Chase Elliott rallied past Ryan Blaney off the final turn in a two-lap shootout at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday to advance to the next round of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, winning the YellaWood 500 in Talladega, Ala.
Restarting fifth and on the bottom line, Elliott maneuvered his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to the top in front of Erik Jones, setting up the charge Elliott needed to pass Blaney for his 18th career triumph.
“I wasn’t super crazy about being on the bottom,” Elliott said. “Fortunately, I got just clear enough off (Turn) 2 to slide up in front of Erik. He gave me some great shoves.”
The victory was the fifth of the season for NASCAR’s reigning Most Popular Driver award winner and moved him into the Round of 8 for next week’s race at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s “roval” layout.
Blaney finished second in his No. 12 Ford on Sunday and said he thought about throwing a block.
“I definitely thought about it,” said Blaney, who considered sliding up and perhaps up in the middle three-wide with Elliott at the top. “When you go to the middle and you don’t have (help), your chances of getting split are so high.
“As much as I trust Chase, I don’t trust him not to take me three-wide and leave me in the middle. … I’m probably going to replay in my head five things I could’ve done different, but not a bad day.”
Rounding out the top five were Michael McDowell, Ross Chastain and Denny Hamlin.
Playoff contender Joey Logano — the 2018 Cup champion — caught minor contact in a Lap 24 multi-car incident, as did the No. 48 of Noah Gragson, who was driving in place of championship competitor Alex Bowman (concussion).
On the final turn of Stage 1, Blaney’s Ford roared off Turn 4, got a strong run and edged Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota by less than two feet for the 10 bonus playoff points. William Byron, who was leading with four laps to go, finished 12th and received no extra points.
Another playoff driver — pole-sitter Christopher Bell, who started the race below the Round of 12 cut line — spun his Toyota coming too fast to pit road, had to change plans and replace his tires and lost valuable position in the draft. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver slid back to 32nd and finished 17th.
Running 1-2 on the final circuit of Stage 2, Kyle Larson led teammate Elliott off Turn 4, but Elliott moved his No. 9 Chevrolet out of line and swooped past Larson’s No. 5 and beat him to the checkers for the playoff bonus points.
–Field Level Media
Polesitter Chase Elliott led 171 of 200 laps to claim NASCAR’s season-opening exhibition race, the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, Sunday night in Winston-Salem, N.C. The Hendrick Motorsports…
NASCAR is standing on the threshold of another date with its rich history and will make that become a reality this Sunday night with an exhibition race in North Carolina’s…
Tim Cindric has stepped down from his day-to-day role as leader of Team Penske, however he will remain the president of the organization’s IndyCar Series program. Cindric, 56, joined Penske…
NASCAR opens 2025 season with exhibition at tiny track
Tim Cindric reduces role at Team Penske
10 storylines to follow for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series
Mercedes’ Wolff: Lewis Hamilton in Ferrari red like seeing ex ‘with a new friend’