Mar. 7, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS
VEGAS, Nev.—As dominant as Austin Dillon was in Saturday’s Boyd Gaming
300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, he had to
give his utmost effort in the closing laps to hold off charging Ryan
Blaney for the victory.
Dillon
led 183 of the 200 laps at the 1.5-mile speedway, but Blaney had a tire
advantage at the end of the race, thanks to a late pit stop after his
car snapped loose and knocked Erik Jones into the outside wall at the
exit from Turn 4.
After
restarting fifth with 21 laps left, Blaney charged to the front, making
up a deficit of more than 1.5 seconds and forcing Dillon to block him
repeatedly during the last three laps. Blaney ran out of room in the
final corner, his No. 22 Ford turning sideways and tagging the outside
wall as Dillon crossed the finish line with an advantage of .664
seconds.
During the closing laps, winning crew chief Nick Harrison made a point of not telling Dillon that Blaney had fresh tires.
“There
at the end, you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do,” said Dillon, who
won for the third time in the XFINITY Series and the first time at Las
Vegas. “You got to do whatever you can to win. Our car was dominant all
day, and to give one away like that would have been heartbreaking.
“I
hadn’t heard in my ear all day that somebody was catching me, and he
was catching me at about three tenths (of a second) a lap. And that was
all I had. The other good thing is that my crew chief made sure no one
told me that he had tires on, so I wouldn’t second-guess myself. I just
thought I was getting slower—I didn’t know what I was doing wrong.”
In
his post-race question-and-answer session with reporters, Blaney was
more distraught about his contact with Erik Jones than he was
disappointed with his runner-up finish. And after the run-in with Jones,
Blaney wasn’t about to move Dillon for the win in the closing laps.
“I
didn’t want any more people saying bad things about me after I wrecked
Erik,” said Blaney, who passed fourth-place finisher Denny Hamlin on Lap
190 and third-place Regan Smith on Lap 193 before charging after
Dillon. “I wasn’t going to move Austin, that’s for sure.
“He
did what he had to do. He stopped my run. I didn’t expect him to pull
over. So, no, I wasn’t going to move him to win the race.”
Chase
Elliott came home fifth, followed by hometown favorite Brendan Gaughan,
rookie Darrell Wallace Jr., Ty Dillon, Brennan Poole and Daniel Suarez.
Ty Dillon, Austin’s brother, took over the series lead by six points over Chris Buescher, who came home 14th.
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