Rick Hendrick talks about Chase Elliott, Alex Bowman missing the 2023 playoffs

Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick discusses Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman missing the 2023 NASCAR playoffs.

[autotag]Hendrick Motorsports[/autotag] only has two drivers, William Byron and Kyle Larson, in the 2023 NASCAR playoffs after [autotag]Chase Elliott[/autotag] and [autotag]Alex Bowman[/autotag] failed to win at Daytona International Speedway. Elliott still has the No. 9 car in the Owners’ Championship but it represents the first time since 2016 that Hendrick Motorsports has seen two of its drivers miss the playoffs.

Both drivers suffered injuries during the 2023 season that put them behind the eight ball and were unable to claim a victory through the first 26 races. Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick jumped on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio to discuss Elliott and Bowman missing the playoffs and while it is disappointing, there is still more to fight for this year.

“Y’know, momentum is a thing you got to have,” Hendrick said. “If you can finish the year on a high note, you can win races, and compete there all the way, all four cars be competitive at the end of the year, you’re pumped up. You know you got the right combinations to roll into next year. To me, our most important thing right now is to see (Alex Bowman) and (Chase Elliott) both run well. Chase and Alan are focused on the Owners’ Championship now and that gives them a carrot to go after. We want momentum on the (No. 48 team).”

“The thing about it is that you’re not gonna win every year. You’re gonna be disappointed, but the best you can ask for is to be competitive and show up every week…That’s our goal and sometimes we fall behind and we don’t know why…To me, you don’t want to go into the offseason with a car that’s not competitive cause then you start asking yourself all kinds of questions. Our goal is to have all four of them super competitive here in the last 10 races.”

While Hendrick Motorsports will focus on Byron and Larson to win the Drivers’ Championship, Elliott can still push forward and pursue the Owners’ Championship. It is not a lost year and there is still more to chase with nine races left in the 2023 NASCAR season.

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Alex Bowman talks about going to Daytona in a must-win situation

Alex Bowman discusses the idea of going to Daytona International Speedway in a must-win situation as the No. 48 still seeks a victory.

[autotag]Alex Bowman[/autotag] didn’t expect to be 96 points below the playoff cut-line entering the regular season finale at Daytona International Speedway at the beginning of the 2023 NASCAR season. In fact, it wasn’t even a thought as Bowman led the point standings after the sixth race of the season at Circuit of the Americas.

Unfortunately for the Hendrick Motorsports driver, an injury suffered in a sprint car racing accident following the 10th race of the season at Talladega Superspeedway derailed his year. Bowman missed three races but only had one top-10 finish over the next 12 events. Now, the No. 48 team enters Daytona in a must-win situation. Bowman talked about the scenario in an article from Hendrick Motorsports.

“Obviously, this situation is not ideal, but we have one option – win,” Bowman said. “I have mixed feelings because normally, I feel like I draft well with the No. 9 car and Chase Elliott, but this weekend, I have to beat him. We have a great team, a great pit crew, and as long as we can stay out of the big one, there is no reason we can’t go compete for a win this Saturday and grab the last playoff spot.”

Bowman has to beat Elliott but it is best to stick with what works as both Hendrick Motorsports drivers seek a spot in the 2023 NASCAR playoffs. If Bowman fails to hit the lottery in Daytona, it will be a disappointing end to a championship push that looked so promising at the start of the year.

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Why Alex Bowman could steal a Cup Series win at Watkins Glen

Alex Bowman could be a sleeper to take the victory at Watkins Glen International and clinch a spot in the 2023 NASCAR playoffs.

[autotag]Alex Bowman[/autotag] is not known to be an elite road course driver but last weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at the Indianapolis Road Course represented a turning point for several reasons. Bowman willed the No. 48 car to a fifth-place finish, despite having a mechanical issue near the end of the event.

In fact, it was the Hendrick Motorsports driver’s first top-10 finish since returning from his back injury at the Coca-Cola 600 on May 29. The summer stretch has been difficult for Bowman as he has suffered several unfortunate events, whether that is due to Denny Hamlin at Chicago and Pocono or a mechanical issue in the closing laps at Gateway.

