Recovering from a lackluster qualifying effort,
Newman finished fifth at Richmond Raceway to climb to ninth in
the Playoff standings, 14 points to the good over 13th-place
Alex Bowman with the Sept. 29 elimination race at the Charlotte
roval up next.
"It was just a good team effort, good pit stops," Newman said
after the race. "The strategy wasn't a whole lot to it, just put
four tires on, but had a good short-run car. One time we had a
good long-run car, but we could never get both.
"I think that, if we would have had both, we could have ran with
those guys (race winner Martin Truex Jr. and his Joe Gibbs
Racing teammates who finished 2-3-4 before Erik Jones was
disqualified after the race), but we were at our best probably
when we were just holding good bias to a long-run car--but who
would have known there were going to be that many green flag
runs."
Newman started 19th and was gratified he was able to drive
forward in what he characterized as the best all-around
performance of the season by his No. 6 Roush Fenway Ford team.
"Yeah, without a doubt," Newman said. "The best team performance
all-around throughout the entire weekend. We failed at
qualifying. We got the car too tight, but, overall, just a great
team effort to get the Roush Performance Ford a good run.
"What meant to me the most probably was just being better than
we were the first race (in the spring). We ran ninth in the
first race and qualified 30th or something like that, and we
came back and showed that we were learning, and we'll keep
learning."
RUN-IN WITH AUSTIN DILLON HURTS CHANCES OF TWO HENDRICK DRIVERS
An altercation with Austin Dillon early in the race put Hendrick
Motorsports drivers William Byron and Alex Bowman squarely on
the bubble entering the final event in the first round of the
playoffs.
On Lap 111, two circuits after the green flag for Stage 2,
Bowman dived low beneath Dillon, creating a four-wide situation
on the backstretch. Bowman's No. 88 Chevrolet slipped up the
track into Dillon's No. 3 Chevy, cutting Dillon's left front
tire.
Dillon's car, in turn, bounced into Byron's Chevrolet and cut
the left rear tire on Byron's car. Dillon retaliated against
Bowman by spinning him, causing the second caution of the race.
"I'm going to shove that silver spoon up his (expletive),"
Bowman said on his team radio, a reference to Dillon's status as
grandson of team owner Richard Childress.
"Yeah, we didn't execute very well on top of it either," said
Bowman, who finished 23rd and sits 13th in the standings (two
points behind Byron at the cut line). "So it's definitely a
bummer. We were really tight here in the spring, and we came
here trying to build a car that would turn really well.
"It did that, but it just didn't have any drive. When you're on
stickers, and the guys running 75 lap old tires are forward
driving you, it's not much fun. We didn't have a good day. We
didn't have anything go our way either. We just struggled with
the car all day. It's a bummer, but (crew chief) Greg (Ives) and
all of us will regroup and we should be strong next week."
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
Media.
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