David Ragan beats Goliaths in astonishing Cup race at Talladega
May 5, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
TALLADEGA,
Ala.--In the type of stunning victory that has typified racing at
Talladega Superspeedway since its inception, David Ragan
led an extraordinary 1-2 finish for Front Row Motorsports, which had
never won a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race before Sunday.
David
Gilliland pushed Ragan, his teammate, to the lead on the final circuit
in a green-white checkered-flag finish that took Sunday's
Aaron's 499 four laps past its scheduled distance of 188 laps.
Gilliland came home second, followed by pole sitter Carl Edwards,
Michael Waltrip and series leader Jimmie Johnson.
As Ragan put it, two Davids beat the Goliaths of NASCAR racing in one of the sport’s most unlikely finishes ever.
Ragan's
victory followed a massive wreck that took the race to overtime--and to
near-darkness, in what truly was truly was a Talladega
night. In fact, NASCAR gave the drivers a chance to change their tinted
visors for clear ones during the final caution.
Afterwards, Ragan tried to put the win in perspective.
"I
can only imagine what it felt like back in 1988 when Mark Martin got
that first win for Jack Roush or when Geoff Bodine won that
first race for Hendrick Motorsports," said Ragan, who scored his only
Sprint Cup win at Daytona in July 2011, his last season with Jack
Roush. "I’m sure it was just as special.
"A
lot of these guys have been to Victory Lane in the Sprint Cup Series
and late model racing, short tracks, ARCA – all kinds of series
– but to do it here at Talladega in 2013, like I said, it’s a true
David vs. Goliath story. I couldn’t be more proud to play my own role."
Ragan restarted 10th and Gilliland 11th
for the final two-lap sprint. As the cars raced into Turn 1, they were
barely visible from the frontstretch grandstand, but the teammates
managed to find each other on the track. For the first time in NASCAR’s
new Gen-6 car, Gilliland pushed another car through the corners--to the
amazement of Edwards, whose jaw dropped in the
post-race news conference as Gilliland described the final two laps.
"We
got restarted there, and it was sprinkling, and it was dark and there
was (speedy-dry) on the track so it got on the windshield
where it was wet but I could see, and I could see David there and he
came down," Gilliland said. "Michael Waltrip was behind me, giving me a
good run and just carried a lot of momentum up through there and got
hooked up with David and figured he's got the
best chance of anybody sticking together with him out there and just
worked our way up there.
"It
got real tight getting into (Turn) 3 and 4 with Carl there. I know
David was sideways and out of the gas, and Carl was right up
on his door, and could have gone a number of ways. But, thankfully I
just stayed on his bumper. I pushed him all the way through the
corners. It's the first time I've ever done that with this car, with
these style of cars, because with these type of cars in
practice I've pushed people down the back straight and it actually kind
of gets underneath that little lip underneath the back bumper cover and
I've always been kind of scared getting into the corner. As the front
car compresses, the back part of the nose
doesn't have anywhere to go because the splitter is already on the
racetrack.
"But
I just pushed him all the way around there and Carl about stalled out a
little bit, and we were just able to carry some good momentum
and come home one‑two."
On
Lap 183, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. tried a four-wide move to the outside, but
contact with J.J. Yeley's car triggered a multicar melee
that wiped out Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, Danica Patrick and Clint
Bowyer, among others.
That
set up the two-lap dash in overtime with Matt Kenseth in the lead and
Edwards beside him on the front row. Kenseth, who led 142
laps dropped to eighth at the finish.
Michael
McDowell blew a tire and hit the wall on Lap 174 to cause the fourth
caution of the race and bunch a field that had become segmented
during a series of green-flag pit stops that ended on Lap 168. When
NASCAR threw the yellow, Johnson led a six-car breakaway that included
Kenseth, Kurt Busch, Edwards, Bowyer and Waltrip.
The
caution, however, brought 19 other lead-lap cars back into play and the
massive wreck at the end of the backstretch changed the
game completely.
NASCAR
slowed the race on Lap 122 and stopped it after Lap 125 when showers
that had been forecast for race day arrived shortly after
3 p.m. ET. Edwards had nosed ahead of Stenhouse moments earlier and was
ahead at the last scoring loop the cars crossed before the yellow.
That
left the Fords of Edwards, Stenhouse, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski
at the front of the field when NASCAR red-flagged the race,
forcing drivers and fans to wait and see whether the event would
resume.
After a stoppage of 3 hours, 36 minutes, the race restarted after pit stops, and Kenseth quickly surged to the front.
As
the cars approached Turn 1 on lap 43, a tap from Kyle Busch's No. 18
Toyota turned Kasey Kahne's No. 5 Chevrolet into the outside
wall and triggered a wreck that damaged 16 cars, among them the Chevys
of Tony Stewart and Kevin Harvick, the Toyota of Brian Vickers (after a
driver change with Denny Hamlin) and the Ford of Greg Biffle.
"I
know I got in the back of the 5 (Kahne), and I guess I was trying to go
to the outside of him," Busch said. 'But he just moved up
in front of me, and I wasn't expecting it, and I tried to go to the
outside of him, and before I could get to the outside of him I got in
the back of him.
"I
just hate that I caused a hell of a melee for everybody. I hate that. A
lot of cars got torn up, and it's way too early in the race
to be doing any of those sorts of moves, whether he made it or I made
it. Just I hate it that we all got crashed in that deal."
Both Kahne and Busch visited the infield care center after the wreck, and both were released in short order.
"I
just kind of got shot through the center (of the field) there, just a
lot of momentum coming from behind," Kahne said of the action
immediately before the crash. "Felt the No. 18 pushing me, and next
thing I know, I was spinning
.
"You
just can't push with these cars. We learned that at Daytona. He was
pushing me and spun me in the wall, and then (it) happened
again, so that is what it is."
Kahne said he and Busch didn't speak in the care center.
"No, I didn't talk to him," Kahne said. "I think we both probably understand what happened, and we'll figure it out from there."
Notes: Johnson’s margin in the Cup standings over second-place Edwards shrank by two points to 41. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (17th
Sunday) is third, 59 points behind his Hendrick Motorsports teammate… Paul Menard finished 26th
with a sour engine but gained two spots to eighth in the standings
because other drivers in Chase-eligible positions had bigger issues…
Ragan and Gilliland
won a combined $608,261 for their 1-2 finish, a welcome payday for a
team run by owner Bob Jenkins predominantly out of his own pocket.
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