However, Indianapolis might be the spark that Bowman needed heading into the final two races of the NASCAR regular season. The driver of the No. 48 car sits 20th in the point standings with an 80-point deficit, which is very likely a must-win situation. Ironically, the best chance for a victory may come on a track where Bowman has struggled in the past.

Watkins Glen International is coming up this weekend and it is fair to characterize Bowman as a sleeper to take the victory. There are a few main reasons why this is the case, including his performance at Indianapolis. In the last 17 laps, Bowman consistently had a top-3 car on speed with a handful of laps that were faster than the four drivers in front of him.

Also, the Hendrick Motorsports driver had the fifth-best driver rating (104.5), fifth-best average running position (7.89), and eighth-best green flag speed (96.978 MPH). This all came at a track that featured one of the longest green-flag runs in recent memory and where Bowman had never finished in the top 15 spots. Simply put, it was one of his best performances on a road course yet, excluding the Charlotte ROVAL.

 

It certainly creates optimism for Watkins Glen. Bowman will get extra track time in the No. 17 car for Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Xfinity Series event and it represents a track where the organization had ran very well lately. Hendrick Motorsports has won the last four races dating back to the 2018 season when Chase Elliott claimed his first Cup Series victory.

Elliott’s dominance at Watkins Glen is a concern for anyone else needing a victory; however, the driver of the No. 9 car has not been as dominant on road courses with the NextGen car. The door has been opened for the likes of Daniel Suarez and Michael McDowell to beat Elliott on road courses. Bowman can add his name to the list this weekend.

Sure, Bowman has a best finish of 14th place (three times) at Watkins Glen but look back at Indianapolis. The Arizona native didn’t have a top-15 finish at the venue and still went faster than Elliott a total of nine times in the last 17 laps, which also equals out to 52.9% over that period. Obviously, each driver had to deal with lap traffic at different times but the point remains.

There won’t be many people that label Bowman as a sleeper to win at Watkins Glen but the evidence is present for a significant breakthrough. At the end of the day, it might not happen but it wouldn’t be too surprising to see the No. 48 car with a new winner’s sticker on the side of it this Sunday.

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Alex Bowman wrecks at Michigan, hurts NASCAR playoff chances

Alex Bowman wrecks at Michigan International Speedway and hurts his chances to make the NASCAR playoffs on points.

[autotag]Alex Bowman[/autotag] was in a prime position to make up major ground on the final spot in the NASCAR playoffs at Michigan International Speedway; however, a wreck in the Final Stage has hurt his chances to make it on points.

On the restart of the Final Stage, Bowman was behind Front Row Motorsports driver Todd Gilliland while the No. 38 car started to slow down exiting Turn 2.

The No. 48 car reacted and turned left into Stewart-Haas Racing driver Chase Briscoe, which caused Bowman to wreck into the outside wall. The Hendrick Motorsports driver ended Stage 2 with a 32-point deficit to the 16th spot in the NASCAR playoffs.

Now, Bowman needs to hope for other bubble drivers to have issues or this could likely be a must-win scenario for the No. 48 team moving forward.

Bowman ‘not where I want to be’ through NASCAR’s summer stretch

A little over three months ago, Alex Bowman led the NASCAR Cup Series championship point standings and was off to the best start of his career. But as Bowman knows, things can change quickly in racing, and they have for him and the No. 48 Hendrick …

A little over three months ago, Alex Bowman led the NASCAR Cup Series championship point standings and was off to the best start of his career.

But as Bowman knows, things can change quickly in racing, and they have for him and the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team. Entering Sunday night’s race at Atlanta Motor Speedway (7 p.m. ET, USA), Bowman is 20th in the championship standings and below the playoff grid cutline.

He hasn’t finished inside the top 10 since Richmond Raceway in early April. Despite the cyclical nature of success, Bowman said it “for sure” has been wild how things changed.

“I think losing Blake (Harris, crew chief) for four weeks…there were so many disruptions to how our season started,” Bowman said of the team’s penalty for hood louvers. “We just have to get back to it. I think physically, from where I’m at, I’m definitely not where I want to be either.

“There are a lot of complications with the penalties and breaking your back and everything that went on kind of middle of the beginning of the season. But we just have to keep digging.”

A return to form is the main focus for Bowman and his team — one that can’t come soon enough.

Bowman looked on the brink of winning through the first 10 races of the season with six top-10 finishes. He also led the series in average finish.

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On April 26, he fractured a vertebra in his back during a sprint car race, sidelining him for three points races and the All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro.

“I just feel like just this point of the year, middle of the summer, typically I’m at a certain level, and I’m not at that because it took so long to recover,” Bowman said. “Then you get back to racing, and you’re sore for the whole rest of the week.

“I would say this week is the closest I’ve had to a normal week of training and I was probably 75 percent of what I want to be at, so still trying to get back there. I don’t think it hurts me in the car, but just every little thing adds up.”

Currently, he is 26 points below the cutline. There are eight races, including Atlanta, left in the regular season.

“I think missing four weeks while the rest of the competition is getting better every week doesn’t help things,” Bowman said. “We’ve been OK; we just haven’t had a race that things went well for us. We’ve been on the wrong side of about every caution, on strategy, obviously; an engine failure (in Chicago) wasn’t good, pit stall deal hurt us a ton at Charlotte… So it’s just been like every week something bad happens to us.

“If we can just go execute, run how we should… I feel like we haven’t had race-winning speed the last couple of weeks, but we’ve had decent enough speed to run OK, and we haven’t even been able to execute that. Just have to get the momentum shifted, I guess.”

Chicago’s circuit is ‘wild in a good way’ to Cup contingent

NASCAR Cup Series drivers finally took to the streets of Chicago Saturday after months of hype and anticipation for the sport’s first street course race. “It’s wild. It’s wild in a good way,” 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace said. “The only thing I …

NASCAR Cup Series drivers finally took to the streets of Chicago Saturday after months of hype and anticipation for the sport’s first street course race.

“It’s wild. It’s wild in a good way,” 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace said. “The only thing I talked to my team about is I don’t feel – when I’m in the race car – the city aspect as much as you see it (outside the car). For me, it’s like, OK, don’t hit that concrete wall, don’t hit that one, look at the brake markers, make sure you hit the apex of the corner.

“So, I think we go into race mode, and it’s a good thing we’re not paying attention to the outside. But yeah, I’d say bonkers is a good word (for the weekend).”

“Honestly, it’s pretty close to what I expected,” Hendrick Motorsports driver Alex Bowman said. “It’s a lot of fun. It’s cool to be right there on the limit with literally no room for error.”

Because it’s a new course, NASCAR gave teams 50 minutes of practice before going into qualifying. There were a few issues in practice as drivers like William Byron and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. stepped over the limit and hit the wall. In qualifying, Chase Elliott and Kevin Harvick had heavy crashes.

“Driving the race car is super fun,” Bowman said. “I am really enjoying that.”

Justin Haley could not qualify after his team had a shock issue in practice. He said Kaulig Racing just missed it when it came to the shock package, leading to him scrapping the wall. Even still, he was complimentary of the course.

“Besides the walls being a lot closer than a normal road course, it’s fine,” Haley said. “There are no issues.”

Some expected the course to feel more claustrophobic than drivers might be used to because of the walls and fencing. Unlike traditional road courses, where there is plenty of run-off area before getting to a tire barrier or fence, Chicago is completely enclosed.

“It’s fun,” Haley said.

Ryan Preece “loved” driving the course. But the Stewart-Haas Racing driver knows the fun can quickly dissipate.

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“It was awesome,” Preece said. “I enjoyed it because it’s a constant challenge for yourself to keep pushing further and further into the corner and not overstepping it because I think you saw that one time you overstep it, there is no second chance.

“If you hit a wall, you’re going to bounce off into the other wall. If you overdrive it, you’re probably going to slide right into the tire barrier. So, it’s just finding that line.”

Stenhouse’s crash in practice came because he made a mistake entering the loop – Turn 8. Misjudging the right-hander and turning too soon, Stenhouse hit the wall with the right side of his JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet, which sent him into the opposite wall.

The damage was too significant for Stenhouse to make a qualifying attempt. He will be in a backup car for Sunday’s race.

“The track, though, I thought was really well built and it was fun making laps,” Stenhouse said. “The ride quality, at least in our cars, was somewhat OK, I felt like. I was having fun until I wasn’t, I guess.”

