Crafton gets breakthrough truck series win at Texas
June 6, 2014
By John Sturbin
NASCAR Wire Service
FORT WORTH, TEXAS –
Matt Crafton put a
definitive end to his 13-year/26-race winless streak at Texas Motor
Speedway Friday night, steamrolling the field while stretching his fuel
mileage en route to a NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series victory in the 18th annual WinStar World
Casino 400.
Crafton
and crew chief Carl Joiner gambled on fuel, running the final 61
laps/91.5 miles without pitting the No. 88 Slim Jim/Menards Toyota
Tundra fielded by ThorSport Racing.
Crafton, 37, scored his fifth truck series victory in 322 career starts
and second of the season after winning on the half-mile Martinsville
Speedway in March. It’s the first time Crafton has won multiple races in
a season.
“I
asked if we could make it all the way [on fuel], and they said, ‘Yeah!’”
said Crafton, referring to Joiner and team general manager David
Pepper. “That helped because I
could slow down so much. They’d let me run for five laps and then slow
down for five laps. That is the hardest thing to do for a driver. But we
had the fastest truck.
“It’s
awesome to be able to do it in this fashion. We marched through them. We
had a brand new motor package from Triad and they stepped up as well.
I’m just lucky enough to
drive it. We have an awesome organization. We have every tool to work
with and it’s so cool to be in Victory Lane in Texas.”
Crafton
finished second in both 2009 Texas truck series races and the spring
race in 2012. Friday he led a race- and career-high 118 of 167 laps
around the high-banked, 1.5-mile
TMS quad-oval to finish a massive 13.302-seconds ahead of runner-up and
pole-sitter Justin Lofton. Ironically, Crafton failed to lead a lap
here last year while finishing fourth and 10th in the spring and fall
races, respectively, on the way to his first
truck series championship.
Crafton’s
margin of victory set a new series record at TMS, besting the previous
mark of 11.817 seconds by Dennis Setzer in this event in 2004. Still,
the margin failed to
dampen Lofton’s spirit after scoring his best TMS finish in eight
starts.
“It’s
definitely an exciting day for me at Texas Motor Speedway,” said Lofton,
who was making only his second start of the season. “Sometimes a driver
just clicks with a track
and we had a great truck and qualified on the pole. We made adjustments
throughout the race but right at the end we definitely hit on
something. As soon as I left my pit box (on his final stop) we were on
fuel conservation mode. I wish we could have pushed
him (Crafton) to run him out of fuel. He said his truck ran out of fuel
when he started his (celebratory) donuts. But we’re here. Our guys did a
great job calculating fuel.”
Meanwhile,
NASCAR veteran Joe Nemechek scored a solid third for his privateer team
in the No. 8 MD Anderson Cancer Center/Smoke -N- Sear No. 8 Toyota
Tundra. Sid Mauldin, owner
of SWM Gun Runners located in Pampa, Texas, and partner in SWM-NEMCO
Motorsports, currently is receiving treatment for stomach cancer at MD
Anderson in Houston. Nemechek’s unsponsored black truck carried the MD
Anderson logo on its hood as a show of support
for the facility.
“It’s
definitely big,” said Nemechek, a former NASCAR Nationwide Series winner
at TMS who was making his first truck series start the track. “You look
at what our team is ...
seven or eight guys, we’re building everything. We built seven trucks
so far this year and trying to get performing better.”
In addition, Nemechek is sharing driving duties with his 16-year-old son, John Hunter.
“As a
team we’re getting better; this is our first year,” the elder Nemechek
said. “We’ve never run trucks and I can now tell my son I’ve got a
third-place finish and he’s
got a sixth (at Dover International Speedway). So it’s all good.”
Crafton
also took over the championship points lead by 11 points (232-221) over
teammate Johnny Sauter, who finished seventh in his No. 98 Nextant/Curb
Records Toyota after
pitting for fuel under green on Lap 163.
“We
were hoping to have a 1-2 finish but I couldn’t be happier,” said
Pepper, referring to Crafton and Sauter. “We’re building great trucks.
It’s good to have the points lead
again, but there’s a lot of racing to go.”
Timothy
Peters, who began the night with a one-point lead (185-184) over
Crafton and Sauter, suffered through a miserable night that started with
a cut tire that sent his No.
17 Red Horse Racing Toyota to pit road on Lap 8.
Down
two laps early, Peters’ night ended on Lap 51 when he got caught up in
oil dumped by the grenading engine of German Quiroga in Turn 1 and hit
the outside wall. The truck
suffered extensive right-side damage, prompting Peters to head directly
to the garage area for the night. Peters, who finished 24th in the
27-truck field, exited Texas fifth in points through six starts, 27
points behind Crafton.
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