Thrilling restart gives Brendan Gaughan Nationwide win at Kentucky
Sept. 20, 2014
By Chris Knight
NASCAR Wire Service
SPARTA,
Kentucky - - Brendan Gaughan capitalized on the opportunity to utilize
the high line on the final restart of Saturday night’s
VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300 at Kentucky Speedway
to win his second NASCAR Nationwide Series race of the season.
Gaughan,
with a three-wide pass, powered around leaders Chase Elliott and Ty
Dillon in the closing laps and cleared his competition in Turn 1,
allowing him to cruise to an
eight-tenths of a second lead over Richard Childress Racing teammate
Brian Scott.
“I love
my restarts,” said Gaughan in Victory Lane. “It was an awesome restart.
Shane (Wilson, crew chief) kept telling me that lap times were great
when everyone did two and
we did four (tires), so it took us a while to get back (towards the
lead) there, but four Goodyear tires in the end were the difference.”
On the
final restart of the night, Dillon and Elliott battled extremely hard
for the win, but they forgot about the guy behind them on four tires.
Gaughan with a head of steam
used momentum to clear his competition with six laps to go and cruised
to his second career NNS win, and first on an oval. He also won June's
road course race at Road America.
Richard
Childress Racing swept the top-three finishing positions with Brian
Scott second and Dillon finishing third after a dominating performance.
Gaughan,
39, credited his Earnhardt Childress Racing engine and transmission for
assisting him in his triumph over the much younger Elliott (18) and
Dillon (22).
"There are great race teams and great young race car drivers, but the old dog still has something left," said Gaughan.
Scott
on the verge of netting his first career Nationwide victory, settled for
his best performance of the season after restarting sixth.
“I
thought it was the right call to take four tires at the end,” Scott
said. “I restarted sixth and got a good restart and got up to fourth and
I thought we were going to win
this race. But, unfortunately, we didn’t get any long runs and our
Shore Lodge Camaro was a little too tight.”
Dillon,
who led 155 laps, said, “I’m sick for my guys. Our Bass Pros Chevy was
top-notch, it’s a good thing for confidence to lead all those laps, but
this hurts for sure.”
Dillon’s
dominance would be challenged on Lap 171 when Cody Ware lost an engine.
The fifth caution flag of the night proved to be a significant break
for the leaders, as they
avoided green flag pit stops. On pit road, Dillon exercised a two-tire
stop with fuel with Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Elliott Sadler
also vying for the same strategy.
Racing
resumed with Chase Elliott making a valiant effort to overtake the lead
from Dillon. He was able to nip ahead of Dillon’s No. 3 Bass Pro Shops
Chevrolet, when Eric McClure
crashed in Turn 4.
With 19
laps to go, Elliott fended off a challenge from Dillon on the initial
restart, but his opportunity to stretch his lead would be short lived,
after Regan Smith made
contact with Sam Hornish Jr. on Lap 184, sending him hard into the Turn
1 wall.
A
flawless restart from Elliott allowed the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts
Chevrolet Camaro to escape the hungry pack behind him. Again, Elliott’s
gap would be diminished by yet another
caution for debris on Lap 190 - which would prove the difference in the
race.
Leaving
Kentucky, fourth place finisher Elliott holds a 20-point cushion over
JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith in the championship standings with
six races remaining.
Next up
for the NASCAR Nationwide Series is a trip to Dover (Del.)
International Speedway for the running of the Dover 200 on Saturday,
September 27. Joey Logano is the defending
champion.
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