Talladega win boosts Elliott, Chevy
Send a link to a friend
[April 30, 2019]
Superspeedway was a
statement-maker for Chevrolet and Elliott's Hendrick Motorsports
team -- a not-so-subtle reminder that Chevy's bowtie brigade will
have a say in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup championship, too.
Elliott led teammate Alex Bowman and Chevrolet rookie Ryan Preece
across the finish line under caution Sunday in the GEICO 500,
earning Chevrolet its first victory in the 10-race-old 2019 season
and Hendrick's first one-two finish since the 2016 season. In a year
so far dominated by five-win Toyota and four-win Ford efforts,
Elliott's work was crucial personally, team-wise and
manufacturer-wise.
And judging by the Talladega crowd reaction, there is no question
this was a win well-appreciated for Elliott, a Georgia native.
"I honestly can't describe it to you," a grinning Elliott said.
"After the race was over, just kind of the way it ended, I was in la
la land down there when I was looking for the checkered flag. Every
time I stood up, the crowd stood up. Every time I got fired up, they
got fired up. That's something you can't ever take for granted.
"Like I said, people might not always like you. It's days like
today, those moments, that you'll cherish and never forget.
Certainly I won't. These races are too hard to win to not enjoy
those moments."
Elliott paced a bowtie brigade that included not just the make's
first 1-2-3 sweep of the year but a resounding superspeedway
statement with six of the top eight finishers -- also including
rookie Daniel Hemric (fifth), Kurt Busch (sixth) and Brendan Gaughan
(eighth). Chevy drivers also swept all three of the race stage wins
with Ty Dillon winning the first and Elliott winning both the second
stage and then the race.
In all, Chevy drivers led 74 of 188 laps, including Elliott's
race-best 45 laps, in halting a seven-race winning streak at
Talladega by rival Ford. It's only the second time this season a
Chevy driver has led the most laps in a race -- the last time it
happened, Kyle Larson led a race-best 142 laps but finished 12th at
Atlanta.
Each of the manufacturers went into Sunday's event stressing the
need for their respective teams and drivers to work together
unselfishly -- big picture in focus. And certainly Elliott's victory
was a trophy-winning byproduct of the teamwork emphasis.
"I felt like it was a team win, for sure," Elliott said. "The large
majority of the day we were working together as a bowtie group, as
Team Chevy. I felt like we executed that well.
"I think we could make it better, too. Just because it worked out, I
don't think we need to be content in the results. I think we need to
realize we can do a better job.
[to top of second column] |
"There's certainly power in numbers at these races. When you have
guys being selfless, wanting to push and make the lane go, it makes
a difference. Certainly worked out for us today. I know it didn't
work out for some. It felt like it all kind of happens for a reason.
Yes, there was a lot of effort that went in. I felt like it was
executed pretty well."
Both for Elliott, personally, and his championship Hendrick team,
Sunday's results spoke not just about an important superspeedway
showing but also about potential. Elliott earned the first three
wins of his young career last season, and following those up Sunday
was a confidence boost only a trophy can fully give.
Elliott is the only current member of the four-driver Hendrick team
with a victory in the past two years. It's been two years since
seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson earned his last win -- at
this week's upcoming venue in Dover, Del. Bowman and second-year Cup
driver William Byron are still looking for their first Cup win.
Dover is also a place where Elliott scored one of his three wins
last season -- giving the Hendrick team plenty of confidence heading
forward into the weekend.
"Those were certainly great wins last year," Elliott said. "I felt
like any time you can win and win often is a big deal. I felt like
we won pretty often in that span of a couple months last year, which
was great.
"I still don't think we're winning often enough. I feel like we need
to be contending more. I see some of our competitors being in
contention more than we have been throughout the season. I think we
can certainly do a better job.
"To have a win this early in the year I think is nice. And just
because we won at Dover and Kansas last year doesn't mean we're
going to go run good there, too. You know that.
"It's going to be hit or miss. We're going to go there, see what we
have. We didn't run good at Richmond, which was unfortunate. Had a
good day (Sunday), need to ride that as best we can next week."
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |