Chase Elliott clinches Nationwide title as NASCAR youngest national series champion
Nov. 8, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE, Ariz.— What do you do when you accomplish your goals a year early?
That’s a
question Chase Elliott will have to answer, now that the presumptive
rookie of the year in the NASCAR Nationwide Series is also the series
champion—and the youngest
champion in NASCAR national series history.
Elliott
finished sixth in Saturday’s DAV 200 – Honoring America’s Veterans at
Phoenix International Raceway to clinch the Nationwide Series
championship at age 18 years, 11
months and 18 days.
In a
season that saw Elliott win back-to-back races at Texas and Darlington
and add a victory at Chicagoland, the driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet
closed out teammate Regan Smith
(10th Saturday) to give JR Motorsports its first title in one of
NASCAR’s top three national touring series.
JR
Motorsports co-owner Rick Hendrick affirmed after the race that the plan
is still to run Elliott full-time in the Nationwide Series next year,
doubtless with a few Sprint
Cup starts mixed in. But what’s left for the scion of former Cup
champion Bill Elliott to accomplish?
“That’s
a really good question,” Elliott said after the race. “I don’t know
what tomorrow brings, so I have no idea what the future has in store for
myself or our team or whatever.
The biggest thing is just trying to make the most of what’s going on
now and kind of letting it figure itself out.
“Hopefully,
next year we’re able to go and have the same result, a championship,
with some more wins. I feel like that’s the biggest thing. We’d like to
win some more races,
and we’ve got one more week to try to get another one before this
season’s over with.”
Elliott
will have a new crew chief next season, with his current pit boss, Greg
Ives, ready to succeed Steve Letarte on JRM co-owner Dale Earnhardt
Jr.’s No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports
Chevrolet in the Sprint Cup Series.
Earnhardt said Bill Elliott’s support for his son has been invaluable to the championship effort.
“I had a
real high opinion of Bill before I got the chance to know him, and this
has allowed me to get to know him quite well, and my opinion of him is
even better now, because
he’s been such a great support for, not only his son, obviously, but
for us.
“Some
of those fathers can be a handful, but, man, he has been an asset to us,
and he’s so helpful with Chase, keeping Chase so calm and grounded.
Everything’s so easy with
them. I think, once I retire, I’m going to be a Chase Elliott fan, so
I’ll still have somebody to pull for going down the road.”
Earnhardt believes that Elliott, even at 18 already combines raw natural talent with racing wisdom beyond his years.
“He’s
an amazing talent, very young, but still very mature. Takes good care of
his equipment. If you can wrap up a championship before the season’s
over with, you’re definitely
smart and very calculative. That’s something you learn. That’s
something you’re not born with.
“You’re born with the speed, the raw talent, but he’s already got all the other things, too, well before his time.”
Kyle
Busch, who like Earnhardt has an eye for young talent and a penchant for
launching the careers of promising drivers, feels Elliott is ready to
advance to the Cup level.
There’s only one problem. There’s no place for Hendrick to put him.
“He’s
ready,” Busch asserted. “I finished second to (Martin) Truex in my first
(NNS) season, and they bumped me up to Cup, whether I was ready or
whether I wasn’t ready. We
had some success that year.
“I think Chase could have probably more success than what I had in Cup in my rookie year.”

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