Larson, Bayne and Biffle race their way into NASCAR Sprint All-Star main event
May 21, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD,
N.C. – With Chase Elliott’s Chevrolet bouncing off the outside wall,
and Kyle Larson’s Chevy bouncing off Elliott’s car coming to the finish
line, Larson won a wild
drag race to claim the last of three available spots in Saturday
night’s NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (9 p.m.
ET on FS1).
At
the end of the final 10-lap dash in the Sprint Showdown, Larson pinched
Elliott into the outside wall entering the dogleg at the 1.5-mile track
and banged into the left
side of Elliott’s No. 24 Chevy as the drivers raced side by side to the
finish.
Both cars were battered as they crossed the finish line.
“I
knew (Elliott) was going to be good on four tires and was probably
going to win the Fan Vote, so I knew I had to win because I knew I
wasn’t going to win the Fan Vote,”
Larson said. “So, I did what I could do. Hopefully, they can repair the
right side good enough or we can pull out the backup — or whatever.
“I’m
sure Chase is upset with me. He has all the reason in the world to be
but hey, tonight we’re going for a million bucks (the prize for winning
the All-Star Race), and I’ve
never had a chance to do that before. Hopefully we can get this car
back in Victory Lane and hold a big check later.”
Larson
got to the stripe .016 seconds ahead of Elliott, but that wasn’t the
closest finish of a scintillating Showdown, which, for the first time,
placed three segment winners
into the All-Star Race.
Splitting
the cars of Elliott and Ryan Blaney with a courageous run up the middle
off Turn 2, Trevor Bayne won the first 20-lap segment by .004 seconds
over Elliott.
“I
was thinking about what I could do, and I timed the restart really good
and got right to the 21’s (Blaney’s) bumper at the line and was able to
get three-wide off of Turn
2. The car was pretty good there.
“In
clean air I was all right. I was a little concerned with dirty air, but
I got a run and went through the middle. It was a little sketchy
squeezing through that hole, but
it worked.”
Before
the race, Roush Fenway Racing had no cars in the All-Star Race. After
the second, the organization had two, as Greg Biffle followed Bayne, his
RFR teammate, into the
main event. Playing tire strategy perfectly, Biffle started third at
the beginning of segment two, passed Austin Dillon for the top spot on
Lap 26 and pulled away to win by 1.525 seconds.
Biffle credited crew chief Brian Pattie with the call that won the race.
“Brian
Pattie is a very, very smart veteran crew chief in this sport, and it
was his call,” said Biffle, who came to pit road under a late caution in
the first segment for
two left-side tires and added right sides during the break between
segments. “I was skeptical of it, trust me, but I tell you what, what
really made the difference was we made a chassis adjustment, two left
side tires, the car was really fast the last single
lap that we made under green and I was able to pass four cars in one
lap.
“Then
we came down and the guys ripped off a great two-tire stop like a lot
of other cars did and got us out third. Really, that’s what did it. I
was being as aggressive
as I could be, and I knew it was 20 laps and I knew that was my
chance. The 3 car (Dillon) was a little bit loose and so was I, but I
made some adjustments on my driving style and was able to get by him.”
Elliott,
who finished second in two of the three segments, did get a consolation
prize. As Larson had predicted, Elliott was one of the Sprint Fan Vote
winners, joining Danica
Patrick.
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