Elliott Sadler scorches Iowa for fourth Nationwide win of 2012
Aug. 4, 2012
By K.J. Pilcher
Special for NASCAR Wire Service
NEWTON, Iowa -- It isn't how you start, but how you finish.
After earning three straight poles at Iowa Speedway, Elliott Sadler finally has a finish to match.
Sadler
passed Justin Allgaier with 58 laps remaining and pulled away to win
the NASCAR Nationwide Series U.S. Cellular 250 on Saturday night at the
0.875-mile oval. The triumph was his fourth
this season, setting a personal best for wins in a year.
Sadler
gave a victory yell on the radio and jogged over to grab the checkered
flag for his achievement. He talked about redemption after last week's
incident at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where
he was penalized for beating the leader to the start/finish line during
a late restart.
"It's been a rough week," Sadler said. "We felt like we should have won that race last week."
His
father underwent knee surgery but provided his son with some
motivational words for his race at Iowa. Sadler took the advice to heart
and claimed his second win in three weeks.
"He said do not let them take this championship away from you," Sadler said. "Go to Iowa and kick their butts."
Sadler,
who increased the one-point season points lead over Austin Dillon to
18, led 60 laps, after surrendering the lead to Darrell Wallace Jr. on
the opening lap. Wallace, making his second
Nationwide start after placing ninth in his series debut at Iowa
Speedway in May, came in seventh, leading the first 37 laps before
Dillon took over.
"I
didn't really like not leading the first lap but that's not the one that
pays the money," Sadler said. "We learned what we had to learn and we
moved on from it. I felt like my restarts the
rest of the race were pretty good."
Sadler
was able to briefly gain the lead from Dillon, his Richard Childress
Racing teammate, off the restart, following a competition caution on lap
50. The second caution when John Blankenship
spun out 87 laps in jumbled the front-runners. Allgaier benefited from a
fast pit stop to take the lead, while Dillon dropped to 10th and Sadler
fell to eighth.
Sadler
fell back again after a pit stop during the third caution for debris on
the track, but he maneuvered through the field before overtaking
Allgaier late.
"I had a hard time passing (Allgaier)," Sadler said. "He knew where my car was fast.
"He
just got a little loose off of turn 4 and that particular lap I got a
really good bite under him. . . . Once we got out front, I knew we were
in really good shape."
The
win capped a huge day for RCR. Team owner Richard Childress was at
Pocono Raceway for Joey Coulter's win in the Pocono Mountains 125 on
Saturday afternoon. He joined Sadler in Victory Lane
at Iowa Speedway later that night. Adding to the impressive day, Sadler
and Dillon hold the top two spots in Nationwide points.
"That
was great," Childress said of the day. "You get two wins in one day,
let's hope tomorrow we can cap it off and make it a full sweep with a
third one."
Childress
had faith Sadler would come through with the win, praising his passes
of Kurt Busch for second before taking the lead from Allgaier.
"I couldn't be prouder of him," Childress said. "Elliott got up on the wheel when he had to get up on the wheel."
Allgaier,
who has 13 top-10 finishes in 2012, recorded his best finish of the
season, placing second. He set a personal best, leading 101 laps of a
Nationwide race. His previous best was 88 laps
led.
"To
come here and lead most laps, and run as good as we did I was proud of
that," Allgaier said. "It's tough to see Elliott out there and know
you're catching him and there's not really much
you can do."
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. had won three straight Nationwide races at Iowa Speedway,
but couldn't make a push for the lead. He suffered problems with tire
grip after starting 11th and finished fifth.
Stenhouse held his third-place spot in points, falling to 21 back of
Sadler but closing to three points behind Dillon.
Sam
Hornish Jr. won the final Dash 4 Cash $100,000 bonus as the program from
series sponsor Nationwide drew to a close. He placed third, finishing
one spot of Des Moines native Michael Annett.
Annett
remained sixth in points, trailing Allgaier by 26, and placed a few
spots ahead of fellow Iowan Brett Moffitt, who made his Nationwide
Series debut Saturday.
Moffitt placed
ninth, one spot ahead of where he started. He viewed the night as just
another race, but was happy with the performance.
"It
was a lot of fun," Moffitt said. "I got a lot of experience racing with
the cars. These things racing around other cars, they're really aero
dependent, so it's a lot harder racing around
other cars. I learned a lot, so that was good."
Brad Sweet was the highest finishing rookie, placing 12th.
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