Current:Home > NewsWilliam Byron withstands Texas chaos to clinch berth in Round of 8 of NASCAR playoffs -NextGenWealth
William Byron withstands Texas chaos to clinch berth in Round of 8 of NASCAR playoffs
View
Date:2025-04-27 16:19:35
FORT WORTH, Texas – William Byron took the lead for the first time after the final restart with six laps left to win at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday, advancing to the round of eight in the NASCAR playoffs while giving Hendrick Motorsports its 300th victory.
With Bubba Wallace and Chase Briscoe battling for the lead, Byron was able to get underneath them before finishing that first lap and staying there.
Wallace, who just snuck into the round of 12, started from the pole and led a career-high 111 laps to start the second round, but wound up third behind Byron and Ross Chastain, another playoff contender. Wallace moved up three spots to ninth in the standings, still one below the cutoff line when this round is done.
“I choked … I had my worst restart,” said Wallace, who after just sneaking into the round of 12 started from the pole and led a career-high 111 laps. “This one is going to sting for a little bit.”
Byron finished 1.863 seconds ahead of Chastain for his sixth win of the season, the most in the Cup series. He maintained the points lead he had starting the second round.
The top five finishers were all playoff contenders, with Ross Chastain second, ahead of Wallace, Christopher Bell and Denny Hamlin. Retiring driver Kevin Harvick was sixth and playoff driver Brad Keselowski seventh.
“We’ve just been kind of steady Eddie through the first three or four races and we haven’t shown any flashes, but today I thought we had a good car if we could have just get to the front,” Byron said. “At the end there we were really fast.”
Hamlin, Chris Buescher, Bell, Martin Truex Jr., Chastain, Keselowski and Kyle Larson round out the top eight of the playoff standings behind Byron. Wallace moved up three spots to ninth, still one below the cutoff line when this three-race round is done, with Tyler Reddick, Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch behind him.
There are two more races in the round of 12, at Talladega next weekend and then the Roval at Charlotte.
After a previous restart with 20 laps to go in the 267-lap race, when Larson and Wallace hadn’t taken fresh tires for the final stretch, they were still side-by-side going into Turn 1. Larson was on the inside when he got loose, went up the track and slammed hard into the wall to end his day, though he didn’t make contact with Wallace.
But there was still one more restart, after five cars got caught up in an accident in the back of the field, including playoff contenders Ryan Blaney and Tyler Reddick, last year’s winner at Texas.
That is what set up the 25-year-old Byron in the No. 24 Chevrolet, instead of Larson, getting the milestone victory for Hendrick. It was Byron’s 10th career win.
Byron said he wasn’t sure he could put into words what it meant to get No. 300, expressing his thanks to “Mr. Hendrick for his investment in me, and telling me at 17 years old that he was going to take me to Cup racing. So just appreciate everything he’s done for me. This is awesome.”
Denny Hamlin was racing with damage to his right side after being hit by Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Ty Gibbs on pit road in the first stage.
“Once we got the damage, (the car) just wasn’t as fast as it was before,” Hamlin said. “Still, considering how much damage it had, it was a top-three car. A bunch of carnage happened there in the end, and we avoided it, so we are in a better spot than when we entered.”
BUSCH BACKED OUT
Kyle Busch knew something was wrong with his car when trying to get to the end of first stage. The playoff contender didn’t make it that far, with No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet getting loose and slamming hard into the outside wall in Turn 1 before coming down to the inside of the track.
“I felt like I had a flat right front (tire) , and I was going to come to pit road. I second-guessed it, and said ‘I don’t think so, man. It’s just something’s wrong. Something’s not right, but it’s not a a flat’,” Busch said. “And just all on its own, just turned into the bottom of the race track in Turn one and it just swapped ends on me. That’s the rear, not the front, not having grip.”
Busch had the car in reverse, backing down the entire backstretch, through the third and fourth turns all the way to his pit stall. He finished only 73 laps and was 34th in the 36-car field, dropping from sixth to 12th in the playoff standings.
ODDS AND ENDS
For the first time since Texas opened in 1997, the race wasn’t scheduled for 501 miles, and was 100 miles shorter. … Playoff contenders have won each of the first four playoff races this season, after non-playoff drivers did so in the first four last year. … The outside temperature reached 101 degrees, making it the hottest Cup race ever at Texas, which opened in 1997. The track temperature was 140 degrees early in the race.
LOOSE WHEELS
Two cars lost rear right wheels in a span of 13 laps early in the race. Austin Dillon’s No. 3 Chevrolet when racing full speed near Turn 3 on lap 41, bringing out the first caution soon after the first cycle of green-flag pit stops had mostly been completed.
Then 12 laps later, after another caution, Todd Gilliland was in a pack of cars in Turn 2 when the tire on the No. 51 Ford started coming loose and then snapped off the car.
UP NEXT
The series returns to Talladega Superspeedway, where Busch won double overtime and under caution in April. Blaney and Buescher finished second and third in that race that had 57 lead changes among 21 drivers.
veryGood! (3516)
Related
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- The Parkland school massacre will be reenacted, with gunfire, in lawsuit against sheriff’s deputy
- Father drowns to death while saving his 3 kids from river
- Russian shelling hits a landmark church in the Ukrainian city of Kherson
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- $4M settlement reached with family of man who died in bed bug-infested jail cell
- Paul Reubens' 'Pee-wee is going to live on': Cabazon Dinosaurs paints tribute to late actor
- MLB trade deadline winners and losers: Mets burning it all down was a big boon for Astros
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Police step up security, patrol courthouse ahead of Trump appearance. Follow live updates
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Millions stolen in brazen daylight jewelry robbery in Paris
- This Northern Manhattan Wetland Has Faced Climate-Change-Induced Erosion and Sea Level Rise. A Living Shoreline Has Reimagined the Space
- Hex crypto founder used investor funds to buy $4.3 million black diamond, SEC says
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Horoscopes Today, August 2, 2023
- As charges mount, here's a look at Trump's legal and political calendar
- Kim Cattrall Makes Surprise And Just Like That Appearance Ahead of Season Finale Cameo
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
NTSB: Pilot’s medical clearance had been renewed a month before crash landing
Should Trump go to jail? The 2024 election could become a referendum on that question
The incandescent lightbulb ban is now in effect. Here's what you need to know.
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Kidnapping in Haiti of U.S. nurse Alix Dorsainvil and her daughter sparks protests as locals demand release
Report: Ex-New Mexico State basketball coach says he was unaware of hazing within program
How much money do you need to retire? Most Americans calculate $1.8 million, survey says.