Springfield News-Sun

Caution-filled race clouds NASCAR’S second trip to Los Angeles Coliseum

- By Jenna Fryer

LOS ANGELES — Bubba Wallace said his back and neck hurt following the bumping and banging of NASCAR’S first event of the new year, an exhibition that Kyle Larson called “very violent for the majority of the race.”

Austin Dillon was shocked at the aggressive­ness shown Sunday night at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, especially early in the race, when he found his head going “bang, bang, back and forth, every corner” in a sloppy, caution-filled game of bumper cars.

“There was nothing but just hammer each other and hope to come out the other side,” said Dillon, who added that he told new teammate Kyle Busch that the steering wheel was knocked out of his hands on a particular­ly hard hit to the back of his Chevrolet. “You’re taking some pretty good blows out there and trying to stay calm.”

NASCAR brought its preseason Busch Light Clash back to the Coliseum for a second consecutiv­e year to race on a temporary quarter-mile track inside the iconic venue. The show was a smashing success a year ago — NASCAR used heat races, last-chance qualifiers, a prerace concert and a halftime show — to dazzle a new audience that included a packed USC student section.

It was going to be impossible to duplicate the success this year — even with a Wiz Khalifa halftime set — but it wasn’t supposed to be so messy. The inaugural event had just five cautions; Sunday night was marred by 25 cautions and a long stretch after the seven-minute Wiz Khalifa set in which the drivers struggled to complete two consecutiv­e laps under green.

The racing was so amateur that it probably killed any chance of turning a third trip to the Coliseum into a points-awarding race, which seemed plausible just a day earlier. Auto Club Speedway in nearby Fontana is set to be renovated following its Cup race later this month, and its track president said the facility wouldn’t be ready to host racing in 2024.

The absence of Auto Club next year puts pressure on NASCAR to remain in the Southern California market, and “a race that counts” at the Coliseum could have filled the void. But the drivers blasted that idea.

Martin Truex Jr., who went winless last season and nearly retired, won Sunday night and gave a flat “No,” when asked if the race should count in the future. The Clash was run at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway from its 1979 inception until last year, when NASCAR moved it to the Coliseum because, frankly, a special race wasn’t so special anymore at Daytona.

The Coliseum idea was fresh and new, and it energized the industry for the start of an important season in which NASCAR launched a new car. The Clash at the Coliseum is what it is, Truex said, and if it’s messy and sloppy, so be it.

“Why would you want to screw it up and make it a points race? It’s like a one-off deal,” he said, noting that at Daytona the ever-changing eligibilit­y rules made a boring race “all weird.”

“Now this is really cool. It’s got its own identity, fun race, all the way out here in a cool venue that’s got a lot of history,” Truex said of the Coliseum. “I think it’s kind of got a good vibe to it now. Let’s not maybe screw that up.”

Next up is the Daytona 500, where top speeds will be more than double the roughly 80-plus mph the drivers were doing at the Coliseum. And, the nature of the racing at Daytona typically requires one driver to slam into the back of the car in front of him to create the force needed to move through traffic.

But if the drivers are concerned, they didn’t go out of their way Sunday night to sound the alarm.

“I think the positive part is NASCAR has showed us things that they’re trying to do to help that area of the car,” Dillon said. “We’re making progress. That’s the biggest thing.”

The progress remains to be seen, both with how NASCAR ultimately views its return to the Coliseum and if it has done enough headed into a new season to protect its drivers.

 ?? AP ?? NASCAR driver Christophe­r Bell (20) spins out in front of Joey Logano (22), Noah Gragson (42) and Chase Elliott (9) during the Busch Light Clash exhibition race at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Sunday.
AP NASCAR driver Christophe­r Bell (20) spins out in front of Joey Logano (22), Noah Gragson (42) and Chase Elliott (9) during the Busch Light Clash exhibition race at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Sunday.

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