NASCAR & Auto Racing

NASCAR at Dover results: Chase Elliott holds off Ricky Stenhouse Jr. to claim victory

Chase Elliott picked up his first win of the NASCAR season at Dover Motor Speedway on Monday, staying ahead of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. by 2.6 seconds at the finish.

Elliott took the lead with around 50 laps remaining in the race that was postponed a day due to Sunday rain at the track in Dover, Del.

Elliott, who was leading in points prior to the race, picked up his first victory at an oval since he won the Cup Series championship at Phoenix Raceway in 2020.

“We’ve had some tough races over the last, I don’t know, four or five months and it was great to get NAPA back in Victory Lane,” Elliott said on FS1. “Great to get Hendrick Motorsports back to Victory Lane.”

Stenhouse finished in second place and two-time 2022 race winner Ross Chastain finished in third after tangling with Martin Truex Jr. on the final lap. Chastain moved up the track with Truex behind him and Truex spun to the inside for a 12th place finish.

“Racing hard,” Chastain told reporters about the final lap. “I crowded him up and should’ve left him more of a lane.”

Chase Elliott and team snap oval win drought

While Chastain has been a multi-time race winner this year, the victory at Dover was a first for the series points leader. Now all four Hendrick Motorsports drivers have won a race this season, combining for five wins in 11 races.

Elliott won two road course races last season, but has long been seeking a win at an oval. His best finish at an oval this season prior to Monday was sixth at Atlanta, considered a hometown track for the driver from Dawsonville, Georgia.

The Dawsonville Pool Room restaurant, where Elliott and his NASCAR Hall of Fame father Bill Elliott frequent, blared their siren (pronounced si-reen) on Monday afternoon to signal the Elliott victory.

“Just so proud.” Elliott said after the race. “This one means a lot in a lot of different ways…Like I told (the crew) after the race, those guys, they’ve been deserving of one for a while. Glad we could get across the line first. We’ll enjoy it for a few days and go to work next week.”

Day 2 at Dover full of cautions, mix of leaders

There were 13 cautions for 75 laps, including seven cautions for incidents, at a track that typically hasn’t produced many yellow flags in recent years. The tire falloff was also a factor as multiple teams managed worn tires and called for early or unplanned pit stops throughout the race.

There were also 10 different leaders from a mix of teams and 21 green flag passes, which was the most at the track since 2013, making for for an interesting event.

Denny Hamlin won the first stage, then suffered from a loose tire after pitting, losing his track position. He was later hit by Cody Ware’s spinning car, and finished the race 21st with a car that looked dominant on Sunday prior to the delay.

Ryan Blaney won the second stage, with Kyle Busch finishing that stage in second. Busch led a race-high 103 laps on his 37th birthday.

But by the final 40 laps, Elliott was in the lead after jumping ahead on a restart with Stenhouse in second managing his tire falloff. The JTG-Daugherty Racing driver’s best finish this season before Monday was 10th at Fontana. His average finish through 11 races this season is 24.6.

“That was a lot of fun,” Stenhouse said. “A lot of battling. It was tough to pass, but it was fun running through lapped traffic. I really wish we had like a 70-lap run to end there.”

Stenhouse couldn’t catch up to Elliott, though, as the No. 9 Chevrolet driver stayed ahead through the finish. Elliott now has a 50 point lead in the series standings over Ryan Blaney. The next Cup Series race is Sunday, May 8 at Darlington Raceway at 3:30 p.m. on FS1.

Race results

Pos.CarDriverTime behindBest timeBest speed
19Chase Elliott--23.026156.345
247Ricky Stenhouse Jr.2.57723.299154.513
31Ross Chastain3.67922.849157.556
420Christopher Bell4.0623.144155.548
548Alex Bowman5.32923.154155.481
65Kyle Larson11.93222.994156.563
718Kyle Busch12.16423.095155.878
817Chris Buescher14.13722.879157.35
94Kevin Harvick14.54923.292154.56
1043Erik Jones18.27523.393153.892
1131Justin Haley18.74223.194155.213
1219Martin Truex Jr.20.15123.062156.101
1314Chase Briscoe23.71923.661152.149
1499Daniel Suarez27.46623.336154.268
1541Cole Custer28.3823.784151.362
1623Bubba Wallace-123.425153.682
1734Michael McDowell-123.722151.758
187Corey LaJoie-123.565152.769
1910Aric Almirola-123.372154.03
206Brad Keselowski-123.35154.176
2111Denny Hamlin-122.771158.096
2224William Byron-123.172155.36
233Austin Dillon-223.754151.553
2421Harrison Burton-223.622152.4
2515Ryan Preece-223.46153.453
2612Ryan Blaney-323.091155.905
2742Ty Dillon-423.925150.47
2838Todd Gilliland-423.868150.83
2922Joey Logano-423.684152.001
308Tyler Reddick-1023.426153.675
3145Kurt Busch-1223.559152.808
3277Josh Bilicki-1924.343147.886
3316AJ Allmendinger-7923.354154.149
3451Cody Ware-16223.983150.106
3578BJ McLeod-23324.074149.539
362Austin Cindric -30923.419153.721

This story was originally published May 2, 2022 at 11:33 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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