Notebook Items:
- Dillon’s tiebreaker loss of Chase spot is also a heartbreaker
- "Secret" allies help Hamlin hold Chase berth
- Brian Scott provides bright spot for Richard Petty Motorsports
October 23, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DILLON'S TIEBREAKER LOSS OF CHASE SPOT IS ALSO A HEARTBREAKER
TALLADEGA,
Ala. – Facing an overtime restart with two laps left in the Hellman’s
500 on Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway, crew chief Slugger Labbe
reminded driver Austin Dillon
of the relevant numbers.
Dillon
had to finish no more than five positions behind Denny Hamlin to secure
a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup’s Round of 8—as long as
Hamlin didn’t win the race.
Dillon
had done everything right to that point. He had earned a bonus point by
staying out for an extra circuit and leading Lap 117 under the second
caution of the afternoon.
He gained three spots after a restart on Lap 186 and was 11th when the
green flag waved for the final time on Lap 191.
On
the final two laps, he worked his way forward to ninth before the
checkered flag ended the race. Only one problem. Hamlin beat Kurt Busch
to the stripe by .006 seconds—approximately
two feet—to finish third.
The
two drivers finished the Round of 12 tied for eighth with 3,078 points,
but Hamlin won a tiebreaker for the final Chase spot because his
third-place finish on Sunday was
better than Dillon’s best Round-of-12 finish of sixth last week at
Kansas.
“Yeah,
it’s really close,” a disappointed Dillon said. “I guess it wasn’t our
day to do it. It wasn’t planned for us to do that. We tried. We didn’t
really have enough speed
all day to do much. I’m proud of my guys, and all my teammates helped
me as much as they could. We just couldn’t get another spot.
“We
got a couple there at the end on the last little straight, but the No.
43 (Aric Almirola) was the car we needed (to beat for eighth place), and
it didn’t work out. Another
top 10 at a speedway—it’s pretty nice to get that, but obviously not
what we wanted. The No. 22 (Joey Logano) won and the No. 11 (Hamlin)
finished third, so it’s not what we needed, but we will take it and move
on from here.”
“SECRET” ALLIES HELP HAMLIN HOLD CHASE BERTH
With
his three Joe Gibbs Racing teammates running at the back of the field
throughout Sunday’s race to protect Round of 8 spots, Denny Hamlin had
no obvious friends at the front
of the field to help him join his teammates in the next round of the
Chase.
But
Hamlin revealed after finishing third behind Joey Logano and Brian
Scott that he had received help from unexpected quarters in doing just
enough to beat Austin Dillon for
the final berth on a tiebreaker.
“I
knew that strategy was going to be in play,” Hamlin said of the
conservative game plan in place for Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Kyle
Busch. “I mean, obviously, when you
have three guys that realistically just don't need to wreck to get in,
and you have one that needs to go out there and almost win to get in,
you can't sacrifice the three guaranteed spots that you got to try to
get one more in. That would just be bad gamesmanship.
Coach (team owner Joe Gibbs) knows a little better than that. I think
he's coached a few things before.
“So
it was on me to go out there and do it. I mean, I had a few friends out
there today—a lot of them that probably had manufacturer or team
alliances that they broke. I won't
name names to get them in trouble, but they were very, very loyal to us
today. That paid dividends, for sure.
“I
just counted on my buddies to help me and hope that you earned some
respect from some of those guys when they had to make a choice whether
they were going to push you or somebody
else. And luckily we had the right pushes when we needed them.”
BRIAN SCOTT PROVIDES BRIGHT SPOT FOR RICHARD PETTY MOTORSPORTS
Before Sunday’s race, Richard Petty Motorsports had suffered through 31 races without a top-10 finish.
Drivers
Brian Scott and Aric Almirola changed that. Scott ran a perfectly
crafted race and finished second to Joey Logano, and Almirola came home
eighth after working his way
forward during the final 40 laps of the Hellman’s 500.
“A
good finish always helps,” Scott said. “It helps with the team. It
helps with the guys at the shop, the morale. Just trying to get any bit
of a bright spot in this year has
been difficult. I think that this is by far the brightest spot that
we've had in a really challenging 2016 for Richard Petty Motorsports.
“I
don't know. ... I guess the results and what this does for us going
forward is yet to be determined. But just proud. I mean, the guys have
worked hard all year. They've deserved
a lot better finishes than we've given them. Just proud to deliver a
good, solid top five, to do my job behind the wheel to give us a shot at
the win—just have a good day for Richard Petty Motorsports.”
Scott’s
previous best finish in his first 48 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts
was 12th, most recently at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., in
March.
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