JOhnny Sauter claims NASCAR Camping World Truck Series title; William Byron gets record seventh win
November 18, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
HOMESTEAD,
Fla. – Johnny Sauter won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
championship with a third-place finish in Friday night’s Ford EcoBoost
200 at Homestead-Miami Speedway,
leaving race winner William Byron to consider what might have been.
As
Byron and Tyler Reddick battled for the lead, Sauter passed
Championship 4 contender Matt Crafton for third-place on Lap 119 of 134
at the 1.5-mile track. Sauter then pulled
away to claim the championship as Crafton faded to seventh in the
closing laps.
Byron,
the polesitter, claimed his rookie-record seventh victory of the season
to salve the wound of last week at Phoenix, where a blown engine late
in the final Round of 6 race
knocked him out of the inaugural NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Chase.
Byron,
18, won the series owner championship for Kyle Busch Motorsports, the
organization’s fourth straight and fifth overall owner championship in
the series.
But
the night belonged to the 38-year-old Sauter, who won his first NASCAR
championship 15 years after making his first national touring series
start in the NASCAR XFINITY Series.
“It’s
not just me,” said Sauter, who started 19th in the No. 21 GMS Racing
Chevrolet after a lackluster qualifying effort. “It’s the whole
team—everybody at GMS Racing. “We qualified
bad today, and really, I was kind of worried about it. But it felt
pretty good in race trim…
“Just
proud of these guys. Flawless execution on pit road tonight. (Crew
chief) Joe (Shear Jr.) made great adjustments to where I could just kind
of hang on. I’m not a high line
guy, so I just elected to keep doing my deal and found some pretty good
grip around the bottom of the race track.
“To
be a champion… five years ago my old man was down here when I won the
race. This is for him and for Joe Shear’s dad—great Midwest racers. My
family’s here, my kids are here,
my wife’s here. It’s just an awesome night. Proud to be champion, and
we’ll do everything within our power to represent NASCAR and Camping
World as best we can.”
The handling of Crafton’s truck eroded after the last restart, making Sauter’s championship pass all but inevitable.
“I
kind of figured it was a matter of time,” acknowledged Crafton, who
fell short in his quest for a third series title. “We were just really
bad on that last run for whatever
reason. We just went the wrong way for whatever reason.
“It
just got really tight on that last run. The run before that was just a
little bit free, and on that last run it just got really tight on entry
(into the corners).”
Behind
Crafton, Christopher Bell and Timothy Peters came home eighth and ninth
to claim third and fourth, respectively, in the final series standings.
Byron charged from sixth to the front after a restart on Lap 115, finally taking the lead from Reddick 10 laps later.
“It
feels awesome,” said Byron, who was also named Sunoco Rookie of the
Year in the series, as expected. “It’s just – it’s incredible. I mean
this team has worked so hard all
year. We just had an unfortunate situation last week that we couldn’t
control, but, man, they brought a good truck. Qualified on the pole.
“These
guys just are awesome. God, I hate leaving this – I just hate this team
not being together next year. It’s just insane how good they are and so
many talented people on
this race team. Can’t thank KBM enough, Toyota, Kyle and Samantha
(Busch, Kyle Busch’s wife), everyone at KBM, (sponsor) Liberty
University – it’s just amazing.”
Byron
will drive a Chevrolet in the NASCAR XFINITY Series for JR Motorsports
next season, and Bell, 21, will return to KBM with an eye on the
championship that eluded him this
year.
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race - Ford EcoBoost 200
Homestead-Miami Speedway
Homestead, Florida
Friday, November 18, 2016
1. (1) William Byron #, Toyota, 134.
2. (7) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 134.
3. (19) Johnny Sauter (C), Chevrolet, 134.
4. (3) Kyle Larson(i), Chevrolet, 134.
5. (18) Daniel Hemric, Ford, 134.
6. (17) Daniel Suarez(i), Toyota, 134.
7. (4) Matt Crafton (C), Toyota, 134.
8. (8) Christopher Bell (C) #, Toyota, 134.
9. (13) Timothy Peters (C), Toyota, 134.
10. (2) Cole Custer #, Chevrolet, 134.
11. (6) John H Nemechek, Chevrolet, 134.
12. (22) Matt Tifft #, Toyota, 134.
13. (20) Rico Abreu #, Toyota, 134.
14. (14) Ben Kennedy, Chevrolet, 134.
15. (10) Noah Gragson, Toyota, 134.
16. (16) Cameron Hayley, Toyota, 134.
17. (24) Austin Hill, Ford, 134.
18. (12) Jesse Little, Toyota, 134.
19. (9) Brady Boswell, Chevrolet, 134.
20. (11) Ben Rhodes #, Toyota, 134.
21. (5) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, 134.
22. (21) Scott Lagasse Jr(i), Chevrolet, 134.
23. (23) Grant Enfinger #, Ford, 134.
24. (30) Jordan Anderson, Chevrolet, 134.
25. (27) Austin Wayne Self #, Toyota, 133.
26. (29) Alon Day, Chevrolet, 131.
27. (32) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 131.
28. (28) Reed Sorenson(i), Chevrolet, 130.
29. (25) Stewart Friesen, Chevrolet, 128.
30. (31) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 128.
31. (26) Patrick Staropoli, Chevrolet, 125.
32. (15) Ryan Truex, Toyota, Engine, 49.
Average Speed of Race Winner: 129.747 mph.
Time of Race: 1 Hrs, 32 Mins, 57 Secs. Margin of Victory: 2.175 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 4 for 18 laps.
Lead Changes: 15 among 5 drivers.
Lap
Leaders: W. Byron # 1-16; R. Sorenson(i) 17; W. Byron # 18-19; M.
Crafton (C) 20-22; K. Larson(i) 23-43; W. Byron # 44; T. Reddick 45-47;
M. Crafton (C) 48-53; K. Larson(i)
54-83; W. Byron # 84; K. Larson(i) 85-87; M. Crafton (C) 88; K.
Larson(i) 89-110; W. Byron # 111; T. Reddick 112-124; W. Byron #
125-134.
Leaders
Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): K. Larson(i) 4 times for 76
laps; W. Byron # 6 times for 31 laps; T. Reddick 2 times for 16 laps; M.
Crafton (C) 3 times for
10 laps; R. Sorenson(i) 1 time for 1 lap.
Top
10 in Points: J. Sauter (C) - 4,030; M. Crafton (C) - 4,026; C. Bell
(C) # - 4,025; T. Peters (C) - 4,024; W. Byron # - 2,199; D. Hemric -
2,163; B. Kennedy - 2,162; J. Nemechek
- 2,133; T. Reddick - 511; C. Custer # - 502.
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