NASCAR & Auto Racing

NASCAR at Texas full results: Austin Dillon wins, races his way into playoffs

Austin Dillon crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, July 19, 2020. (AP Photo/Ray Carlin)
Austin Dillon crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, July 19, 2020. (AP Photo/Ray Carlin) AP

Austin Dillon beat the heat and the rest of the field at Texas Motor Speedway to win his first NASCAR race of the season. It was just his third career Cup win.

“Not bad for a silver spoon kid, right?” Dillon said on NBCSN after exiting his No. 3 Chevrolet Camaro in front of screaming fans.

He finished less than half a second ahead of his Richard Childress Racing teammate Tyler Reddick, who finished second at the O’Reilly Auto Parts 500. Joey Logano finished in third place.

“Can’t ask for much more than what we got there,” Reddick said on NBCSN after the race. “Me and my teammate on the front row there the last couple of restarts.”

With under 30 laps left, a caution was called for Quin Houff, which shook up the running order and favored drivers who had pitted earlier in the race. Drivers on the lead lap pitted, but Reddick did not take any tires to win the race off pit road and restart in first. Dillon took two tires and quickly raced past Reddick when the race went green again. Dillon’s crew chief Justin Alexander said his team’s position in points did not impact his call for two tires.

“I would have made those calls regardless of whatever (points) we needed,” Alexander said. “Four tires for us actually fired off slower than two tires. So for me, it was a no brainer.”

A few laps later, the caution flag came out for contact between Denny Hamlin and Alex Bowman, and the restart came with 11 laps left. Dillon chose the inside lane on the restart and Reddick raced him side-by-side, but Dillon forged ahead. The final caution of the race, which was called again for Hamlin, forced a two-lap shootout between Dillon and Reddick.

“That last (restart) I was thinking, ‘Top, top,’ the whole last lap” Dillon said after the race. “And then coming to green, I said, ‘I’m gonna dictate this race from wherever I start.’ I chose the bottom (lane). I thought our car was turning better than what Reddick’s was at that point.”

Dillon held onto the lead with a big push from Logano on the final restart, notching a first and second place finish for Richard Childress Racing. The race gives Dillon an automatic playoff bid, while Reddick’s finish puts him in 17th in points, just one position below the cutoff and 14 points behind Byron in 16th.

“We’ve talked about (playoffs), talked about it all year,” RCR team owner Richard Childress said. “We think with everything that’s going on, it depends on how the stages and everything run, we feel we can be right there for the win at the end of the day.”

Reddick said he thinks another win for the team could come before the post-season.

“If we can keep running like this, we won’t have to worry about points hopefully,” Reddick said.

BLANEY WAS FAST BUT COULDN’T SEAL THE DEAL

For the first two stages, and late into the final stage, it looked like Ryan Blaney would sweep Texas. But after Blaney won Stages 1 and 2, a major wreck occurred on the frontstretch, forcing a red flag. Kyle Busch, tapped by Aric Almirola, hooked his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. The No. 19 car of Truex spun toward the outside wall then backward, catching multiple cars behind him. Cole Custer, Ryan Preece and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. were caught up in the wreck and forced to exit the race. Busch still finished in fourth after driving onto the grass.

Brad Keselowski led the field on the restart, but was passed by Hamlin, who was then passed by Blaney on Lap 238 of the 334-lap race. Blaney held the lead through multiple cautions in the third stage and remained just ahead of Hamlin.

“I’m trying, man.” Hamlin told his team on the radio while chasing Blaney. “I really am.”

Blaney was fast, but a decision to stay out on Lap 246 as other drivers like Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano pitted ended up hurting him when the caution for Houff came out. Blaney finished in seventh.

“I don’t know what the opposite material of a golden horseshoe is, but we’ve found it,” Blaney said after the race.

It was Dillon and Reddick who won out based on strategy and luck, such as NASCAR goes.

