Drivers weigh in on ramifications of Dillon’s playoff penalty

The stars of the NASCAR Cup Series arrived to Michigan International Speedway on Saturday prepared to share their opinions on Austin Dillon’s controversial win and subsequent stripping of the playoff eligibility that came with it from NASCAR. …

The stars of the NASCAR Cup Series arrived to Michigan International Speedway on Saturday prepared to share their opinions on Austin Dillon’s controversial win and subsequent stripping of the playoff eligibility that came with it from NASCAR.

Michigan native Brad Keselowski was just surprised he hadn’t happened already.

“I’m kind of surprised that didn’t happen earlier, to be honest, in the playoff format,” Keselowski told assembled media in an availability prior to Saturday’s Cup practice and qualifying sessions. “Maybe it’s just part of a natural evolution that happens slowly over time.”

Dillon was far from the first driver to win a race with contact in NASCAR’s win-and-in playoff era, but his actions were arguably the biggest test of the sport’s limits.

After losing the lead on a restart with two laps remaining, Dillon dive-bombed leader Joey Logano into Turn 3 and spun him out. It opened the door for Denny Hamlin to scoot under the pair and inherit the top spot, but Dillon right-reared the No. 11 Toyota off Turn 4 and sent him careening into the outside wall.

It was enough to secure the Richard Childress Racing driver a trip to victory lane and provisional playoff spot on Sunday night, but three days later NASCAR elected to penalize Dillon for the actions. He kept the victory but was stripped of playoff eligibility and docked 25 points in the drivers’ and owners’ championship.

Hamlin was happy with the call given the circumstances.

“Certainly, in the moment, if you just take the win, everything fixes itself at that point instead of having this split-decision,” Hamlin told the media Saturday. “As I understand it, there’s some iffy language in the rulebook. Can you really go back and take the win this late in the game?

“I think in the future you just send whoever it is to the back and it all fixes itself. You don’t have to worry about taking off playoff eligibility and stuff like that, but given how much time it took, it was probably the right call.”

The incident was complicated – egregious in nature but fostered by the necessity of wins in NASCAR’s win-and-in playoff system. Dillon entered Richmond 32nd in points, struggling through perhaps the worst season of his Cup career. A playoff-clinching win would have been enough to turn his No. 3 team’s season around, making a major financial swing for Richard Childress Racing in the process.

It made Dillon’s actions understandable, if unacceptable. “I have some sympathies for all the parties involved, whether it be NASCAR, Austin or certainly the guys that got wrecked last week,” Keselowski said. “But the way the system is set up, I kind of understand it.

“That has an effect that transcends not just the Cup Series, but on down. It’s something I think NASCAR felt a lot of pressure to react on, and they did. I don’t know if I have an idea on whether they made the right move or the wrong move, but I guess time will tell.”

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Asked if they would be willing to replicate Dillon’s actions for a critical win, opinions varied. Erik Jones said there was “not a chance,” saying it’s “just not the way I race.” He also pointed out the ripple effect these incidents can have on racing down to the grassroots level.

“Whether we like it or not, it is a trickle-down effect,” Jones said. “What we do on Sundays trickles down — not just to Xfinity, Trucks and ARCA. It trickles down to late models, street stocks, front-wheel drives, quarter midgets, go karts. All these guys and kids watch what we do on Sunday and think what we do is right.”

Ross Chastain was comparatively uncertain. “I never thought I would drive into the wall at Martinsville in fifth gear until I did it,” he said. “No one knows what’s going through Austin’s head for that scenario. I don’t have a predetermined decision on what I’m going to do. It’s just racing at the end of these races.”

RFK Racing’s duo both acknowledged that cleaning out someone for a win isn’t something the organization ever plans to do. Months after seeing a potential win lost cleanly in a photo-finish at Kansas Speedway, Buescher said a precent for wrecking being okay “really wouldn’t change the style of racing that we’re going to do in our camp.”