Despite worries about how the car would handle on the street course, there weren’t many complaints. In preparation for the event, drivers spoke of how bumpy and slippery the course felt in the simulator. On Saturday, however, some found it wasn’t as bad as the simulator made it seem. Aside from the usual bumps of being on a street course, the Next Gen car felt no different in Chicago than it has on a road course.

“It feels OK. It feels like normal. It feels like what you’d expect,” Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch said. “Honestly, it’s better served for this type of environment than the old car. You saw a lot of guys wheel hopping and having issues with the Xfinity (Series) car, which are truck arm cars, and that doesn’t lend itself to very good braking opportunities getting deep into corners and not wheel hopping.

“So this car here, you just kind of slid a tire here or there … but it doesn’t wheel hop and crash you. You just kind of slide a little bit, and you’ve got to get it back under control.”

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Martin Truex Jr. was another driver who, despite his performance, was pleased with the course. He qualified 11th.

“It was fun today; definitely a challenge,” Truex said. “Every turn is different with the pavement and the bumps, and the different concrete spots and patches of different styles of asphalt and all those kind of things. It’s quite a challenge, but it was fun learning it today.

“I thought our practice went really well. We picked it up quick and had really good speed and then was a little disappointed in how we qualified. We just didn’t quite pick up like a lot of guys did when we put tires on there, so not sure about that, but felt really good on long-run race trim, so it should be fun tomorrow.”

NASCAR building a course in downtown Chicago left many drivers impressed. Whether it was from a logistical standpoint or the course itself, the weekend has been embraced by many and has already left a lasting impression.

Bowman ready for return after North Wilkesboro test

Alex Bowman’s return to NASCAR Cup Series competition on Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway will come with no previous on-track time after rain canceled practice and qualifying. Well, no on-track time at Charlotte, at least. Bowman ran over …

Alex Bowman’s return to NASCAR Cup Series competition on Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway will come with no previous on-track time after rain canceled practice and qualifying.

Well, no on-track time at Charlotte, at least.

Bowman ran over 150 laps earlier this week at North Wilkesboro Speedway in a NASCAR-approved medical test. It was necessary for Bowman to be cleared to race after suffering a fractured vertebra in a sprint car crash late last month.

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The laps run at North Wilkesboro will not translate to Charlotte. Even still, Bowman is grateful to have had the seat time to get re-acclimated to the cockpit of his race car after sitting on the couch for a month.

“Yeah, for sure,” Bowman said on Saturday. “And honestly, as much as it was for me to get my head wrapped around what it was actually going to feel like, I feel like that was a part of getting cleared (was) having a doctor there and kind of going through that. Glad we were able to do that.

“Obviously, (we) would have liked track time (on Saturday) to kind of know what I signed myself up for (on Sunday), but yeah, I think it was definitely good to be able to do that.

“I ran a lot of laps in the simulator, which doesn’t really do a whole lot, but hopefully that gives me an idea of what my race car is going to be like. I think it was really good for me, mentally. Obviously, it was a requirement to get cleared, but just mentally to know what to expect feels good.”

There was not much Bowman could do to recover other than rest. The fracture was the T3 vertebra, which was high enough in Bowman’s back it did not require a brace. And Bowman was mobile throughout his recovery.

Josh Berry drove Bowman’s car in his four-week absence. But even as he returns, Bowman acknowledged he’s going to be dealing with some pain or discomfort for time to come and there are things he still does that bring that on. Bowman has been easing himself back into the gym, and particularly this week, he did not want to overdo it before the longest race of the year.

In the car during the test at North Wilkesboro, Bowman felt fine. He knows that doesn’t mean it’ll be the same as Charlotte. Something Bowman did fear is how it’ll feel when the team drops the jack on a pit stop, but they practiced that before this weekend, and Bowman said it didn’t hurt.

“I feel like I’m ready,” Bowman said of racing again.

Despite the time away, Bowman is still in playoff contention, having only dropped eight places to 17th in the championship standings. Bowman led the series in average finish before his injury.

“I don’t think it puts us at ease with the situation we’re in, points-wise, by any means,” Bowman said. “A lot can happen – you can have a lot of winners, and that can change really quickly. But I think what it does do is talk about the season we’ve had so far.

