAR’s return to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for its seasonopen­ing exhibition race — a sloppy Sunday night extravagan­za in which the Wiz Khalifa halftime show might have been the most entertaini­ng part of the event.

Truex took the lead with 25 laps to go in the Busch Light Clash, a 150-lap race that was moved from Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway last year to the Coliseum. NASCAR built a temporary quarter-mile track inside the iconic venue in a bold attempt to try something radically different.

Truex, who contemplat­ed retirement during last year’s winless season, won for the first time since Sept. 11, 2021.

“Last year was a pretty rough season for us with no wins, and to come out here and kick it off this way, really proud of all these guys,” Truex said.

Last year’s race was considered a smashing success based on the new fans drawn to the event and excitement over the progressiv­e approach to creating a brand new type of racing.

NASCAR knew it was going to be difficult to duplicate the success in its return and the racing Sunday wasn’t great — there were 25 cautions, and laps under yellow didn’t count. There were only five cautions in last year’s race.

“Last year’s show I felt like was relatively clean and good racing, some bumping, some banging, but we could run long stretches of green flag action,” said Kyle Busch. “Today was, I would call it a disaster with the disrespect from everybody of just driving through each other.

“But it’s a quartermil­e. It’s tight-quarters racing. Actually this is probably how it should have gone last year, so we got spoiled with a good show the first year. Maybe this was just normal.”

Truex put Joe Gibbs Racing in victory lane to start 2023 after a horrible close to last year. Coy Gibbs, who essentiall­y ran his father’s race team, passed away in his sleep the night before the November season finale. Coy Gibbs’ death came just hours after his son, Ty, won NASCAR’s second-tier Xfinity Series championsh­ip.

Austin Dillon and

Busch, in his debut for Richard Childress Racing, finished second and third for RCR. They joined Truex on a podium for a NASCAR-first medal ceremony held below the Coliseum’s famed peristyle.

Alex Bowman and Kyle Larson went fourth and fifth for Hendrick Motorsport­s, and Tyler Reddick was sixth in his debut for 23XI.

“It’s tough when it takes 45 minutes to make like six laps,” Bowman said of the messy race. “That was pretty bad when we were just crashing and crashing and crashing.”

Ryan Preece, in his debut race for StewartHaa­s Racing, led 43 laps until a late electrical issue took him out of contention. Before Sunday night, Preece had led a total of 25 laps in 115 Cup races over five seasons. Preece finished seventh.

Bubba Wallace was dominant early for 23XI but was spun late by Dillon and then banged into Dillon after to show his displeasur­e. He finished 22nd after leading 40 laps.

“I hate it for Bubba, he had a good car and a good run,” Dillon said. “But you can’t tell who’s either pushing him or getting pushed. I just know he sent me through the corner and I saved it three times through there, released the brake and all kinds of stuff, and then when I got down, I was going to give the same. Probably was a little too hard.”

I WOULD CALL IT A DISASTER WITH THE DISRESPECT FROM EVERYBODY OF JUST DRIVING THROUGH EACH OTHER.

Kyle Busch

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS AP ?? Martin Truex Jr. leads in the Busch Light Clash at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum late Sunday on the way to his first NASCAR win since September 2021.
ASHLEY LANDIS AP Martin Truex Jr. leads in the Busch Light Clash at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum late Sunday on the way to his first NASCAR win since September 2021.

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