His owner-teammate, Keselowski, offered perhaps the most nuanced take.

“We would all adapt to it, naturally,” Keselowski said. “You have to adapt to it. If that became the norm every week, then I think actions would speak louder than words and we’d all probably fall into that reality.

“I don’t think we have any intentions of getting to that being the norm every week, particularly at RFK. But you race what the rules are — if the rules are something’s okay, we’re probably going to do it, whether that’s on the car or on the race track.”

Questions will remain moving forward. Dillon’s team is planning to appeal NASCAR’s decision. The intensity on-track is only going to increase as the playoffs arrive. Even if the field can avoid another dramatic ending, eventually another on-track incident will force NASCAR into a judgement call.

Now the sanctioning body will have new precedent, which makes teams feel closer to understanding the limits – even if they aren’t fully defined.

“I believe that hard racing is still okay,” Hamlin said. “I think if two cars are battling side-by-side and one hits the wall because of the close racing, I think that that’s going to be deemed okay.

“I think if you come from a long ways back — you were not going to win the race until you decided to wreck someone — I think that is a clear line in the sand, but sometimes balls and strikes are not totally clear. Sometimes there’s one around the edge and you have to call it.

“But it’s up to us to make that decision. Do we want to put ourselves in that gray area where it could be called one way or another? I think you just have to live with the result.

“I think that if NASCAR polices intentional wrecks for the win going forward, there’s going to be some close calls, but you put yourself in that spot, so you’re going to have to live with the result and the ruling on it.”

Dillon takes wild overtime win at Richmond

It took a controversial full-contact finish but Austin Dillon claimed his first NASCAR Cup Series victory in two seasons in Sunday night’s Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway – vaulting from a 32nd place in the points standings before the race to an …

It took a controversial full-contact finish but Austin Dillon claimed his first NASCAR Cup Series victory in two seasons in Sunday night’s Cook Out 400 at Richmond Raceway — vaulting from a 32nd place in the points standings before the race to an automatic playoff berth with the win.

Coming to the checkered flag during the final lap of overtime, Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevy hit the rear bumper of the race-leading No. 22 Team Penske driven by Joey Logano crashing Logano’s car into the catchfence. Then Dillon immediately moved low on track and hit Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota as he was driving by. It allowed Dillon to take the checkered flag only a few feet ahead and claim the all-important win by a slight 0.116s.

As Logano and Hamlin drove their dented, smoking cars to pit lane, the 34-year-old North Carolinian Dillon did victory donuts and spoke about the win and the move he used to gain it. He reminded reporters later that this was short track-style racing and that he’s seen both Logano and Hamlin make similarly aggressive moves to win a trophy.

“I don’t know man, it’s been two years and this is the first car I’ve had a shot to win with,’’ Dillon said when asked if he thought it was a fair move for the win.

“I felt like with two to go, we were the fastest car. Obviously we had to have a straightaway. Wrecked the guy. I hate to do that, but sometimes you just got to do it.

“I got to thank the good Lord above. It’s been tough for the last two years man. I care about RCR, these fans, my wife. This is my first [win] for my baby girl. It means a lot. I hate it, but I had to do it.’’

“When given that shot, you’ve got to take it,’’ Dillon added.

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It’s Dillon’s first win in the last 68 races and fifth of his career. His last trophy came in the final regular season race of 2022 at Daytona International Speedway which earned a last chance position in that playoff run. He was ranked 32nd in points coming into this Richmond race — 258 points behind the playoff cutoff line — and now he becomes the 13th driver to win his way into championship contention.

Noted his grandfather, team owner and NASCAR Hall of Famer, Richard Childress, “He knew what he had to do and they (Logano and Hamlin) would have done it to him.’’

After speaking briefly with reporters alongside his car on pit road, an angry Logano went immediately to the NASCAR officials team hauler.

