Crafton takes the win in late restart at Texas
June 6, 2015
By John Sturbin
NASCAR Wire Service
Matt
Crafton insists he had “a blast” racing Daniel Suarez Friday night at
Texas Motor Speedway, including a pair of late-race restarts that
secured victory in the 19th annual WinStar World Casino & Resort
400.
Crafton
continued his recent domination of NASCAR’s intermediate racetracks,
hammering out the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory over an
aggressive Suarez. The two-time reigning series champion, Crafton
recorded his eighth career victory by 0.569-seconds.
“I
had a blast racing with Daniel there at the end,” said Crafton, who
scored his third victory and seventh top-10 finish of 2015. “We were
literally running in the center of the racetrack and up against the wall
in Turns 3 and 4, and you really have to work the throttle and drive
the thing.”
Crafton
was cruising with a lead of 6.866-seconds over Suarez after cycling
into the lead following a round of green flag pit stops. But a caution
on Lap 149 of the scheduled 167 for fluid on the track from the blown
engine of Timothy Peters’ No. 17 Red Horse Racing Toyota Tundra bunched
the field after pit stops. Crafton chose the outside lane for the
restart on Lap 154, and Suarez grabbed the lead before Crafton was able
to regain his momentum and retake the point on Lap 155.
Crafton
and Suarez were running 1-2 when rookie Daniel Hemric spun the No. 14
California Clean Power Chevrolet in Turn 2, bringing out the night’s
fifth caution. When the race went green on Lap 166, Crafton used the
outside lane to power around Suarez exiting Turn 4 en route to his third
win of the season and second consecutive June night race at TMS.
“The
restarts were hairy,” said Crafton, driver of the No. 88 Ideal
Door/Curb Records Toyota fielded by ThorSport Racing. “We got a pretty
good start on that last one and ran side-by-side-by-side. The tires were
newer on the first one (restart) and you can run along the bottom
wide-open. I knew if I didn’t get him clear he might have won the race.”
That
restart was highlighted by near-contact between the two, with Suarez
saving his truck as it began to slide down the banking.
“You mean when we were bouncing off each other?” Crafton asked with a smile. “That was fun in Turn 1. I said, no harm, no foul.”
Suarez,
driver of the No. 51 ARRIS Toyota fielded by Kyle Busch Motorsports,
posted his first top-10 finish in his TMS debut and sixth top-10 of
2015. Suarez also finished second last Friday night to Tyler Reddick’s
No. 19 Bulldog Ford fielded by Brad Keselowski Racing on Dover
International Speedway’s “Monster Mile.”
“There
was one point - not the last one (restart) - I really think I had a
shot (at Crafton) because we had on new tires,” said Suarez, a native of
Mexico. “Maybe all of us had new tires and I was able to be a little
more aggressive. I knew the second restart, I really tried for one lap
(to take the lead) and I was so loose to the right side of my truck. The
last thing I wanted to do was wreck that fast truck. I like to bring
complete trucks back to the shop. I’m not sure if I could do something
different there. I need to see what Matt did, what I did, what I could
do better, what I could do faster. Like I said, I do my homework and try
to be better for the next time.”
John
Wes Townley finished a career-best third in the No. 05 Zaxby’s
Chevrolet Silverado, topping his previous best result of fourth on the
1.5-mile Charlotte Motor Speedway.
“The
last caution was the break we really needed,” Townley said. “Before we
had a bad set of tires and fell off quite a bit. Didn’t quite have it
for Crafton, so congratulations to him. It is nice to get a career-best
and definitely be showing progress. We’re getting better and better and
I’ve got to thank Zaxby’s and Hendrick horsepower.”
Crafton
won last year’s event here on fuel mileage, a strategy he and crew
chief Carl “Junior” Joiner mapped-out en route to victory on the
1.5-mile Kansas Speedway last month. Crafton also prevailed on the
1.5-mile Atlanta Motor Speedway, a sister facility to TMS, in Race No. 2
of the season.
Crafton
led a career-best 118 laps en route to victory here last June, snapping
a 26-race TMS winless streak. “All of them are great,” said Crafton,
referring to his mounting win total. “Last year, just getting that first
cowboy hat (at TMS) was very sweet. But all the victories are great.”
Crafton
led a race-high 77 laps to 68 for pole-sitter Erik Jones, who
experienced battery-related electrical problems in his No. 4 Special
Olympics World Games Toyota after leading 68 early laps. Jones fell a
lap down during his first pit stop on Lap 83 to change the first of
three batteries and ended up 15th, two laps down.
Crafton
exited Texas with a 25-point lead over Reddick headed into the next
race at Gateway Motorsports Park in Madison, Ill., on June 13.
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