Chase Elliott wins Clash at Bowman
Gray and sets sights on following it with Daytona 500 victory
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[February 03, 2025]
By JENNA FRYER
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR returned to its roots with a
fight-free preseason exhibition at Bowman Gray Stadium and a popular
victory with Chase Elliott winning The Clash on Sunday night.
Elliott won his heat Saturday night to start from the pole and
essentially dominate on the quarter-mile track where NASCAR's Cup
Series last raced in 1971.
NASCAR's reigning most popular driver won The Clash for the first
time in his career and joined his father, Bill, as winners of the
unofficial season-opener. Bill Elliott won The Clash in 1987 and
then parlayed that victory into a win in the Daytona 500 one week
later.
Chase Elliott gets his chance to repeat his father's dominance when
NASCAR's season officially opens Feb. 16 at Daytona International
Speedway.
“Excited to get to Daytona. It’s a great way to start the season,"
Elliott said. “I know it’s not a points race, but it is nice to win,
for sure. Just really proud of our team for just continuing to keep
our heads down and push forward, for sure.”
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The Clash is a non-points event that was held at Daytona
International Speedway from 1979 to 2021 as the warm-up act to the
Daytona 500. NASCAR stepped outside the box in 2022 and moved it
across the country to Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which was
transformed into a temporary short track for three seasons.
NASCAR this year moved it to Bowman Gray in a throwback to
grassroots racing. The Cup Series ran at Bowman Gray from 1958 to
1971 and the stadium is now used for weekly local racing and is the
football field for Winston-Salem State University.
The track is notorious for flared tempers and fighting, but made it
through two days of NASCAR racing without a single brawl.
“This environment is special. This is a place that has had deep
history in NASCAR,” Elliott said. “I think they deserve this event,
truthfully. I hope we didn’t disappoint. It was fun for me, at
least. We’ll hopefully come back here one day.”
Elliott led 172 of the 200 laps in his Chevrolet from Hendrick
Motorsports to win the event in front of an adoring sold-out crowd
of 17,000 fans. Most spectators were on their feet every time
Elliott picked off a lapped car while battling door-to-door with
Denny Hamlin and then holding off Ryan Blaney at the end,
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Chase Elliott celebrates after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race
at Bowman Gray Stadium, Sunday, Feb. 2, 2025, in Winston-Salem, N.C.
(AP Photo/Matt Kelley)
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“Thanks everybody for coming out,” Elliott told the
crowd. “Y'all made for a really cool environment for us. We don't
race in stadiums like this, so this is just really cool and
appreciate you making the moment special for me and my team. I hope
it was a good show for you.
"Had a tough race. Ryan kept me honest there at the end," he
continued. “Denny was really good at the second half of that break.
I just felt like he was kind of riding, and I was afraid to lose
control of the race and not be able to get it back. Fortunately it
worked out. Great way to start the season.”
Kyle Larson and Josh Berry raced their way into The Clash earlier
Sunday night by going 1-2 in the crash-filled last chance
qualifying, and Blaney earned a spot based on points scored last
season to complete the 23-driver field.
This year's race marked the Cup Series' first race at the “Mecca of
Madhouse” but didn't produce the off-track temper tantrums the
Bowman Gray regulars are used to watching during weekly grassroots
racing.
But the event was still special.
Richard Childress hails from just 15 minutes away and as a youngster
the Hall of Fame team owner sold peanuts in the grandstands. He was
in the stands Sunday night watching and before the race began, he
stopped by the Fox Sports booth to deliver peanuts and popcorn to
the broadcast crew.
“As a kid we jumped the fence and come in and sell peanuts and
popcorn, then I’d hang out with all the race drivers, and we had a
heck of a time," Childress said. “I said ‘Man, as much fun as they
are having, I’ve got to be a race driver.’ We’d come over here for a
fight and a race would break out.”
Blaney finished second in a Ford for Team Penske and was followed by
Hamlin in a Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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