Chase Elliott outduels Joey Logano for XFINITY win at Daytona
Results aT Race Report
Feb. 20, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – The finish of Saturday’s Powershares QQQ 300 NASCAR
XFINITY Series race at Daytona International Speedway left winner Chase
Elliott out of gas on the
cool-down lap and runner-up Joey Logano pounding his steering wheel in
frustration.
But
it was the high-speed chess game seconds before the first and
second-place cars crossed the finish line that made all the difference.
Fearing
he wouldn’t get help from Kasey Kahne, Elliott’s JR Motorsports
teammate, Logano pushed Elliott clear of the pack on the final lap,
hoping to make a move to the outside
as the cars sped off Turn 4.
But
when Logano went high, Elliott moved to his right, and repeated contact
between Elliott’s No. 88 Chevrolet and Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske
Ford—hard enough to pound a deep
dent into Elliott’s right rear quarter panel—broke Logano’s momentum
and allowed the No. 88 to cross the stripe .043 seconds ahead of the No.
22.
“He
blocked it—I got there a little bit late,” Logano acknowledged. “And
then I got hooked on his right rear, and that’s what killed my momentum…
That contact just stopped
my car.”
So
the pole winner for Sunday’s Daytona 500 (on FOX at 1 p.m. ET) beat the
winner of the 2015 Daytona 500 by a small fraction of a second, and
Logano was runner-up for the
third time during Speedweeks, having run second to Denny Hamlin in last
Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited and second to JR Motorsports co-owner Dale
Earnhardt Jr. in Thursday’s first Can-Am Duel.
Kasey
Kahne finished third and XFINITY regular Elliott Sadler fourth in the
season opener, as JR Motorsports grabbed three of the top four
positions. Austin Dillon ran fifth,
followed by Darrell Wallace Jr. and rookie Brandon Jones.
“That
was a heck of a battle, man,” said Elliott, who survived early contact
during a six-car incident on Lap 13 and rallied to win his first XFINITY
race at Daytona and the
fifth of his career. “I had such a great car, and we just found
ourselves in the right place at the right time.
“Luckily we just barely had enough to get in front of Joey there.”
Elliott duly impressed his car owner, an acknowledged superstar when it comes to restrictor-plate racing.
“Chase
obviously did what he had to do there at the end of the race,”
Earnhardt said. “I thought that was very gutsy to be able to really put
such an aggressive block on the
22… He did what he had to do to keep the guy behind him, and it won him
the race.
“I’m
proud of Chase. It’s such a cool thing to be a part of his career. He’s
going to do some amazing stuff in his career, and it’s awesome to be a
little part of it.”
After
Ray Black Jr. stalled on the backstretch to cause the fourth caution of
the race on Lap 102 of 120, ending a 76-lap green-flag run, Logano led
the field to green on Lap
108 with Elliott beside him. While Sadler pushed Elliott to the lead,
Logano got hung out of line and drifted back.
Forced
to fight back to the front over the final 11 laps, Logano got a strong
push in the outside lane from Kahne, who in turn was getting a strong
push from Dillon. Logano
didn’t get back to the front until the final lap, when he opted to push
Elliott and tried to make a last-ditch move.
“It’s
three races and three seconds, and I guess it is nothing to hold your
head down about, but, gosh, when you see the lead that many times and
are that close to winning
and don’t pull it off, it’s frustrating,” Logano said.
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