NASCAR & Auto Racing

NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 results: 4 things we learned from Brad Keselowski’s NASCAR win

Editor’s note: Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 car failed NASCAR’s post-race technical inspection and Johnson was disqualified. The results have been updated to reflect the ruling.

Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 2 Ford for Team Penske, won his first Coca-Cola 600 early Monday morning in an overtime race that was determined in the final laps.

Keselowski finished three-tenths of a second ahead of Jimmie Johnson, who came in second place until failing his post-race inspection. Chase Elliott, who had a large lead until a caution with two laps to go, crossed the finish line third.

CHASE ELLIOTT FOILED AGAIN

Just four days after Elliott ended a race in fury over an incident with Kyle Busch, he nearly returned to the track in redemption. Nearly.

With two laps to go and Elliott in the lead, Hendrick teammate William Byron spun out, forcing a caution and an overtime race. Elliot pitted for tires before the restart, placing him behind Keselowski and Johnson.

With under 50 laps to go, Keselowski moved into a first place position off a critical restart after a caution flag was thrown for Joey Gase, who spun off Turn 4 at the back of the field. Elliott’s No. 9 Chevy pushed past Keselowski and held the lead for 38 laps of the 405-lap race.

A TRUEX-BOWMAN DUEL …

Epitomized the Toyota-Chevy, JGR-Hendrick battle, and defined the evening.

Hendrick Chevrolet drivers made a statement early. Three of the team’s four drivers dominated the qualifying round with a top-10 starting spot, then the one driver who started in 12th place, Alex Bowman, dominated the first two stages of the race.

Bowman led 338 of the 600 miles, winning Stage Nos. 1 and 2 handily, and finishing second in Stage 3. He was passed by reigning Coca-Cola 600 champion Martin Truex Jr. on Lap 225 after a cat-and-mouse chase that continued through the finish.

Truex Jr. finished in second behind Bowman in the first two stages, and finished fifth in Stage 3, which was won by Joey Logano.

Meanwhile, Truex’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Kyle Busch and Erik Jones remained sprinkled throughout the top 10 in the first three stages, as did Hendrick drivers Chase Elliott, William Byron and Jimmie Johnson. Truex Jr. finished the race sixth (following Johnson’s disqualification) and Bowman placed 19th.

ROOKIES REMAIN STRONG

Cup rookie Tyler Reddick continued to impress with his second top-10 finish of 2020. He finished in eighth place (updated result) following a seventh place finish last Sunday at Darlington and a 13th place spot on Wednesday at the same speedway.

Reddick demonstrated he could handle the endurance test at Charlotte as well. The No. 8 driver started fifth, and raced his way into fourth place for Stage 1 points and flirted with the top-10 through the night.

Rookie Christopher Bell also made an appearance in the top-10. Bell finished ninth.

STRUGGLES AT CHARLOTTE

Hamlin’s dreams of his first Coke 600 win were dashed before the race began. The No. 11 driver lost a ballast under his car while running pace laps just minutes before the green flag waved, forcing Hamlin to pit as other drivers started the race. Hamlin entered eight laps down and remained in the bottom half for all 607.6 miles, the longest Cup race ever in mileage.

Hamlin did not finish in dead-last, however. No. 43 driver Bubba Wallace was forced out of the race due to a mechanical issue less than halfway through Stage 2. He returned in the third stage with a penalty and finished in the bottom three.

Like Wallace, No. 14 driver Clint Bowyer suffered a blow early. Bowyer hit the wall just before the end of Stage 1, forcing Bowyer’s car to smoke and sending the driver to the care center, from which he was quickly released.

Hamlin’s error will cost him more than Bowyer’s and Wallace’s, however. According to the NASCAR rule book, “loss or separation of added ballast from the vehicle will result in a four-race suspension of the crew chief, car chief and head engineer.” The ballast is the weight teams add to cars to meet the minimum weight requirement.

Before the race, Hamlin told FOX Sports he had multiple face masks at the ready in his car.

“I have different emotions stored away depending on how tonight goes,” Hamlin said. He finished 29th.

After tonight, Hamlin will need to pull out the frown. Keselowski will be the one smiling.

NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 results

Pos.DriverCar No.Time behind
1Brad Keselowski2Winner
2Chase Elliott90.674
3Ryan Blaney121.218
4Kyle Busch181.465
5Kevin Harvick41.625
6Martin Truex Jr.191.817
7Kurt Busch11.823
8Tyler Reddick81.894
9Christopher Bell952.272
10Chris Buescher172.402
11Erik Jones202.403
12Cole Custer412.821
13Joey Logano223.023
14Austin Dillon33.217
15Aric Almirola103.492
16John Hunter Nemechek383.558
17Matt DiBenedetto213.869
18Michael McDowell343.908
19Alex Bowman883.939
20William Byron241 lap
21Ross Chastain772 laps
22Ryan Preece372 laps
23Corey LaJoie322 laps
24Ricky Stenhouse Jr.473 laps
25Ty Dillon134 laps
26Matt Kenseth424 laps
27Ryan Newman65 laps
28Daniel Duarez966 laps
29Denny Hamlin117 laps
30Brennan Poole157 laps
31Gray Gaulding278 laps
32BJ McLeod7812 laps
33Garrett Smithley5314 laps
34Timmy Hill6615 laps
35Quin Houff0015 laps
36Joey Gase5120 laps
37JJ Yeley38154 laps
38Bubba Wallace43241 laps
39Clint Bowyer14309 laps
40Jimmie Johnson48DQ

This story was originally published May 25, 2020 at 12:19 AM.

Alexandra Andrejev
The Charlotte Observer
NASCAR and Charlotte FC beat reporter Alex Andrejev joined The Observer in January 2020 following an internship at The Washington Post. She is a two-time APSE award winner for her NASCAR beat coverage and National Motorsports Press Association award winner. She is the host of McClatchy’s podcast “Payback” about women’s soccer. Support my work with a digital subscription
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