TOUGH BREAK FOR JOHNSON, BYRON

Like Blaney, Jimmie Johnson had speed, but he couldn’t catch a break, which has been the story of the No. 48’s season. Johnson was battered by multiple penalties and multiple wrecks at Texas.

By lap 30, he was sent to the rear of the field on the next restart after a team safety violation on pit road. He raced his way back to seventh to close Stage 1, but early into Stage 2, Johnson hit the wall rounding Turn 4 and was then issued another two-lap penalty for having too many crew members over the wall under NASCAR’s damaged vehicle policy.

Johnson’s Chevrolet Camaro entered the final stage 11 laps down, but he continued to move up in positions. He was then caught up in the big wreck caused by the contact between Busch and Truex, but remained in the race through the finish. Johnson ended the race 12 laps down in 26th place.

It wasn’t the finish the No. 48 wanted or needed to improve his playoff position. He was 15th in points before the race, which is where he’ll stay. With Dillon’s win and Reddick’s gain in points, however, Johnson’s Hendrick teammate William Byron could be in trouble on the playoff bubble.

Byron crashed out of the race in the final stage, jeopardizing his playoffs standing. If RCR is celebrating Texas, Team Hendrick is cursing it.

TEXAS DOES IT BIG. AND HOT.

In addition to the big crashes, there was a hot track. The NBC Sports broadcast reported that the inside of Ty Dillon’s car reached 140 degrees at one point during the race. When the red flag came out in the final stage, NASCAR officials quickly delivered water to the drivers’ cars. After the race, Dillon was treated at NASCAR’s infield care center for dehydration. He took an IV and said he was feeling fine shortly after.

“It was definitely just putting ice bags on you,” Kentucky race winner Cole Custer said of the heat on NBC Sports Network after exiting his car. “Hopefully your AC was working.”

While Custer claimed Kentucky last weekend, it was a different rookie in the picture this weekend (Reddick). And another first-time 2020 race winner shaking up the playoff picture (Dillon).

“Hats off to the (No.) 3, all those guys,” Reddick said on NBCSN. “They’re working hard. It gets one RCR Chevrolet into the playoffs. And now we’re below the cutline. We’ve got to keep fighting.”

After getting some fluid and air, Dillon wearing a giant, Texas-sized cream-colored cowboy hat after the win said he would race home to celebrate with his wife, Whitney, and his newborn son, Ace. The couple’s first child was born in June.

“We’re screaming and yelling right now,” Whitney said from the family’s living room, Ace in arms, on NBCSN. “We’re so happy.”

Final results

Pos.DriverCar No.Time Behind
1Austin Dillon3WINNER
2Tyler Reddick80.149
3Joey Logano220.42
4Kyle Busch180.452
5Kevin Harvick40.602
6Erik Jones200.756
7Ryan Blaney121.35
8Kurt Busch11.408
9Brad Keselowski21.623
10Aric Almirola101,714
11Clint Bowyer141.868
12Chase Elliott92.029
13Ryan Newman62.151
14Bubba Wallace432.515
15Michael McDowell342.609
16Corey LaJoie323.019
17Matt DiBenedetto213.282
18Matt Kenseth423.457
19Chris Buescher171 lap
20Denny Hamlin111 lap
21Christopher Bell953 laps
22John Hunter Nemechek383 laps
23Daniel Suarez965 laps
24JJ Yeley276 laps
25Gray Gaulding2711 laps
26Jimmie Johnson4812 laps
27Brennan Poole1512 laps
28Reed Sorenson712 laps
29Martin Truex Jr.1914 laps
30Alex Bowman8815 laps
31Josh Bilicki716 laps
32Joey Gase5116 laps
33BJ McLeod7816 laps
34Quin Houff039 laps
35Ty Dillon1371 laps
36Timmy Hill6680 laps
37William Byron2482 laps
38Ricky Stenhouse Jr.47113 laps
39Cole Custer41115 laps
40Ryan Preece37117 laps

This story was originally published July 19, 2020 at 7:28 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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