Late pass gives Trevor Bayne NASCAR Nationwide Series Iowa victory
June 9, 2013
By K.J. Pilcher
Special to NASCAR Wire Service
NEWTON, Iowa -- Marriage hasn’t slowed down Trevor Bayne.
The
22-year-old joked over the radio that he should have gotten married a
long time ago after he concluded a stunning and exciting late-race
comeback Sunday.
Bayne
exchanged vows with new wife, Ashton, on Tuesday and celebrated their
honeymoon by winning the NASCAR Nationwide Series DuPont
Pioneer 250 at Iowa Speedway. He endured the long day that included a
more than one hour rain delay for his first Nationwide win this season
and second of his career.
The
married couple was reunited in victory lane, Bayne’s pass with 11 laps
remaining to pass Austin Dillon, who had led a whopping 207
laps.
"It’s
such a special week for me," Bayne said. “I was teared up at the altar
on Tuesday and teared up on victory lane on Sunday."
The
Roush Fenway team was all smiles, including Ashton, who attended the
post-race press conference. The victory was the fourth in the
last five Nationwide races at Iowa Speedway for crew chief Mike Kelley,
who guided Ricky Stenhouse to three straight wins here in 2011 and
2012.
“This team at Iowa has been so good," Bayne said. “It’s such an opportunity and a blessing to be a part of this team."
Bayne closed the gap and pulled alongside Dillon with about 15 laps remaining when Dillon seemed slower due to lap traffic.
The pair made contact and Dillon became loose, allowing Bayne to pass and pull away for the victory.
“We
ran him down," said Bayne, who earned a second straight top-five finish
and fourth overall this season. “We were able to race him
pretty hard."
The
long runs seemed to benefit Bayne more than Dillon. It played a factor
that the race remained green for the last 72 laps after the
fifth and final caution. The goal was to keep Dillon in sight for the
late surge and it became a strong possibility about five laps before the
final lead change, according to Bayne.
"We
weren’t great on the short run, but the long run we could really get
after him," Bayne said. “I knew we had to keep that lead to
a minimum, while he was fast on the restart, so we could catch him at
the end of the run."
It also marked the 200th
win for a Ford car on the Nationwide Series, which began in 1982 and
ranks second to Chevrolet (376).
Kelley said the team had to make huge progress on the car’s setup to
contend for a win and provide that wedding present they wanted for the
happy couple.
“Actually,
when we unloaded we weren’t that good," Kelley said. “Trevor did a
really good job of telling us where we were wrong and
what we needed to work on."
They
had to make numerous adjustments during a day of inconsistent
conditions that varied between sunny and cloudy and dry and rainy.
They had to constantly adapt, preferring the cloud cover. The race
originally was scheduled for Saturday night but postponed due to rain.
“Our
car changed very dramatically when the clouds were out to when the sun
was out," Bayne said. “We picked up two-tenths versus the
competition as soon as the clouds were out. That was part of the reason
we caught Austin at the end of that run."
The
team has faced adversity on and off the track all season long. They
have persevered through tests, so the conditions, including
the long delay, were easy to handle.
“Days
like today are becoming (easier) for us because of all the things we’ve
had to go through," Kelley said. “We’ve had people in
and out, crazy things happen to us on the race track we’ve seen happen
to us before (and) we have to go back and rebound."
Dillon dominated nearly the entire race, leading 156 of the first 187 laps.
Instead,
the power wasn’t there at the end to close out the dominating
performance. He said the No. 3 car didn’t have enough drive into
the corner and Bayne was better at the end.
“We could get a big lead but started fading fast at the end of those runs," Dillon said. “That’s just part of it."
He
didn’t seem to have an issue with the late contact with Bayne, who made
contact with Regan Smith during a restart before the rain
delay that helped Dillon jump from fourth to first before the red flag.
“That was good racing," Dillon said. “Nothing wrong there."
Dillon
posted his best finish of the season, earning his third straight pole.
He now has six top-five finishes and seven in the top
10.
“We’ll keep improving," Dillon said. “It was a good points day."
Elliott
Sadler recorded another top-five finish at Iowa Speedway. He placed
third, but was too far away to challenge the top two. Sadler
rebounded from a disappointed finish at Dover International Speedway
last week.
Things appear to be moving in the right direction.
“We
knew coming into Iowa we could be competitive and run up front," Sadler
said. “We showed that today. This is a good momentum builder
for me and my race team."
Sam
Hornish Jr., who battled Dillon for early, finished fourth after
leading 22 laps. He now trails season points leader Regan Smith
by 23 points. Smith finished seventh.
Kyle Larson, the highest finishing rookie, rounded out the top-five.
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