Sure, Newman dive-bombed Sunoco Rookie of the Year front-runner
Kyle Larson on the final lap of Sunday's Quicken Loans Race for
Heroes 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, but there were
extenuating circumstances.
For Newman, that one move, made in the final two corners of the
final lap of the final race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup's
Eliminator Round, defined an entire season.
And the hands that held the steering wheel of the No. 31 Richard
Childress Racing Chevrolet also held the fate of Jeff Gordon.
It was a case of cosmic balance. Newman's aggressive pass of Larson
in Turn 3, where Newman steered his car to the apron, hit the gas
and used Larson's No. 42 Chevrolet as a cushion, earned an
11th-place finish -- just enough to advance to Sunday's one-race
Championship Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at
Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m. ET on ESPN).
Newman's gain was Gordon's loss, as the driver of the No. 24
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, a sentimental favorite to win a
long-awaited fifth title, won't get the chance this year. Newman's
pass of Larson was worth one point in the Chase standings, and that
one point edge cut Gordon out of the Chase like a cruel scalpel.
For the final 70 laps, the suspense was riveting. Gordon ran
comfortably in second place, unable to challenge runaway winner
Kevin Harvick. Newman rode on the cusp of elimination and was
running 14th -- and out of the money -- when NASCAR called the
track-record-tying 11th caution for debris on the frontstretch.
At that point, Newman's crew chief, Luke Lambert, made what proved
to be the pivotal call of the race. Lambert opted to forego a pit
stop under the yellow, and Newman gained nine positions by staying
out. He lined up fifth for the restart on Lap 293.
But Newman's car wasn't good on restarts, and before the next
caution flag waved on Lap 296, Newman had dropped back to ninth.
Soon after the race restarted with 12 laps left, Newman lost
positions to Dale Earnhardt Jr., Marcos Ambrose and Larson.
At that point, the No. 31 was running 12th and again out of the
money. And at that point, Lambert began exhorting his driver, saying
repeatedly on the radio, "One more spot."
Newman got that spot on the last lap, diving into Turn 3 and
door-slamming Larson's Chevrolet. The impact knocked Larson into the
Turn 4 wall, but Larson still managed to cross the finish line in
14th.
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Newman said later that he didn't like to race that way, but there
was no reason for misgivings. Nor was there any need for Newman to
recall the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race on the
half-mile dirt track at Eldora Speedway, where Larson "used me up,"
as Newman put it, on a succession of restarts.
Sunday's race was not about evening a score. It was about doing what
was necessary -- whatever was necessary -- to survive and advance
under a Chase system in which an entire season can be distilled into
one bold, aggressive move.
No apologies necessary. And no regrets warranted.
As the season finale approaches, and Newman, Harvick, Denny Hamlin
and Joey Logano prepare to race for the series championship, Newman
will field countless questions about his status as the only eligible
driver without a victory this season.
It's entirely possible that Newman could post the highest finish
among the four drivers at Homestead and claim the title without
winning the race. After all, Newman already has defied conventional
wisdom by advancing to the Championship Round.
But if he does bring Richard Childress Racing its first championship
since the late Dale Earnhardt last won in 1994, let's hope Newman
confines his emotions to celebration.
Because there won't be any reason to apologize for that either.
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