The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Surge rejector Byron blasts way to Atlanta win

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It was superspeed­way racing with all the trimmings. “New” Atlanta Motor Speedway produced a fifth different 2022 winner — William Byron, who managed to keep an angry pack of drafting cars behind him for the final 10 laps of Sunday‘s Folds of Honor Quiktrip 500.

In a race that produced 46 lead changes among 20 drivers — both track records — Byron crossed the finish line .109 seconds ahead of Christophe­r Bell and .145 seconds ahead of Ross Chastain.

Bell, however, was penalized for passing below the boundary line on the backstretc­h on the final lap and was demoted to 23rd, the last position on the lead lap. That elevated Chastain to his second straight runner-up finish.

Byron took the lead from Bubba Wallace on Lap 316 of 325 and held it the rest of the way.

“It was so different,” said Byron, who collected his third Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his first at Atlanta, which had undergone a major repaving and reconfigur­ation since the series raced at the 1.54-mile track last July.

“Lots of changes with the Next Gen car. The (No. 24 Hendrick Motorsport­s) Chevrolet was awesome there. Worked hard overnight. Had a pretty rough practice and worked hard on it and got it handling well, like I told you. It was kind of an intermedia­te style with a little bit of speedway into it, so a lot of fun.”

In essence, track owner Speedway Motorsport­s Inc. transforme­d an intermedia­te downforce track into a mini-daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, and NASCAR responded by mandating a superspeed­way competitio­n package for the first race on the new asphalt.

Those who doubted the dramatic changes would produce nail-biting sideby-side racing were quickly proven wrong, as many of the race teams left the track with destroyed race cars and drivers with payback on their minds.

Byron managed to steer clear of the chaos, but Chastain did not. Leading on Lap 94 near the end of Stage 1, Chastain blew a right-rear tire on his No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet and slammed in the outside wall in Turn 2.

Chastain lost two laps for improper fueling under NASCAR‘S damaged vehicle policy but regained them as the beneficiar­y under two straight cautions. Deft repair work by his crew kept him competitiv­e.

“That’s the fight in Trackhouse,” Chastain said. “This Gen 7 car, to take a lick like that, blow a tire out of nowhere and leading, just cruising, blow a right rear, slam the wall. Thought our day was over. Our guys went underneath the car, got the toe closer, and we got the balance back where I could drive it.

“And just the Chevy was fast. It was so fast. I mean, we were fighting with Will there at the beginning. It’s so cool to race with buddies. I’m getting to race with my… I only have a few, but the last few weeks I’ve been able to race with my buddies.”

Like Chastain, Kurt Busch was collected in a major accident (Lap 145) but recovered to run third as the highest-finishing Toyota. Daniel Suarez was fourth, giving Trackhouse Racing — co-owned by Justin Marks and star entertaine­r Pitbull — two cars in the top five.

Corey Lajoie came home fifth, scoring the first top five of his Cup career. Chase Elliott, Chris Buescher, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano and Alex Bowman completed the top 10.

All told, 28 of the 37 cars that started the race were involved in collisions. That number included Wallace, who was collected in a wreck with Justin Haley and Buescher approachin­g the checkered flag. Wallace finished 13th.

 ?? (Mike Mulholland/getty Images) ?? William Byron, driver of the #24 Liberty University Chevrolet, takes the checkered flag to win the Cup Series Folds of Honor Quiktrip 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway Sunday.
(Mike Mulholland/getty Images) William Byron, driver of the #24 Liberty University Chevrolet, takes the checkered flag to win the Cup Series Folds of Honor Quiktrip 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway Sunday.

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