If not for a costly misstep on pit road by his crew, Chase Elliott could have been the Hendrick Motorsports driver celebrating in Victory Lane at Kansas Speedway, instead of Kyle Larson. The day had been shaping up well, but one error snowballed into another, turning a promising run at the front into a P15 finish by the time the checkered flag flew.
Elliott started the race from P9 and showed a strong pace throughout, finishing both Stage 1 and Stage 2 in P2. A clean pit stop following Stage 2 allowed the #9 Chevrolet to take control of the restart, holding off Kyle Larson and Brad Keselowski to lead the opening laps of the final segment. But on lap 195, when Keselowski suffered a flat tire, it triggered a round of pit stops that proved pivotal.
Elliott led the field onto the pit road and pulled into stall No. 41, located closest to the pit entry. Everything appeared to go according to plan — until the crew ended up making a minor error, which led to some big changes.
Jackman TJ Semke dropped the car a fraction of a second too early. Rear-tire changer Chad Avrit had not yet secured the right-rear wheel, forcing Semke to raise the car again so the lug nut could be tightened.
The mistake, the crew’s only miscue of the day, cost them dearly. The stop stretched to over 14 seconds — an eternity in a pit lane where eight-second stops are the norm. Elliott tumbled from the lead to rejoin in 16th, and couldn’t regain the lost ground.
The 2020 NASCAR Cup champion clawed his way back to P12 late in the run, but ultimately fell to P15 as Todd Gilliland, Corey Heim, and Noah Gragson slipped by in the closing laps.
Not focusing too much on the downside, Chad Knaus, the Vice President of Competition for Hendrick Motorsports, said, “It was great for the #9 this weekend. They unloaded, they were good. Chase had very favorable comments about the race car straight out of the gate.
“It’s unfortunate that the issue happened today because I think we’d be sitting here with them easily in the top-five with the pace that they had. But it only takes one hiccup, and it can kind of derail your day.”
He added, “We’ve got to keep working on those things, but as long as they continue to bring good race cars and fast race cars and execute at a high level, they’re going to be where we need them.”
Although the 29-year-old Elliott is yet to visit Victory Lane this season, he currently sits fourth in the driver standings, holding an average finish of 11.6 with three top-five results through the first 12 races.
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!