NASCAR & Auto Racing

Chase Elliott has dominated NASCAR since racing returned. Win was more than good fortune

Chase Elliott said he had “good fortune” after capturing his first win of the Cup Series season at Charlotte Motor Speedway Thursday night.

“I’m not sure that we had it exactly perfect,” Elliott said. “But the guys did a great job making good adjustments and good pit stops there to put us in position.”

“Just had some good fortune and things went our way,” the No. 9 driver added.

That’s a sharp contrast to back-to-back races over the last two weeks that ended in late-lap devastation for Elliott’s Hendrick team. Last Wednesday, Elliott spun out of a top-three finish off a hit from Kyle Busch just before the race was called early due to rain. Elliott then returned to the track Sunday to nearly secure his first Coca-Cola 600 victory before a late-lap caution was thrown and his team called for the driver to pit, again edging Elliott from victory lane.

“We talked about how much that stunk,” said Ryan Blaney, who finished third. “Those things happen, and we had the same thing happen to us in Vegas this year when we pitted and a lot of people stayed out and it just didn’t work and (we) ended up not winning the race.”

“So you’re bummed,” Blaney continued. “You’re pissed off a little bit, but really there’s no sense in dwelling on it. (Chase’s) attitude was obviously disappointed, but at the same time, like I said, he was normal Chase.”

After Thursday’s Alsco Uniforms 500, “Normal Chase” now means a driver who combats back-to-back frustration with back-to-back wins. Tuesday, Elliott swiped the title of ‘Truck Champion’ from Busch after beating the No. 18 Cup driver in a race that promised more than pride. There was also a $100,000 bounty on the line, put in place the Gander RV CEO and Kevin Harvick.

Elliott took his money and his bows after the race, then returned to Victory Lane two days later for what appears to be a hot streak for the sport’s most popular driver.

In the four races since NASCAR returned from hiatus May 17 during the coronavirus pandemic, Elliott has crossed the finish line in three of them, earning a fourth-place finish, second place, and a win. He’s third in the Cup points standings with 290 points, behind Joey Logano (317) and Kevin Harvick (331).

“I have the utmost confidence in him,” Elliott’s crew chief Alan Gustafson said Thursday night. “I think he’s the best driver out here, and he’s showing it.”

Elliott did not lead the most laps Thursday, but he led the ones that mattered. He raced his way from a 19th-place start to a ninth-place finish in Stage 1, followed by a fourth-place finish in Stage 2. Elliott then took the lead from Cup Series points leader Kevin Harvick in the final 28 laps of the 208-lap race, which was delayed over an hour due to rain, and again crossed the finish line in first.

“I don’t know that Tuesday made up for Sunday,” Elliott said. “It was certainly good. It never hurt anything to come over here, perform and have a good run like that, but it definitely didn’t fix it.”

Elliott said his team was “hungry and wanted to get back and try again.”

They did just that, translating frustration into production, and Elliott seems determined to continue using the tough losses, as much as the recent wins, as motivation.

“You’re just kind of waiting on something to happen,” Elliott said. “It just kind of keeps you grounded, and the fact that it’s never over until it’s over, we’ve been reminded of that quite a lot.

“And that’s a lesson I’m never going to forget.”

NASCAR Alsco Uniforms 500 at Charlotte results

Pos.DriverCar No.Time behind
1Chase Elliott9Winner
2Denny Hamlin112.208 seconds
3Ryan Blaney122.685
4Ricky Stenhouse Jr.473.119
5Kurt Busch16.164
6Joey Logano227.011
7Brad Keselowski27.824
8Austin Dillon39.592
9Martin Truex Jr.1910.335
10Kevin Harvick411.584
11Jimmie Johnson4811.714
12William Byron2414.73
13John Hunter Nemechek3816.072
14Tyler Reddick816.719
15Matt DiBenedetto2118.349
16Clint Bowyer1422.291
17Ryan Newman624.162
18Cole Custer4124.723
19Corey LaJoie3226.184
20Aric Almirola1028.722
21Christopher Bell9529.79
22Chris Buescher1739.533
23Matt Kenseth231 lap
24Ryan Preece371 lap
25Michael McDowell341 lap
26Erik Jones201 lap
27Ty Dillon131 lap
28Daniel Suarez961 lap
29Kyle Busch181 lap
30Gary Gaulding272 laps
31Alex Bowman882 laps
32Quin Houff003 laps
33Timm Hill663 laps
34JJ Yeley774 laps
35BJ McLeod785 laps
36Josh Bilicki368 laps
37Bubba Wallace4343 laps
38Brennan Poole15122 laps
39Joey Gase51200 laps
40Garrett Smithley56208 laps
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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