“Missed three points races, had a 60-point penalty and still be on the playoff cutline – it says how good of a season we were having before I did get hurt. Excited to be back, and hopefully, we can pick up where we left off and be strong right out of the gate.”

Bowman cleared to return at Charlotte

Alex Bowman will return to NASCAR Cup Series competition this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway after missing the last three points races because of a compression fracture. In preparation for his return, Bowman ran 170 laps Tuesday at North …

Alex Bowman will return to NASCAR Cup Series competition this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway after missing the last three points races because of a compression fracture.

In preparation for his return, Bowman ran 170 laps Tuesday at North Wilkesboro Speedway in a NASCAR-approved medical evaluation. Bowman was injured on April 25 when he suffered a fractured vertebra in a sprint car crash at 34 Raceway in Iowa.

“It’s a boost for all of us to have Alex return to the No. 48 car this weekend at our home track,” said Rick Hendrick. “He’s still 17th in points, which says a lot about how well the team performed at the start of the year. Alex has worked hard to rehab the injury and come back strong, and I look for him to continue having a championship-caliber season.”

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Bowman has been granted a playoff waiver by NASCAR. Before being sidelined, Bowman was ninth in the standings with the best average finish in the Cup Series.

Josh Berry drove the No. 48 Chevrolet in Bowman’s absence, including over the weekend in the All-Star Race. Berry won the Open to advance to the $1 million feature event. In his three races as Bowman’s substitute, Berry’s best finish was 10th at Dover Motor Speedway.

“Josh is an absolute pro,” said Jeff Andrews, president and general manager of Hendrick Motorsports. “His talent and hard work allowed the team to continue operating at a high level while Alex recovered. We can’t say enough about the great job he did under some challenging circumstances. We’re grateful to Josh and our partners at JRM for their support.”

Bowman still unclear on timeline for return from injury

Alex Bowman is still unsure when he’ll return to NASCAR Cup Series competition but hopes a doctor visit this week, including a new x-ray, will provide some clarity. “I’m obviously mobile,” Bowman said Sunday at Darlington Raceway. “Super-fortunate …

Alex Bowman is still unsure when he’ll return to NASCAR Cup Series competition but hopes a doctor visit this week, including a new x-ray, will provide some clarity.

“I’m obviously mobile,” Bowman said Sunday at Darlington Raceway. “Super-fortunate that the injury wasn’t any worse than it was. Obviously, a lot of people have had that flat landing in a sprint car and have been hurt much worse than I was. So I’ll heal up and come back when I can.”

Bowman was injured on April 25 during a sprint car race at 34 Raceway in Iowa. The Hendrick Motorsports driver suffered a fractured vertebra and was initially sidelined for three to four weeks. Josh Berry has been driving the No. 48 Chevrolet in his absence.

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“I knew I hurt,” Bowman said of the crash. “It hurt a lot, but I was like, I can move everything, so in my head, if you can move everything, then you’re just tweaked up or whatever. Like when you throw your back out. But when I got back to my trailer, I couldn’t get my fire suit off or move much and realized how much pain I was in. My plan was to get home and get checked out, but it pretty quickly became ‘get to a hospital in Iowa and get checked out there’.”

Because the fracture is so high up his spine, Bowman has not been wearing a brace, and there are no spinal cord injuries. He has able to get back in the gym, which has been the extent of his therapy.

“I would say the most painful thing for me is laughing, coughing, sneezing, or trying to sleep,” Bowman said. “Laying down hurts pretty bad. Standing up and walking around is not so bad. I’ve been able to walk the whole time, so that’s been nice. I’ve kind of kept myself busy.

“This week, I was able to get back in the gym a little, which was really good because not working out for a couple of weeks is like the worst thing in the world for me. They have these, like, hair bands that pump up around your muscles, so you can work out with really lightweight and still get a really good workout from it. So, I was doing curls with like five-pounders. Typically, I do 10s, so five was a good workout for me.”

If he had to drive the car today, Bowman said it would probably hurt when the jack drops from a pit stop. He hasn’t been in the simulator and thinks he could, but would expect discomfort when he’d have to pull the seatbelts tight.

Bowman had the best average finish in the NASCAR Cup Series and briefly led the point standings before being sidelined. Missing the events at Dover Motor Speedway and Kansas Speedway was particularly tough since those tracks are statistically strong for him, and he knows he’s missing out on valuable points.

