Tyler Reddick burns his tires after winning the the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, Sept. 25, 2022. (AP Photo/Larry Papke) |
Tyler Reddick opened the round of 12 in NASCAR’s playoff with a victory at Texas on Sunday, winning a week after being one of the first four Cup drivers knocked out of title contention.
After none of the contenders won the first three races of
the playoffs — a first in any round in this postseason format — the trend
continued with the eliminated Reddick leading 53 of the final 54 laps on a long
race day that went into the night.
Reddick finished 1.19 seconds ahead of Joey Logano at the
end of an extended race that had a track-record 16 cautions, a record 36 lead
changes, a 56-minute red flag for lightning and multiple tire issues leading to
crashes — including playoff contenders Chase Elliott, the points leader going
into the second round, and Christopher Bell.
“I was extremely worried, I’m not going to lie,” Reddick
said. “Unfortunately, just about every time we’ve had fast cars, we’ve had some
tire problems. That last run, the right sides were vibrating really, really
hard there. ... I was just trying to maximize and use the gap that I built over
(Logano) just in case.”
Logano took over the points lead, by 12 over Ross Chastain.
Elliott, who entered the round of 12 as the points leader, had
a fiery finish after contact with the outside wall in Turn 4 when leading just
past the halfway mark of the race.
Flames were already visible from under the right side of the
No. 9 Chevrolet when he got onto the frontstretch, then turned across and came
to a stop in the middle of the infield, where Elliott climbed out uninjured as
the car was being engulfed by flames. He finished 32nd.
“I’m not sure that Goodyear is at fault,” Elliott said.
“Goodyear always takes the black eye, but they’re put in a really tough
position by NASCAR to build a tire that can survive these types of racetracks
with this car. I wouldn’t blame Goodyear.”
Goodyear and NASCAR officials said there were several teams
that didn’t have tire issues, and the reports from those teams indicated that
they were conservative with the air pressure they used in their tires.
Non-playoff drivers Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. also
had tire issues when leading the race at the 1 1/2-mile track.
Bell, the Oklahoma native who considers Texas his home
track, couldn’t recover from a second tire issue that led to his race-ending
crash after finishing only 136 laps. He was the only driver to finish in the
top five in all three races in the first round of this postseason, but was 34th
at Texas.
Contenders Ryan Blaney and Chase Briscoe finished fourth and
fifth. The other finishers still eligible for the title were William Byron
(seventh), Kyle Larson (ninth), Denny Hamlin (10th), Daniel Suarez (12th),
Chastain (13th), rookie Austin Cindric (15th) and Alex Bowman (29th).
Soon after the caution came out for Truex’s spinout from the
lead on lap 268, Hamlin was sliding through the infield after Byron made
contact with him from behind. When pressed after the race, Byron admitted that
he intentionally did it, upset about being pushed up against the wall by Hamlin
during green-flag laps just before that.
Hamlin stayed side-by-side and nose-to-tail with Byron
during the caution period, livid because of the position he was losing on the
track. Since he couldn’t keep pace after going into the grass, Hamlin had to
restart 22nd instead of near the front.
“I guess we can just wreck each other under caution. I tried
to wreck him back,” Hamlin said. “Yeah, I don’t think we touched. I got to
look. I don’t think we touched. Obviously, he sent us into the infield under
caution.”
Scott Miller, NASCAR’s senior VP for competition, said
officials didn’t see the incident in real time while focused on what caused the
caution. He said the incident will be reviewed to determine if there will be
any penalties.
The race was about to resume following the caution period
for the end of the second stage when NASCAR ran some extra laps under caution
because there was light rain falling on some parts of the 1 1/2 mile track. But
when there was lightning in the vicinity, the cars were brought to park on pit
road with 220 of 334 laps completed.
Drivers got a chance to get out of the cars for a break on a
day with record heat. The temperatures in the upper 90s made for the hottest
Cup race ever at the track that opened in 1997.
ANOTHER EARLY BUSCH EXIT
Kyle Busch completed only 48 laps and was last in the 36-car
field, marking the first time in his 32 Cup starts at Texas that he didn’t
finish the race.
Busch got loose when going higher up the track when getting
close to teammate Hamlin.
“I went to the high groove where I was making time in the
spray and the sticky stuff, but it is not so sticky apparently. I crashed,”
Busch said. “I’m trying to go, trying to race. Banana peels out there for me.”
It came a week after the two-time champion was eliminated
from title contention in his final season with Joe Gibbs Racing before going to
Richard Childress Racing. Busch finished 34th at Bristol after an engine failure
just past the halfway mark of the race.
MULTIPLE IMPACTS
Cody Ware’s car went nearly nose-first into the safer
barrier on the outside wall in Turn 4, and then shot down the track and onto
pit road. There was then an even bigger hit when the car slammed hard just past
a cutout in the pit wall.
Ware escaped serious injury, even though he was put on a
stretcher and into an ambulance after first being tended to for several minutes
after getting out of the car. He was taken to the infield care center, where he
was treated and released.
His team said he had some discomfort in his ankle, but no
broken bones.
UP NEXT
The middle race of the second round of the playoffs is
Sunday at Talladega, where Chastain got his second win of the season in April.
He hasn’t won since, but has finished seventh or better in the last three
playoff races.
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