Allmendinger wins NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Road America
June 22, 2013
By Jerry Bonkowski
Special to NASCAR Wire Service
ELKHART LAKE, Wisc. – How do you find just the right gift to say "thank you" to a man who seemingly has everything?
That's
the dilemma A.J. Allmendinger has faced since billionaire team owner
Roger Penske gave him a second chance to redeem himself following last
year's embarrassing suspension
for violating NASCAR's substance abuse policy.
Saturday,
Allmendinger finally found the way. It took two green-white-checker
restarts and five extra laps (55 in total), but he easily earned both
his first career NASCAR
and Nationwide Series win in the Johnsonville Sausage 200 Presented by
Menards at Road America.
"This
is the only way I could repay him," Allmendinger said of Penske. "It's
just cool to win for Roger. It's what I've wanted since last year. … I
wish he was here to be able
to say, 'Thank you, boss, I got one for you.'"
It was
Allmendinger's first start in a Nationwide Series race since 2008. But
he's no stranger to victory lane at the 4-mile Road America road course,
having won there in the
now-defunct Champ Car World Series in 2006.
"It's
my favorite track now," Allmendinger said with a smile. "It's a lot of
fun. This track is still the same racetrack I remember. The same
characteristics still apply to
both race cars. The track is still the same thing with how you have to
get into the corners and where the grip levels are in the corners."
Earlier
in the afternoon, Allmendinger won the Coors Light Pole Award with a
lap of 109.233 mph, his first pole in nine career Nationwide Series
races.
Penske
asked Allmendinger before last month's Indianapolis 500 if he'd be
interested in competing in a couple of upcoming Nationwide Series races.
Saturday's race at Road America
was the first and Allmendinger will race again August 17 at Mid-Ohio
Sports Car Course.
"We're going to try and get another one there," Allmendinger said.
After
Owen Kelly shoved series points leader Regan Smith into Billy Johnson,
sending all three cars sailing on Lap 47, Allmendinger took the green
flag two laps later.
But
that was short-lived as on Lap 50, which should have been the
second-to-last lap, Michael Annett took a spin, got stuck in rain-soaked
grass and brought out the eighth
and final caution flag.
On the
second GWC restart on Lap 54, Allmendinger's Ford Mustang dueled with
Justin Allgaier's Chevrolet Camaro, but pulled away at the start of the
55th and final lap and
won by a comfortable 1.372-second margin.
"I knew
the car was quicker than everybody," Allmendinger said. "I still knew
if I could get back the lead, as long as I didn’t make any mistakes,
they weren't going to pass
me."
Allgaier finished second, followed by Parker Kligerman.
"I'm
still not a road racer, I can assure you of that," Allgaier said. "Just
watching A.J. and seeing some of the places he was able to go on that
last green-white-checker,
I still have some stuff to learn."
Added
Kligerman, "It's just complete chaos most of the time near the end of
the race and all you hope is you put yourself in the right place amongst
the chaos and hopefully
it goes your way."
Owen Kelly finished fourth, followed by Sam Hornish Jr.
Sixth
through tenth were Brian Vickers, who will also race Sunday in the
Sprint Cup road course race at Sonoma Raceway, followed by Kyle Larson,
Cole Whitt, Elliott Sadler
and Austin Dillon.
Because
of the tangle he had with Kelly and Johnson on Lap 47, series points
leader Regan Smith dropped from fifth to a disappointing 32nd-place
finish, one lap down from the
winner.
Smith also saw his 58-point series lead cut to just a 28-point edge over Allgaier and 30 points in front of Hornish.
NOTES:
When asked if there are enough road courses (three) on the current
Nationwide Series schedule, Allgaier and Kligerman were quick with their
answers. "Not enough," Allgaier
said. "If we had 10, that'd be perfect. I'm not a road racer, but I
love it. I'm not good at it, but I love doing it." Added Kligerman,
"More, more. It'd be awesome (to have 10)." … Here's an interesting
irony: the top three finishers are all current or former
Penske Racing drivers. "Two former Penske drivers finishing second to a
Penske car," Allgaier said. "I think A.J. did a great job today." …
Vickers is the only driver to do the "double" this weekend, racing at
both Road America and Sonoma. His total travel
from Charlotte to Wisconsin to California and back: approximately 6,300
miles. … Dexter Stacey was replaced on the fourth lap by Tim Andrews in
the No. 92 Ford. Stacey, who was involved in a hard wreck last week at
Michigan, reported residual soreness in his
chest and requested a relief driver.
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