Blaney gets shot at back-to-back
NASCAR titles after controversial finish at Martinsville Speedway
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[November 04, 2024]
By JENNA FRYER
Ryan Blaney celebrated his victory at Martinsville Speedway, a win
that launched NASCAR's defending champion into the title-deciding
season finale.
Meanwhile, Christopher Bell and William Byron waited awkwardly
alongside their parked cars for a ruling from NASCAR on who would be
the fourth and final driver in the winner-take-all decider at
Phoenix Raceway.
The issue was whether Bell had smashed into wall on the final lap
and rode along it for momentum to give him the final pass he needed
to move past Byron for the last spot in the championship. The move
was quite similar to one used two years ago at Martinsville by Ross
Chastain — it was dubbed the “Hail Melon” — and subsequently banned
the ensuing offseason.
Blaney was headed back to the championship finale for the right to
defend his title against Team Penske teammate Joey Logano and Tyler
Reddick of 23XI Racing. The fourth finalist just waited for what
seemed an eternity for a NASCAR ruling.
Bell riding the wall was ultimately deemed illegal and Byron saved
Hendrick Motorsports from a humiliating third round of the playoffs.
Three Hendrick drivers were vying for the four spots in the finale
and only Byron qualified — and only because Bell was deemed to have
committed a safety violation.
“We had the situation with Ross here, we went to Phoenix, there was
a lot of dialog with the drivers that that's not a move (they) want
to have to make,” said Elton Sawyer, NASCAR's senior vice president
of competition. “In the offseason, meeting with the industry,
meeting with our drivers, to a man, that was not a move they wanted
to make.”
So it was outlawed.
Bell argued he didn't have a choice as he hit the wall trying to
avoid fellow Toyota driver Bubba Wallace, who claimed he had a tire
going down. Bell rode a portion of it for momentum and it got him
the pass he needed to tie Byron in points for the final spot next
week at Phoenix Raceway.
“I understand that the rule is made to prevent people from riding
the wall, but my move was completely different from what Ross did,”
said Bell, who was denied a third consecutive trip to the
championship race.
“I slid into the wall and kept my foot into it. I guess that is a
losing move,” Bell continued. "I didn’t intentionally floor it and
go into the fence — I slipped into the wall and that’s all she
wrote.”
Said Byron: “He rode the wall and there's a clear rule against
riding the wall. So in my eyes, that's what counts. If it happened
in the past, it was fair game. But now the rule is against it.”
Blaney, meanwhile, passed Hendrick driver Chase Elliott with 15 laps
to go to win at the Virginia track for a second consecutive year.
His victory last year propelled him to his first Cup title.
The title goes to the highest-finishing driver next Sunday between
Blaney, Byron, Logano and Reddick.
“To have another shot at the championship is really special,” Blaney
said. “Try to go back-to-back next week. I've got nothing left. Oh
my God, I'm tired.”
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Ryan Blaney, centere, celebrates after winning a NASCAR Cup Series
auto race at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Va., Sunday,
Nov. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)
Blaney last week lost an automatic berth into the
finale when Reddick passed him in the final turn at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. The victory gives team owner Roger Penske two chances to
win a third title this year: Penske teams won the sports car
championships in both IMSA and on Saturday the World Endurance
Championship.
Blaney's win was the 100th for Team Penske since it
partnered with Ford. Logano won the title in 2022, Blaney won in
2023 and now Penske has a shot at three consecutive Cup titles.
“A lot of momentum. It’s nice to have two Penske cars in,” Blaney
said. “It’s nice to join (Logano) and have a decent shot to bring
Roger another title, a third title in a row, so these guys are the
best at what they do and it’s been so much fun to get to run with
them and share wins and championships.
“It’s super strong right now in our organization and hopefully it
carries over.”
Elliott finished second at Martinsville, Kyle Larson finished third,
and Penske driver Austin Cindric was fourth but not eligible for a
championship berth.
Denny Hamlin drove from last to fifth but was eliminated from the
playoffs and Byron was sixth and given the final spot in the
championship field when Bell's pass was ruled illegal. Bell finished
22nd after an early spin in the race. He had a large enough point
cushion that left him tied with Byron for the final spot in the
championship field.
Byron and Blaney return to the championship race for the second
consecutive year; Logano is the only two-time champion in the field
and Reddick is making his title-race debut.
The field is represented by a pair of Ford drivers, one Toyota and
and the Chevrolet from Hendrick.
Truex speeding penalty
Martin Truex Jr., who is retiring from full-time NASCAR racing after
next week's race, started the penultimate race of his Joe Gibbs
Racing career from the pole.
He led the first 42 laps in his Toyota until he had to make his
scheduled pit stop, and Truex was flagged for speeding on pit road.
The penalty dropped him three laps off the pace and ruined his race.
Truex, who was eliminated from the playoffs in the first round,
later received a second speeding penalty and finished 24th on
Sunday.
Up next
Next Sunday's season finale at Phoenix Raceway, where the highest
finishing driver among Logano, Reddick, Blaney, and Byron will win
the championship. Ross Chastain is the defending race winner, but
was not title eligible last November.
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