In the last three weeks, Bowman has fallen to 17th in the standings. The Cup Series runs the non-points race at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend before visiting Charlotte Motor Speedway for the Coca-Cola 600 at the end of the month.

“It sucks. It sucks pretty bad,” Bowman said of not racing. “But it’s pretty self-inflicted. It was my choice to go sprint car racing, and I knew what I was signing up for. It really sucks being out of the race car, but everybody at Hendrick Motorsports has been super-supportive, as well as everybody at Ally. It definitely sucks to not be in the car, though.”

Andrews says no changes to Hendrick policy after spate of extra-curricular injuries

For the sixth time in the opening 11 weeks of the season, Hendrick Motorsports entered the racetrack without one of their full-time Cup drivers in the seat. Alex Bowman, who fractured a vertebra while racing a sprint car at 34 Raceway in Burlington, …

For the sixth time in the opening 11 weeks of the season, Hendrick Motorsports entered the racetrack without one of their full-time Cup drivers in the seat.

Alex Bowman, who fractured a vertebra while racing a sprint car at 34 Raceway in Burlington, Iowa this past Tuesday night, will be sidelined three to four weeks as he recovers, becoming the second HMS driver to miss time due to an extra-curricular injury this year.

“Whenever our drivers come forward with schedules for extracurricular racing or things they’re going to do like the Chili Bowl in the offseason, those schedules are reviewed,“ Jeff Andrews, President and General Manager of Hendrick Motorsports said. “And the message from Mr. (Rick) Hendrick is, ‘I don’t want to stop those things, but be careful.’ We’ll always keep Sunday at the top of the list.”

Bowman, who’d been enjoying one of the best starts to the season in his career with new crew chief Blake Harris, had amassed three top-five and six top-10 finishes before the injury. Josh Berry, who filled in for Chase Elliott in five races at Hendrick, will drive the No. 48 car in Bowman’s absence.

While Harris never wants to see his driver forced out of the seat, he’s confident in Berry’s skillset as a more than capable substitute.

“This company has a great history of success here in the No. 48 car alone,” Harris said. “Josh — we got him in the simulator Wednesday as soon as we knew something, I mean within two hours, I think, of him knowing he was able to hop in for us. Statistically, he’s probably the best guy here. He’s only had a handful of races, but I don’t know that he’s finished worse than second here.”

Berry, who will be making his eighth career Cup Series start and sixth this year, echoed Harris’ sentiments, and is much more confident stepping into this situation at a track he’s enjoyed success at (2022 Xfinity Series Dover winner) than when he stepped in last minute for Elliott at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

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“The reality of it is I feel a little bit more comfortable than where we were sitting in at Las Vegas, having a relationship with everyone at HMS and working through a handful of races with the No. 9. I’m ready to go,” Berry said. “We’re going to stay in the present; race these two races this weekend and see how it goes.”

Elliott knows exactly what his teammate Bowman is going through, having lived a similar situation only a matter of weeks ago.

“I know he’s bummed. But I think it could have been a lot worse, right,” he said. “For me, number one, I’m thankful he’s in a position where he’s going to be able to get back to the team and be able to contribute 100 percent as he was before. So to me, his health is really first and foremost. I know he’s bummed and he’s probably not feeling good, but I’m looking forward to having him back.”

Despite the quantity of incidents affecting the same organization, Elliott still chalks it up to unfortunate timing more than anything else.

“I mean, look, I get it — it’s a bad look. I totally understand that,” Elliott admitted. “But also, I understand that there is a timing piece of that and it’s just really poor timing. I think if one happened this year and the other happened next year, would we be having the same conversation? Probably not… I think them being back-to-back makes it look a little worse than the reality.”

“We look at Chase and Alex’s situation as two different situations,” added Andrews, who doesn’t anticipate any changes to the organizations policies as it pertains to off-track activities. “This is the first extracurricular racing accident that we’ve had that’s taken one of our drivers out here for three weeks.

“We may take a look at this if it happens again. We’ll have to,” he continued. “From our perspective, we have to evaluate and understand what is the right balance. We certainly don’t want to tell them ‘no’ to something that might help them here on Sunday. But we want them in good race cars, safe cars.”