Search
Close this search box.

Partner

Ross Chastain Emerges from Last-Lap Chaos at COTA, Captures First Cup Series Victory

share it
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
PC: Trackhouse Racing | Twitter

It doesn’t get much crazier than that…

After three consecutive finishes inside the top-three, Ross Chastain and Trackhouse Racing have finally found their way to victory lane in the NASCAR Cup Series, capturing the victory in Sunday’s EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix at Circuit of The Americas.

Chastain led a race-high 31 laps en-route to his first career victory in the NASCAR Cup Series, but the path to get there wasn’t exactly uneventful.

On the final restart of the race, in NASCAR Overtime, Chastain was able to get back onto the track in prime position – after being pushed wide by race leader Tyler Reddick in turn one — eventually squeezing his way into the top spot.

Just one lap later, on the final lap of the event, Allmendinger had tracked the Trackhouse Racing entry down from nearly a second behind, to attempt to make a move for the victory, when all hell broke loose, allowing third-place Alex Bowman to be in the picture as well.

Both Allmendinger and Bowman would get ahead of the Alva, Florida-native at one point in the race’s final four corners, with Chastain eventually coming back into the fray exiting turn 19, nudging the Kaulig Racing entry, and sending it spinning into Bowman.

Video: Ross Chastain Initiates Contact on Allmendinger, Bowman to Score First-Career Cup Win in Frantic Finish

“It’s insane. To go up against some of the best with AJ, I mean, I know he is going to be upset with me, but we raced hard, both of us, and he owes me one,” Chastain said. “But when it comes to a Cup win, man, I can’t let that go down without a fight.”

Alex Bowman would ultimately finish in second place, with Christopher Bell, Chase Elliott, and Tyler Reddick rounding out the top-five. Polesitter Ryan Blaney finished in sixth, with Martin Truex Jr, Austin Cindric, Erik Jones, and Austin Dillon rounding out the top-10.

AJ Allmendinger, who was in prime position to become the winningest road course driver in NASCAR National Series history, was relegated back to 33rd, after being spun and stuck in the gravel trap.

Daniel Suarez, who won the race’s first stage, finished in 24th, after being spun in the opening laps of stage two, and later suffering power steering issues on his Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet.

Exiting Circuit of The Americas, Chase Elliott continues to hold a 13-point advantage over Ryan Blaney, who sits second in the point standings. Joey Logano, Alex Bowman, and Ross Chastain round out the top five.

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Post

NASCAR to utilize shorter COTA National Course layout in 2025 for the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series
NASCAR to Utilize Shorter "National" Course Layout at COTA in 2025
Richard Childress Racing names Richard Boswell new crew chief for Austin Dillon, hires John Klausmeier as technical director, promotes Keith Rodden to VP of Competition
Richard Boswell to Serve as Austin Dillon Crew Chief; RCR Makes Competition Department Moves
Daniel Hemric to drive the No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet Silverado full-time in the 2025 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Daniel Hemric Moves to McAnally-Hilgemann Racing No. 19 Truck in 2025
Kris Wright will run the full 2025 NASCAR Xfinity Series season in the No. 5 Our Motorsports Chevrolet
Kris Wright Joins Our Motorsports for 2025 NASCAR Xfinity Season
Riley Herbst joins 23XI Racing for full-time NASCAR Cup Series campaign in 2025 will drive third entry No. 35 Toyota
23XI Racing Adds Riley Herbst to 2025 Roster in Third Full-Time Car
Travis Mack has been named the 2025 crew chief for John Hunter Nemechek and the No. 42 LEGACY MOTOR CLUB NASCAR Cup Series team
Travis Mack Joins LEGACY MOTOR CLUB as Nemechek's Crew Chief in 2025

Join Our Newsletter

Ready to have NASCAR news hand-delivered to your email daily?

Related Article