Elliott wonders 'what if' after 3rd-place finish
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[May 01, 2018]
TALLADEGA, Ala. -- Chase Elliott
climbed out of his No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet on pit road,
downed a bottle of water, spoke with his crew and pretty much was
left to wonder, "What if?"
The talented 22-year old finished third Sunday in the GEICO 500 at
Talladega Superspeedway. But unlike other victory near-misses --
he's had eight career runner-up finishes, including one just last
week -- Elliott conceded this time he was a victim of circumstance.
He was the lone Chevy in a top-five scoreboard of Fords at a track
when you need a dancing partner to partner with toward the finish
line.
"It's tough," Elliott said. "You would think those guys want to win
the race around me, but they just ride and ride and ride and they
have to know in their minds they are waiting too long, even for
themselves.
"I thought maybe one of them would get greedy and want to win, I
certainly did. I knew if I went by myself it wasn't going to work.
For what it was, it worked out pretty good."
Team Penske's Joey Logano scored his first victory in over a year
and was followed across the line by Stewart-Haas Racing Ford driver
Kurt Busch. Elliott was third with Busch's teammate Kevin Harvick
right behind and defending race winner Ricky Stenhouse Jr. driving
his Ford to fifth place.
While maneuvering the frantic final laps, Elliott hoped that someone
up front would pull out of line with him and at least make a
determined run at Logano. It never panned out, however.
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"For us, we just never got anything going, I feel like, until the
end," Elliott said of his day. "I was able to come in and put on
tires towards the end of the race and have a little better rubber
than those guys around me, which was nice, and I made some good
moves to get up inside the top five.
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"Last few laps was really trying to make a run and do something
there at the end. Those guys were being awfully patient with one
another. I was very surprised. I mean, it was more than obvious that
they were not going to help me move forward."
Elliott did move forward in terms of his season, however. After a
frustrating 33rd-place finish in the season-opening Daytona 500 and
another DNF at Las Vegas two weeks later (34th place), the Hendrick
Motorsports driver has been playing a determined game of catch-up in
the standings.
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He has four top-11 finishes in the last five weeks -- including,
now, his back-to-back efforts of second (at Richmond) and third (at
Talladega). He's ranked 18th in the points standings -- tying his
highest mark of the season -- and is only five points behind
16th-place Ryan Newman and eight points behind 15th-place Ricky
Stenhouse Jr.
"For us trying to gain some points back, we needed a good finish
(today)," Elliott said. "We are trying to dig out of a bit of a hole
right now. So need runs like we've had the past two weeks. So we'll
move on."
The series next week races at the famous Dover International
Speedway one-miler, where Elliot has never finished worse than fifth
place in four Cup starts, including a best of second place in the
fall race last year.
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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