“It was chicken &*#! — there’s no doubt about it,’’ the two-time series champion Logano said of Dillon’s move. “He was four car-lengths back, not even close. Then he wrecks the 11 [Hamlin] to go along with it.

“I mean, I get it, bump and run,’’ Logano continued, “I’ve done that, but he just drove through me, it’s ridiculous.’’

Logano’s crew chief Paul Wolfe was frustrated as well.

“It’s just a joke to call that racing. … something like that, that’s not racing,’’ Wolfe said. “We all put too much in this … that’s not professional what happened tonight.’’

Hamlin, who led the most laps (124) on the night, was equally as frustrated.

“There are no penalties for rough driving so it opens up the opportunity for Austin to just do whatever he wants,’’ said Hamlin, who was scored second.

“I got hooked in the right rear again. I was just minding my own business and he hooked me in the right rear and put me in the fence. I don’t know. The record book won’t care about what happened, He’s going to be credited with a win but obviously he’s not going to go far [in the playoffs] because you got to pay your dues back on stuff like that.

“But it was worth it because he jumped 20 positions in points, I understand that and there’s no ill will there, but I just hate that I was a part of it. … I understand it but I don’t agree with it.’’

Finishing just behind Hamlin were 23XI Racing teammates Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain was fifth. These positions were important with only three races remaining now to set the 16-driver playoff field.

Playoff eligibility changed throughout the race — sometimes dramatically so.

Wallace’s top-five run was enough to move him from a seven-point deficit outside the playoff 16 to just inside the top 16. He has a three-point advantage in that final playoff position now over both Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher, who finished 18th Sunday night, and Chastain.

Martin Truex Jr. who led the championship standings for much of the early season and held a 102-point advantage inside the standings at the Richmond green flag, took a big hit in the points. His No. 19 JGR Toyota had to retire early with engine problems taking a last place finish in Sunday’s 37-car field and now the 2017 series champion holds only a 78-point advantage above the playoff cutoff — ranked 14th still the highest ranked driver without a win.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Ty Gibbs is 15th with a 19-point cushion above the cutoff line, followed by Wallace, Buescher and Chastain.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Bell, who led 122 laps and won Stage 1 — a series best 10th stage win – finished sixth, followed by Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson, Spire Motorsports’ Carson Hocevar, Hendrick’s Chase Elliott and Trackhouse Racing’s Daniel Suárez rounding out the Richmond top 10.

Larson continues to lead the standings — now with a five-point advantage over Reddick and a six-point lead on his teammate Elliott. Hamlin is fourth, only 21 points back.

Not only was the race noteworthy for its dramatic ending and the shake-up in the points standings, it was a test run of the new option tire that allowed teams to have a choice of Goodyear rubber in-race. It certainly created a new element of strategy and suspense.

Suárez who tried the new tires early, for example, made up 15 points and took the lead immediately after his pit stop to change them.

“The option tire worked exactly as it was intended,’’ said Goodyear’s Director of Racing Greg Stucker. “They fired off immediately and were more than a half-second faster than the prime, which is big on a short track. Also, the options gave up significantly more than the Primes over a long run, as intended.

“What was really exciting was how different teams used the option tire at different times to accomplish their own goals,’’ he added.

With all the storylines, dramatic finish, and important new tire element, Reddick offered the understatement of the evening, “Wild way to end the night.’’

The series moves to the Midwest next week for Sunday’s Firekeepers Casino 400 at the two-mile Michigan International Speedway (2:30pm ET, USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Buescher is the defending race winner.

RESULTS

Majeski snatches Truck Series regular season finale in Richmond

Ty Majeski took the lead on a restart with eight laps remaining in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series regular season finale Clean Harbors 250 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway to hoist his second consecutive race trophy. Majeski’s No. 98 ThorSport Racing …

Ty Majeski took the lead on a restart with eight laps remaining in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series regular season finale Clean Harbors 250 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway to hoist his second consecutive race trophy.

