Pit
road penalty spoils Larson's chances
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[April 25, 2017]
By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed by The Sports Xchange
BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Kyle Larson broke a
record in a race that ran like ... well, a broken record.
Starting from the pole in Monday's rain-delayed Food City 500 at
Bristol Motor Speedway, Larson led the first 202 laps of the Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series race. Never before had a driver for Chip
Ganassi Racing led that many laps in a race in NASCAR's premier
series.
But as was the case in Saturday's NASCAR Xfinity Series race, when
Larson led 180 laps, the end of the race wasn't as satisfying as the
beginning.
On Saturday, Larson finished seventh after a cut tire and a
subsequent commitment line violation sent him to the rear late in
the race.
Monday was deja vu. Larson was running in the top five before a
speeding penalty on lap 421 of 500 sent him to the rear in the
Monster Energy Series race.
Though he recovered to run as high as second, thanks to a two-tire
call to gain track position under caution on Lap 462, he couldn't
pass race leader Kevin Harvick over the final 33-lap green-flag run
and faded to sixth at the finish.
The quality of the competition, however, made up for the pit road
mistake.
"Yeah, I got that speeding penalty," Larson said. "I was just
pushing on pit road and messed up there and had to gamble on two
tires, and the balance was OK on two, but I just didn't have the
speed (or), I guess, the grip that the 48 (race winner Jimmie
Johnson) and the 14 (runner-up Clint Bowyer) had to run the bottom.
"I knew I couldn't go down there and get by the 4 (Harvick), so I
was trying to maybe set him up, up top, but it was a lot of fun
there.
"The three of us were racing hard for the lead for a few laps and
had some traffic, so I thought the race was great. The track changed
a lot throughout the race and was extremely exciting. I don't know
what more you could ask out of this place. This is the best track we
go to, most exciting place, and I love coming here."
Pit road speeding penalty costly to Truex, too
No one at Bristol could run the bottom of the track better than
Martin Truex Jr., who led 116 laps in Monday's rain-delayed Food
City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Truex lost some of his advantage when the potency of the VHT track
sealer, which added grip to the bottom lane, began to fade as the
race progressed. But the real whammy for Truex was a penalty for
speeding on pit road incurred under the final caution on Lap 465.
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Truex had been battling race winner Jimmie Johnson
for the lead before the infraction, but the No. 78 Toyota lost any
chance for the victory after being sent to the back of the field for
a restart on Lap 468.
"We were going for it, you know?" Truex said. "Wish we could have
had a shot there just to see if we could have won. This is the best
run we've had here in a long time. It's bittersweet.
"I wish we could have seen if we could have beat the 48 (Johnson).
We were close there before that last caution, but it is what it is,
and you try to get what you can get, and sometimes you cross the
line, and today we crossed the line.
"All in all, it was an awesome day and a lot of fun. Had the VHT not
worn out quite as bad, then we would have really killed them. The
top lane came in, and some guys could run that better than I could,
but overall it was a good day and a lot of fun all day."
Sneaky-fast Kenseth comes from nowhere to fourth
Throughout most of Monday's Food City 500, Matt Kenseth was all but
invisible.
As the track changed throughout the race at Bristol Motor Speedway,
however, Kenseth's fortunes changed for the better.
In the final 15 laps, the driver of the No. 20 Joes Gibbs Racing
Toyota passed Kyle Larson and Joey Logano to finish fourth, posting
his first top five since he ran third at Atlanta in the second race
of the season.
"We got better there at the end and got a little bit of track
position -- finally," Kenseth said. "It was an uphill battle all day
without qualifying (because of a Friday rainout), and then I sped on
pit road (under caution on lap 386) and got us to the back.
"At the end, we had a car that was good -- most of the day it wasn't
very good, but the last two runs we were fairly competitive."
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