Larson holds off Logano for NASCAR XFINITY win at Auto Club Speedway
March 25, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FONTANA,
Calif. – Kyle Larson kept polesitter Joey Logano at bay after a restart
with four laps left in Saturday’s Service King 300 NASCAR XFINITY
Series race at Auto Club Speedway
and held on to win by .127 seconds.
Larson
and Logano had swapped the lead on three successive laps before Brandon
Jones plowed into the outside wall on Lap 142 to bring out the seventh
and final caution of the
afternoon.
The
lead cars pitted for fresh tires under the yellow, with Larson exiting
pit road first and Spencer Gallagher grabbing the second spot with a
two-tire stop. That proved Logano’s
undoing, as his No. 22 Team Penske Ford was pinned behind Gallagher’s
GMS Racing Chevrolet for the restart on Lap 147 of 150.
Logano
chased Larson to the checkered flag but couldn’t prevent the driver of
the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet from scoring his first victory
of the season, his second
at Fontana and the sixth of his career.
“The
racing there at the end with Joey was awesome,” said Larson, a
California native who got his first NASCAR XFINITY Series victory at the
two-mile track. “I had just a couple-lap
fresher tires than he did, and I was able to chase him down. That was a
lot of fun.
“I
wish that last caution wouldn’t have come out, because it would have
been easier for me to win, I think. But a heck of a race. I honestly
didn’t think we would be here yesterday.
I was struggling bad in practice. Fought the balance a lot throughout
the race, too. Finally, the last few runs, we hit on it and it felt good
for the short run and throughout the long run. So I can’t say enough
about everyone on our ENEOS Chevy team.”
Both
the winner and the runner-up had obstacles to overcome. Larson
recovered from a pit road speeding penalty to win the race. Logano sped
on pit road and subsequently fell
to the back of the field when the jack on the left side of his Ford
dropped prematurely during an extended stay on pit road.
But
Logano was in prime position at the end, though he acknowledged that
Gallagher’s two-tire call deprived him of the chance to overtake Larson.
“What’s
his number? 23?” Logano asked. “Yeah, I don’t know about that move.
That wasn’t a good move. I don’t know what they were thinking, but that
maybe wasn’t the best play
at this race track. I knew he was going to spin them (his tires).
There’s no way he couldn’t. It wasn’t his fault.
“He
was a sitting duck and I was a sitting duck behind him that lost too
much track position on that restart being too far behind Kyle. If not
for that, we would have probably
been door-to-door across the line bumping and banging or something. We
were able to catch Larson the last few laps. We were definitely faster,
but I needed another lap, maybe two.”
Kyle
Busch finished third after scraping the wall on Lap 122 while in
pursuit of Logano, who was leading at the time. Erik Jones ran fourth
and Sunoco rookie William Byron fifth
as the highest-finishing series regular.
The
action-filled race wasn’t without a number of hard crashes. Paul
Menard’s Chevrolet nosed hard into the outside wall after contact from
Jones. Cole Custer clobbered the Turn
1 wall with an assist from Ryan Sieg—and was upset when he exited the
car.
“I
just got hooked going into the corner,” Custer said. “I think I hit him
(Sieg) a tick just on my side-draft going off of (Turn) 4, and then he
decided just to hook us going
into Turn 1 and wreck us.
“I
thought we could have competed for a win there. We had a bad pit stop.
We were going to work our way back up there, but just got our day ended
by a clown move.”
Notes:
Byron is second in the series standings, 17 points behind seventh-place
finisher Elliott Sadler… Darrell Wallace Jr. finished sixth for the
fourth-straight race… Busch
won both the first and second stages of the race, earning a total of
two playoff points toward the owner’s championship.
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