Majeski’s No. 98 ThorSport Racing Ford led Christian Eckes’ No. 19 Chevy across the finish line by a slight 0.936s to earn the win and vindicate a gut-wrenching loss at the three-quarter mile Richmond track from a year ago when he dominated the race only to lose the lead with four laps remaining.

That tough loss was still very much on the mind of the 29-year old Wisconsin native this weekend. And he nearly gave this one away too after receiving a pit road penalty when a tire got loose on his first pit stop during the Stage 1 break.

“This feels good. We’ve had great ThorSport trucks here at Richmond the last two years, but found different ways to lose them (races) and tried to do that again tonight ’’ said Majeski, who now has five career wins in the series.

“We really need to clean that stuff up.’’

Eckes, driver of the No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet officially claimed the regular season championship in winning Saturday night’s opening stage – his series best eighth stage victory of the season.

“Confidence is high for sure,’’ said Eckes, a three-race winner in 2024. “I feel like we’re in a better position than we were last year and I thought we were in a pretty good position last year too. Real proud of the team. We didn’t have quite what we needed today but proud of everybody and ready to get these next seven races underway.”

For the first time in the modern Playoff format, a driver raced his way into championship contention in the last cutoff race. Daniel Dye, 20, finished eighth in the No. 43 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet – good enough to put him in the Playoffs by 12-points over TRICON Garage Racing’s Tanner Gray, who finished 12th.

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“Just all the hard work these guys have put in and it’s really good to validate myself and the work I’ve put in to change up what I’ve been doing,’’ Dye said. “It’s so cool to have our No. 43 in the Playoffs.”

Tanner Gray stood by his car, understandably frustrated with the night.

“We just weren’t good enough,’’ Tanner Gray said. “Didn’t have the speed, didn’t have the balance and I didn’t do a good enough job, so I’m really frustrated.”

His younger brother Taylor Gray finished third Saturday night, followed by veteran Grant Enfinger and rookie Layne Riggs. The third-place finish was enough to secure Gray’s position in the 10-driver Playoff field and comes in his first full-time season. Fourth-place finisher Enfinger led the most laps – 98 of the 250 – and earned the Stage 2 win; his first stage victory since last season.

 

Tyler Ankrum, defending series champion Ben Rhodes, Dye, Ty Dillon and rookie Connor Hall rounded out the top-10 in Saturday’s race.

The 10-driver Playoff field will include TRICON Garage’s Corey Heim, a five-race winner who holds a three-point advantage on Eckes to start the seven-race Playoff run. Majeski goes into the Playoff run ranked third, followed by fellow race winners this season, Nick Sanchez and Rajah Caruth.

Enfinger is seeded sixth followed by Ankrum, Taylor Gray, Rhodes and Dye.

The Playoff opener, the LiUNA 175, is Aug. 25 at the Milwaukee Mile (4 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“These are my first two wins outside of the Playoffs and they’re right on the cusp of the Playoffs, so this team just seems to click right around Playoff time,’’ Majeski said. “Between that and a lot of these racetracks are just our bread and butter. [Crew chief] Joe [Shear] and I, I feel like we’re pretty good at these last two racetracks and we’re going to another familiar one in Milwaukee and the way that this Playoff schedule lays out is pretty good for our team. I’m excited to get going.”

RESULTS

Hamlin understands why Richmond is at risk of losing one of its dates

Sunday night, Richmond Raceway will host its second NASCAR Cup Series race of the season. If the rumors are true about the 2025 schedule, it might be the last time Richmond has two races for the foreseeable future. The Athletic reported that …

Sunday night, Richmond Raceway will host its second NASCAR Cup Series race of the season. If the rumors are true about the 2025 schedule, it might be the last time Richmond has two races for the foreseeable future.

