Erik Jones repeats in Phoenix truck race as second power failure halts action
Nov. 7, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz.— With lights flickering around Phoenix International Raceway,
polesitter Erik Jones won Friday night’s Lucas Oil 150 NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series race
when the second power failure of the evening halted the race after 126
of the a scheduled 150 laps.
The
clear class of the field, Jones led 114 of those 126 laps. Though the
lights came back on after the second stoppage, NASCAR called the race
because of the possibility that
the power would fail again while the trucks were racing at full speed,
as had just happened on Lap 124.
Jones,
who won the same race last year, picked up his fourth career victory and
his third of the season. Series leader Matt Crafton ran second and
extended his advantage over
fourth-place Ryan Blaney to 25 points.
Crafton
can become the first driver to win back-to-back Truck Series
championships if he finishes 21st or better in the season finale next
Friday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Jones,
who non Thursday announced a full-time NCWTS deal with Kyle Busch
Motorsports for 2015, was confident he could have kept Crafton behind
him, had the race gone the full
distance.
“I felt
pretty confident about it,” Jones said. “I think that we would have
been able to definitely hold him off. I felt like we had by far the best
truck.
“He
could run 10 laps pretty and maintain about five (car-lengths) back to
us. Then it seemed like we could just kind drive away inch by inch at
that point. I didn’t have a
doubt in my mind that, if we were to go back racing for the last 20
(laps), that we would have been able to hold him off.”
Though he never led a lap, Crafton thought he could have gotten past Jones on the next restart.
“It’s a damn shame that the lights went out,” Crafton said. “I guarantee it was going to be exciting on the next restart.”
Cole Custer ran third, followed by Blaney and Ben Rhodes, who was making his fourth start in the series.
Delayed
for an hour by a major power outage in Phoenix’s West Valley, the race
was slowed again as soon as it started by a chain-reaction wreck that
sidelined the trucks of
German Quiroga, John Wes Townley and Justin Jennings—before they
reached the start/finish line on the opening lap.
The
race didn’t go green again until Lap 19—and not for long. Two laps
later, Rhodes spun to bring out the second caution. Moments after the
next restart on Lap 27, Spencer
Gallagher spun underneath the Toyota of Timothy Peters, knocking Peters
truck into the outside wall and collecting the Tundra of Jeb Burton.
All
told, for 28 of the first 33 laps, the field circulated under yellow.
The fourth caution, on Lap 39, also brought a red flag, after Joey
Coulter’s Chevrolet blew a tire,
slammed into the outside wall and had to be carted off the racing
surface on a roll-back.
After a
restart on Lap 46, however, the race settled into a rhythm, as Jones,
who had led from the outside, stretched his advantage over Crafton to
more than two seconds before
the start of a cycle of green-flag pit stops 80 laps into the race.
The
race stayed caution-free until Lap 100, when contact from John Hunter
Nemechek spun Brennan Newberry’s Chevy in Turn 4. By then only six
trucks remained on the lead lap,
but with a free pass to Ben Kennedy and wave-arounds by Austin Dillon,
Blaney, Custer and Johnny Sauter, 11 trucks restarted on the lead lap
with 43 circuits left in the race.
During
the long green-flag run, sixth-place finisher Darrell Wallace Jr., who
had pitted under caution on Lap 41, inherited the lead from Jones on Lap
92, when Jones brought
his Tundra to pit road for the first time. But when Wallace, Rhodes and
Bryan Silas pitted under caution on Lap 103, Jones was back in the lead
for a restart on Lap 111 with Crafton beside him.
Jones
maintained his advantage until the power failed again, plunging the
track into darkness as the trucks raced on Lap 124. Shortly thereafter,
for safety reasons, NASCAR
called the race.
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