NASCAR & Auto Racing

NASCAR race at Martinsville full results: 3 takeaways from Martin Truex Jr.’s victory

Tires rubbed and corded all over Martinsville Speedway with few cautions to offer reset relief for the top drivers struggling under the lights Wednesday night.

But Martin Truex Jr. wasn’t fazed despite an early penalty on pit road. The No. 19 driver sailed to his first win of the season at the Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500.

“We’ve been working a long time on trying to figure this place out,” Truex Jr. told FOX Sports on the broadcast after the race. He won at the same speedway last fall.

Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski followed in second and third, respectively, at the checkered flag.

NASCAR embraced “new” with the first mid-week evening race at Martinsville and the sanctioning body’s preceding announcement that it would ban the Confederate flag from all events and properties. In that vein, The Observer’s takeaways follow a different format, since teams largely fell into distinct categories.

RED: JOE GIBBS RACING

Struggled early and was unable to regain solid footing until Truex Jr. settled into the lead with 100 laps to go and ran away with the race. He led Blaney by four seconds 20 laps before the checkered flag.

Still, the Toyota drivers dealt with equipment issues throughout the evening; Kyle Busch reported a brake problem, Denny Hamlin’s car got hot and Erik Jones’ hood suffered damage. With fewer than 50 laps left in Stage 2, Truex Jr. was the highest running driver in 20th while Busch and Hamlin raced two laps down.

Truex Jr. was also the only one who secured early stage points, finishing fourth in Stage 1, and dropping back to the bottom half in Stage 2. He was the team’s saving grace in the short-track race that saw few caution flags.

“We’ve had a lot of confidence since really the last couple years we’ve just continued to refine our setup and what we’ve been doing,” Truex Jr. said after the race. “I kind of found the rhythm that I need here.”

YELLOW: HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS

The Hendrick Chevrolets looked strong, with the team’s highlight coming off Jimmie Johnson’s first stage win of the season in the second stage. Johnson’s Hendrick teammates Chase Elliott, William Byron and Alex Bowman remained flickered through the top-10 during the first two stages, and were able to collectively rack up points for the team. By the final stage, though, the drivers dropped down the field, although all four finished in the top 10.

GREEN: TEAM PENSKE

As a crew, Team Penske’s Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski dominated when it mattered. Logano won the first stage, finished third in stage 2, and crossed the finish line in fourth. . After the Stage 3 restart, Blaney, who lost his pole position early, raced back to the front and changed with Logano for the lead, while Keselowski ran up into the top three.

“After our first pit stop, we got our car a lot better,” Blaney said after the race. “I think just the green racetrack didn’t really go well with what we had or something, or we really wore our tires. I really had to run the top a lot.”

“We had a great long-run car,” Blaney said about his second place finish in Stage 2. “So that was great to get the lead there at the start of the third stage and just kind of biding our time.”

Still, Team Penske couldn’t catch up to Truex Jr., who said he and his team were just waiting for their first win of the season. On Wednesday night, that moment came.

“It’s been a learning process to figure (short tracks) out,” Truex Jr. said. “For our team, the last five years or so, we’re just continuing to work on the little things it takes to get around these places.”

Other drivers with notable races included RPM driver Bubba Wallace, who placed 11th, and Cup Series rookie Tyler Reddick, who finished 16th and racked up stage points along the way.

NASCAR Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville results

Pos.DriverCar No. Time behind
1Martin Truex Jr.19WINNER
2Ryan Blaney124.705 seconds
3Brad Keselowski25.313
4Joey Logano229.103
5Chase Elliott911.481
6Alex Bowman8812.926
7Matt DiBenedetto2114.089
8William Byron 2414.72
9Kurt Busch917.186
10Jimmie Johnson4818.64
11Bubba Wallace1118.81
12Ryan Newman620.356
13Chris Buescher1720.356
14Mchael McDowell3420.69
15Kevin Harvick421.685
16Tyler Reddick81 lap
17Clint Bowyer141 lap
18Corey Lajoie321 lap
19Kyle Busch181 lap
20Erik Jones203 laps
21Rick Stenhouse Jr.473 laps
22Ty Dillon133 laps
23Matt Kenseth423 laps
24Denny Hamlin113 laps
25John Hunter Nemechek383 laps
26Ryan Preece374 laps
27Daniel Suarez966 laps
28Christopher Bell956 laps
29Cole Custer416 laps
30Brennan Poole156 laps
31JJ Yeley277 laps
32Aric Almirola2021 laps
33David Starr5324 laps
34Quin Houff0026 laps
35Joey Gase 5136 laps
36Garrett Smithley7750 laps
37Austin Dillon3101 laos
38Reed Sorenson7205 laps
39Timmy Hill66395 laps

This story was originally published June 10, 2020 at 11:01 PM.

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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