The Athletic reported that Richmond would be on the chopping block to lose one of its race dates if NASCAR were able to secure a new venue. An international trip, potentially to Canada or Mexico, was connected to the conversation about the Virginia short track, built in 1946 and having hosted NASCAR races since 1953 (two per year since 1959).

“I kind of understand NASCAR’s decision because … if the fans turned out here and we sold out every race, then there would be two races,” Virginia native Denny Hamlin said. “They’re going to do things that the fans want to participate in. What’s crazy is that it’s always one of our top five [ratings] markets that watch us on TV, but [they] don’t actually come to the racetrack itself.

“So, it’s interesting. There are plenty of racing fans around here, but getting to the racetrack has been challenging in the past.”

The 0.750-mile track sits outside Richmond amid neighborhoods, restaurants and businesses, but attendance has significantly dropped over the years — down from when there were consistent sellouts. It was revealed in 2019 that the seating capacity had been reduced.

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Another criticism over the years — the racing itself. Richmond has gone from being dubbed “The Action Track” to one where viewers aren’t entertained by the action on the racetrack even if teams and drivers find it to be enjoyably challenging.

There was a time when Richmond played a significant part in the NASCAR calendar. It was the regular-season finale from 2004 through 2017 before becoming the second postseason race from 2018 through 2021. Since then, it’s been moved further ahead on the calendar as one of the races leading into the postseason.

Nothing has helped make Richmond the draw it once was — not even the $30 million infield redevelopment project it underwent in 2018, as Hamlin also noted.

“I think that has all been a really positive thing, but sometimes these are the cycles that you have to go through,” he said. “Hopefully, it’s a learning moment for the track, and everyone involved that can get this track back, reinvigorated as one of the top short tracks that we have on our schedule. It certainly is a shame if it goes to one week, but the audience here has made it warranted.”

Hamlin to start potential Richmond sweep from pole

Denny Hamlin will begin his potential sweep of the NASCAR Cup Series races at Richmond Raceway from the pole position. Hamlin earned the top spot with a lap of 118.162mph (22.850s). It’s his third pole of the season, fourth at Richmond and the 43rd …

Denny Hamlin will begin his potential sweep of the NASCAR Cup Series races at Richmond Raceway from the pole position.

Hamlin earned the top spot with a lap of 118.162mph (22.850s). It’s his third pole of the season, fourth at Richmond and the 43rd pole of his career.

Martin Truex Jr. will join his teammate on the front row. Truex qualified second at 117.822mph.

Josh Berry qualified third (117.601mph), Chase Elliott, fourth (118.105mph), Christopher Bell, fifth (117.570mph)\, Austin Dillon, sixth (117.770 mph), Chris Buescher, seventh (117.463mph), Bubba Wallace, eighth (117.591mph), Joey Logano, ninth (117.096mph) and Tyler Reddick rounded out the top 10 (117.488mph).

Buescher is the defending race winner of the Cook Out 400.

Ryan Blaney qualified 11th and Kyle Busch qualified 12th. William Byron managed 13th, Ty Gibbs, 14th and Kyle Larson, 15th.

The bubble driver on the Cup Series playoff grid, Ross Chastain, qualified 22nd. Brad Keselowski qualified 29th, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 33rd and Riley Herbst, 34th. Parker Retzlaff qualified last, 37th, for his Cup Series debut.

NEXT: The Cook Out 400 at 6 p.m. ET Sunday (USA).

RESULTS

Busch competing at Richmond with sprained wrist from Indy crash

Kyle Busch arrived at Richmond Raceway with a wrapped left wrist after it was sprained during the most recent NASCAR Cup Series race. “These great Next Gen race cars snap the wheel and snap your wrists,” the Richard Childress Racing driver said. …

Kyle Busch arrived at Richmond Raceway with a wrapped left wrist after it was sprained during the most recent NASCAR Cup Series race.

“These great Next Gen race cars snap the wheel and snap your wrists,” the Richard Childress Racing driver said.

