Allmendinger stakes claim to Chase spot with thrilling win at the Glen
Aug. 10, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
WATKINS
GLEN, N.Y.— In a battle between two drivers with everything on the
line, AJ Allmendinger held off Marcos Ambrose in breathtaking fashion to
win Sunday’s Cheez-It 355
at the Glen and claim an almost certain spot in the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
In the
closing laps, Allmendinger and Ambrose bumped each other, leaned on each
other, raced each other side-by-side through the esses without
wrecking—astoundingly—and swapped
the lead before Allmendinger secured his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
victory with a pass in Turn 6 with just over one lap left.
The
2.45-mile road course at Watkins Glen International gave both drivers
their best chance to qualify for the Chase, and it was Allmendinger who
prevailed in a two-lap battle
that that was a long-time coming, thanks to three red-flag periods
needed to repair safety barriers at the track.
Kurt
Busch ran third, hoping during the final two laps that Ambrose and
Allmendinger would take their aggression over the line and give him a
chance to win. Rookie Kyle Larson
kept his Chase hopes alive with a fourth-place run, and Carl Edwards
came home fifth.
Joey
Logano, Kevin Harvick, Greg Biffle, Matt Kenseth and Brian Vickers
completed the top 10. Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished 11th and took the
series lead from pole winner Jeff
Gordon, who ran 34th after losing four laps while his team diagnosed
and repaired an electrical-system failure.
On the
next-to-last lap, Allmendinger controlled the restart and held the lead
through Turn 1, but Ambrose applied pressure up through the esses,
gained ground when Allmendinger
ran wide in the bus stop chicane and got past the No. 47 JTG/Daugherty
Chevrolet after setting up a pass with a tap at the exit from the bus
stop.
But
Allmendinger stayed to Ambrose’s outside through Turn 5 and leaned on
the No. 9 Ford through Turn 6, gapping Ambrose down the front straight
and pulling away for the win.
“Yeah, I
mean I knew our car was slick on restarts on the tires, and I knew
Marcos was going to try to move me out of the way if he had the
opportunity,” Allmendinger said.
“To his credit, he didn’t wreck me. He just moved me like he should
have. I went down into the next corner and leaned on him a little bit to
see if I could get a gap and get them racing behind me.
“I knew
if I could just get a three- or four-car-length gap, they weren’t going
to get back to me. That was just a fun race. Thanks to the fans for
enduring the red flags,
the track workers for putting the track back together a couple of
times. Everybody at home, if you didn’t love that you are not a fan of
racing.”
Despite
the exchange of the lead on the 89th of 90 laps, Ambrose felt the race
may have been decided on the previous restart on Lap 86, when Ambrose
took the lead after a side-by-side
race through the esses only to lose it when Allmendinger out braked him
into Turn 1 before two separate incidents involving Denny Hamlin and
Alex Kennedy caused the sixth caution of the afternoon.
“I slid
coming off Turn 11 after I got the lead (on Lap 86), and he was able to
get it back before the caution dropped,” Ambrose said. “That was
probably the difference between
winning and losing the race right there.
“If I
could have held the lead when the caution came out, I would have
probably had the advantage on the restart and been able to fend him off.
But that's just racing. It's
what it is, what it's all about. You try to land him on a restart, take
a couple of chances. I'm pleased we got through the S's side by side
without wrecking the whole field, because it could have easily happened
out there.”
The final few laps were worth the wait, but the wait was longer than anyone might have anticipated.
A
violent crash on Lap 56 near the exit from the Carousel (Turn 5) halted
the action for an extended period, as track workers made repairs to
severely damaged Armco barriers
between Turns 5 and 6.
Destroyed
in the wreck were the No. 31 Chevrolet of Ryan Newman, which turned
sideways and smashed into the guard rail to the right of the racing
surface, and the No. 95 Ford
of Michael McDowell, which plowed into Newman’s car as it rebounded
from the barrier and backed hard into the guard rail on the left side of
the course.
Newman was running behind Biffle right before the crash.
“From
my standpoint, Biffle jumped the curb and hit the splitter or something
up on the curb and got out and got across the grass,” Newman said. “And I
probably could have
given him a little bit more (room), but I tried to time it so I could
shoot past, but he slowed down when he got back on the race track.”
Newman
shot across the track into the barrier as he was trying to avoid Biffle.
McDowell, on the other hand, hand no chance to avoid Newman’s Chevy.
“I’m
not sure what happened,” McDowell said. “I saw the 16 (Biffle) get wide
and the 31 (Newman) come back across the track. I didn’t have time to
adjust or move. I tried not
to hit Ryan in the door there. That was pretty much it. I was just
along for the ride.”
The
stoppage lasted more than 81 minutes, and after pit stops under caution
when the race resumed, Allmendinger passed Edwards for the top spot on
Lap 61. He stayed out front,
maintaining a lead of more than 1.5 seconds over Ambrose, who moved
into second place on Lap 66.
And then came the win.
“This
is what I live for—this is all I talk about,” Allmendinger said. “I
don’t want to hear that AJ might be the next first-time winner—I’m tired
of hearing that.”
On Sunday, Allmendinger made sure he won’t ever hear those words again.
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