Signs of healing over the two-week Olympic break — a brace giving way to a simple wrap. Kelly Crandall

On the roof camera of his No. 8 Chevrolet, Busch could be seen looking at his wrist after climbing from his car and taking his glove off following the race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 21). A few days later, Busch was wearing a brace in a picture posted on social media by his wife, Samantha, while on vacation during the two-week break for the Olympics.

Busch was running sixth when he bounced off Denny Hamlin and spun in Turn 3 with three laps left in regulation of the Brickyard 400. The car made a full spin before making contact (on the right side) with the outside wall.

His wrist has no broken bones, and Busch will race Sunday at Richmond. There are no plans for a backup driver and Busch is fine behind the wheel.

However, he did admit, “Without two weeks off, I would not have been able to race. I’m good.”

Suarez focused on performance rather than contract extension

Daniel Suarez was never worried about his job security with Trackhouse Racing because his contract extension had been done for “a while” before it was announced Aug. 9. “I was never worried,” Suarez said Saturday at Richmond Raceway. “It was just a …

Daniel Suarez was never worried about his job security with Trackhouse Racing because his contract extension had been done for “a while” before it was announced Aug. 9.

“I was never worried,” Suarez said Saturday at Richmond Raceway. “It was just a matter of working details. Honestly, my biggest worry in the last four months hasn’t been the contract, I promise you; it’s been the performance.”

Suarez was in a contract year with Trackhouse Racing before signing the extension. He will go into his fifth season with the organization founded by Justin Marks in 2025.

Although he’s locked into the postseason through a victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway, which was the second race of the season, Suarez is 17th in the overall NASCAR Cup Series standings. The triumph at Atlanta is one of four top-10 finishes his No. 99 team has earned, and his average finish is 18.2.

“For me, that’s the main thing,” Suarez said. “If you perform, everything takes care of itself. I’ve been here in the Cup Series for some time now, and I understand how it works, and you just have to perform, and at Trackhouse [the last three years have] been a little bit of a struggle; it’s not a secret. You guys know the numbers.

“We have work to do. We are not happy with where we’re at, but we’re happy with where we’re heading. We’re working very, very hard behind the scenes to get the train in the right direction. We have great people. We have a lot of support from a lot of sponsors and from Chevrolet, and we know we’re heading in the right direction.”

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Suarez described the relationship between himself and Trackhouse Racing as a “great journey so far.” The organization signed Suarez as its cornerstone driver when it debuted in 2021, and it has since expanded to field an entry for Ross Chastain, who’s still fighting for a postseason berth as he’s winless and just seven points above the cutline.

“This year has been full of challenges,” Suarez said. “Trackhouse, this year, has had a big task — I would say a bigger task than in previous years when it comes to performance, adjustments and things like that. But we are facing the challenge with a face-up and ready to fight.”

Despite the deal for next season being done and his focus being on the racetrack, Suarez might not be done answering questions about his future. The contract extension was for the 2025 season only, and he admitted there are a lot of things “in the air” going forward.

“The answer is, for sure, it’s one [year], but there are … options for both sides,” Suarez said. “I want to win races, and Trackhouse wants to win races as well, and we have work to do together. Trackhouse by itself won’t make it happen. Me by myself, I won’t be able to make it happen, so we have work to do.

“But the good thing is we have great people, sponsors, and we’re committed to doing it. If things go the way that we are expecting it to go, maybe in a couple of weeks, we may sign a couple more years because that’s in the contract. But we want to perform first.”

Dillon fastest in extended Cup Series practice at Richmond

Austin Dillon paced an extended NASCAR Cup Series practice at Richmond Raceway as teams worked through the addition of the option (soft) tire to their allotment. Dillon paced the way at 118.965mph (22.698s). Bubba Wallace was second fastest at …

Austin Dillon paced an extended NASCAR Cup Series practice at Richmond Raceway as teams worked through the addition of the option (soft) tire to their allotment.

Dillon paced the way at 118.965mph (22.698s). Bubba Wallace was second fastest at 118.859mph.

Christopher Bell was third fastest (118.760mph), Martin Truex Jr., fourth (118.707mph), Zane Smith, fifth (118.702mph), Carson Hocevar, sixth (118.530mph), Chris Buescher, seventh (118.457mph), Michael McDowell, eighth (118.229mph) and Daniel Suarez, ninth (118.203mph). Ty Gibbs completed the top 10 at 118.043mph.

The fastest lap by the drivers in the top 10 all came within their first three laps on the track.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who was 24th fastest, ran the most laps — 91.

Cup Series championship point leader Kyle Larson was just 32nd. There are 37 drivers entered in the Cook Out 400.

There were no incidents in the 45-minute session. NASCAR did not dictate when teams, who had one set of option tires for practice, had to use their sets. Cup Series teams will have two sets of option tires to use during Sunday’s race.

Ross Chastain was fastest in the best 10 consecutive lap average. Chastain paced Buescher, Suarez, Dillon, and Truex Jr.

‘My opinion is the same’ – Truex on Richmond restart

Martin Truex Jr. still believes his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate jumped last weekend’s final restart at Richmond Raceway. “My opinion is the same,” Truex said Saturday about Denny Hamlin. The two restarted side-by-side for overtime, Truex on the …

Martin Truex Jr. still believes his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate jumped last weekend’s final restart at Richmond Raceway.

“My opinion is the same,” Truex said Saturday about Denny Hamlin.

The two restarted side-by-side for overtime, Truex on the outside of Hamlin. Hamlin was the race leader, having taken the top spot by beating Truex off pit road. Until the caution had come out, Truex was in control of the race and had led 228 laps.

NASCAR did not penalize Hamlin after initially saying it was “awful close” on the restart. NASCAR senior vice president of competition, Elton Sawyer, then said two days later that Hamlin did go early and it might have been officiated differently earlier in the race.

Truex has not talked to NASCAR. The former Cup Series champion also said he doesn’t know the restart rules and doesn’t think anyone else does either.

“I’ve seen what was said,” Truex said of NASCAR’s explanation. “I read what they said and I heard what Elton Sawyer said that if it happened with 50 to go or 100 to go or 300 to go, they may have called. It’s clear as mud.”

As the series shifts to Martinsville Speedway, the conversation has been on how closely NASCAR will monitor the restart zone. As a result, some drivers believe everyone will be on their best behavior to avoid being penalized. Truex is one of them. Sort of.

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“I guess if you try to jump, don’t be surprised if they penalize you,” Truex said. “I don’t know. I don’t really understand — it’s a black-and-white rule. You get to the box and you go. I don’t really understand what all the questions are about. You go before it, you should get penalized.”

Truex said he doesn’t know the answer to whether NASCAR needs additional restart rules or something put in place to police them. The race leader, the control car, has to fire first anywhere between the two lines designated as the restart zone.

“It’s hard to follow the rules, and then somebody breaks the rules and doesn’t get in trouble for it,” Truex said. “It’s ridiculous.”

Despite still facing questions about what happened at Richmond, Truex said last weekend is water under the bridge. Saturday, he qualified fourth at Martinsville Speedway, where he’s won three of the last 10 races.

“It’s a race, it’s over,” Truex said. “I was frustrated. It’s aggravating to lead an entire race, dominate a race, and then have it go away that way because I think that’s the fifth or sixth time it’s happened at Richmond. So, you just get aggravated, and it all piles on in a short amount of time, in just 10 or 15 minutes.

“I clearly lost my cool and did some things I’m probably not proud of. But you move on, you got to next week, and you hope you can come out on top and do a better job.”

Richmond conquers closing holes to win Golfweek/Any Given Tuesday event and a Haskins exemption

“This is like icing on the cake and certainly being able to play in the Haskins next year and go to the Masters, the guys are over the moon and we’re thrilled to be a part of it.”

The Augusta/Haskins Award Invitational – for any team, but particularly a mid-major one – is what you might call a schedule upgrade. Richmond coach Adam Decker will be happy to work it into next season’s lineup after his team won the exemption at the rain-shortened Golfweek/Any Given Tuesday Collegiate on Tuesday.

Richmond had a one-shot lead on Long Island University and Valparaiso through two rounds at True Blue Golf Club in Pawley’s Island, South Carolina, and was ready do battle during a final round that was forecasted to be wet. But with a handful of holes left on the back nine, heavy rain made True Blue unplayable, and scores reverted to 36 holes, leaving Richmond with the title and Long Island and Valparaiso in a tie for second.

“We were making a couple birdies before the big monsoon hit,” Decker said. “I felt like we were in a really good spot to finish strongly.”

Not only does Richmond receive a spot in the 20205 Augusta/Haskins tournament but since the event is played in the days leading up to the Masters, each team in the field traditionally receives tickets for Monday’s practice round at Augusta National.

Scores: Golfweek/Any Given Tuesday Collegiate

“We weren’t super focused on everything that surrounds it, we just wanted to keep getting a little better each week this season,” Decker said of playing solid golf with that carrot dangling. “This is like icing on the cake and certainly being able to play in the Haskins next year and go to the Masters, the guys are over the moon and we’re thrilled to be a part of it.”

The closing holes at True Blue Golf Club in Pawley’s Island, South Carolina, require some strategy. They’re scoreable yet penal. Richmond was 3 shots off the lead when they hit that stretch in the first round but ballooned to double digits back. That stretch became a point of conversation in a subsequent team meeting.

“Our conversation the night before was let’s just get in position to have a chance on Wednesday and get it within shouting distance,” Decker said. “Lo and behold, Cole (Ekert) really put the team on his back and shot 6 under par and the other guys really hung in there and were able to get a one-shot lead going into Wednesday.”

Ekert, a junior, made seven birdies in his team-leading charge before making his sole bogey at the par-4 18th for a round of 66. He was 8 under for the tournament, which resulted in his second individual win. Valparaiso’s Caleb VanArragon was second a shot back.

As Ekert was scoring, Decker thinks his teammates might have picked up on the buzz from spectators. He didn’t bring it up. Regardless, his team navigated the closing holes deftly and that ultimately made the difference.

Richmond's Cole Ekert (Golfweek photo)
Richmond’s Cole Ekert (Golfweek photo)

This is Richmond’s first team title since the 2021 VCU Shootout. It’s well-timed momentum leading into the Atlantic 10 Championship in three weeks. Decker said this is a deep team with competitive qualifying.

“We’ve had a lot of different lineup looks trying to figure out what makes the most sense for the end of the year and conference championship, so I think we’re just trying to figure out the right pieces to the puzzle at this point.”

Richmond is going to need to be prepared to go really low at the conference championship, Decker knows, so the focus in qualifying leading up to that tournament will be getting comfortable in the red. That might involve playing shorter tees in practice – anything to reinforce birdies.

“I think the mindset has to kind of evolve to a spot where you’re really comfortable being 5 under par and looking for one more,” he said.

Postseason is the time of year when coaches are looking to find out what their teams are made of, and just as Decker’s squad showed him something at True Blue, so did Ben Belfield’s Long Island men.

Under bleak final-round conditions, Long Island mounted a charge, getting to 7 under before the course became unplayable. They had a lead on Richmond entering the final stretch and Belfield took a lot away from that performance – particularly what it shows him about mental fortitude with such a massive opportunity on the line.

“For them to come down against a good field on a good golf course and show themselves and show other people that we’re not just some scrappy northeast program, these kids can play,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll see more of that as we go through the rest of the season, but it’s a big deal. It was really nice to see.”