Chase Elliott wins home race in Atlanta after late block and run

Chase Elliott‘s hometown of Dawsonville, Georgia, is located about eighty-five miles from Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, but victory had eluded him for much of his NASCAR career. In Sunday’s Cup Series race, he needed to throw a block on the final lap to stave off an incoming Corey LaJoie, but he got to add that home win to his résumé.

While Eliott is the four-time-defending Most Popular Driver, LaJoie was perhaps the sentimental pick to win as the underdog seeking his first career national series win. However, the road to victory—especially on a track designed with superspeedway racing in mind—is paved with wrecked cars and aggressive moves. On the final lap, while Elliott was riding in first, LaJoie received a strong push from Erik Jones to catch the leader who then moved up and hit LaJoie’s front-left bumper. The contact was enough to send LaJoie into the turn one wall, where he spun down and hit Ryan Blaney before ricocheting back up and starting a pile-up that ended the race under caution.

“I hate to throw a mega block like that,” said Elliott. “I had kind of shied away from that big block throughout the day. Had always kind of given in at different points to a guy when they had that big of a run.

“But running the last lap, if you let him go, one of two things can happen. You choose the lane you want to lose in and you hope that you have enough time to go and get him back, or you throw a big block and hope you can stay in front of him. The problem is it could go one of two ways for you. Obviously, you can crash throwing the big block, or you can try to be patient and wait, and then the crash happens behind you and you’ve given up the lead and the caution comes out and now the race is over. I don’t know how you know exactly what choice to make in that situation. A guy is coming with a massive run, am I taking the chance of crashing when I threw it up in front of him? Absolutely, but I didn’t think I was going to get another shot at him if he let him grab the lead right there in that situation.

“I was able to defend the bottom side block and I felt more comfortable defending more aggressively up to the top. I thought that was a situation that I could win on. Fortunately, it worked out, but those situations are impossible. They might go right for you some and they might not, and I don’t really know how you know what’s going to happen next to be able to make that choice.”

Credit: James Gilbert/Getty Images

Despite the block, LaJoie bore no ill-will towards Elliott and congratulated him in Victory Lane. He officially finished twenty-first.

“It was nice to have that thing out in the wind for once, but I made my move and it didn’t work out, he made a good block and the siren is ringing in Dawsonville, unfortunately,” he told NBC Sports.

“I was going to school. That was the first time I’ve been leading a restart at one of these superspeedway-style race tracks and how much you have to drag back, time your runs, cover the lanes, it’s all new to me. When I get myself in that position again, I’ll be a little more prepared and hopefully we can do a little better job and be the one that control the blocks as opposed to the one that’s trying to make that late-race move because that guy usually is in the catbird seat.”

Although LaJoie and Elliott, whose teams are technical allies, ended the race on good terms, the same could not be said for Ross Chastain with much of the field. Chastain, who finished second and won the most recent superspeedway race (Talladega in April), continued to make enemies left and right for his overly aggressive racing tactics. Following a lap 91 multi-car wreck triggered by Chastain turning Martin Truex Jr., Aric Almirola threatened over the radio to confront him at a Food Lion supermarket while Austin Dillon commented drivers should “take a different strategy” to avoid those like Chastain “wrecking half the field.”

With fifteen laps remaining, he spun Denny Hamlin, re-stoking a feud that brewed at Gateway last month. While Chastain took responsibility for the contact, he defended it as him overestimating his wounded car’s grip, and a miffed Hamlin noted “everyone has a different tolerance level but I’ve reached my peak.”

Race results

Finish Start Number Driver Team Manufacturer Laps Status
1 1 9 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 260 Running
2 2 1 Ross Chastain Trackhouse Racing Team Chevrolet 260 Running
3 5 2 Austin Cindric Team Penske Ford 260 Running
4 25 43 Erik Jones Petty GMS Motorsports Chevrolet 260 Running
5 6 12 Ryan Blaney Team Penske Ford 260 Running
6 7 99 Daniel Suárez Trackhouse Racing Team Chevrolet 260 Running
7 24 31 Justin Haley Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 260 Running
8 22 10 Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 260 Running
9 18 41 Cole Custer Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 260 Running
10 27 21 Harrison Burton Wood Brothers Racing Ford 260 Running
11 9 19 Martin Truex Jr. Joe GIbbs Racing Toyota 260 Running
12 10 4 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 260 Running
13 3 5 Kyle Larson Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 260 Running
14 32 23 Bubba Wallace 23XI Racing Toyota 260 Running
15 12 34 Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports Ford 260 Running
16 14 14 Chase Briscoe Stewart-Haas Racing Ford 260 Running
17 28 38 Todd Gilliland Front Row Motorsports Ford 260 Running
18 31 6 Brad Keselowski RFK Racing Ford 260 Running
19 15 20 Christopher Bell Joe GIbbs Racing Toyota 260 Running
20 19 18 Kyle Busch Joe GIbbs Racing Toyota 260 Running
21 30 7 Corey LaJoie Spire Motorsports Chevrolet 260 Running
22 21 45 Kurt Busch 23XI Racing Toyota 259 Accident
23 34 51 Cody Ware Rick Ware Racing Ford 259 Running
24 36 77 Landon Cassill* Spire Motorsports Chevrolet 259 Running
25 16 11 Denny Hamlin Joe GIbbs Racing Toyota 259 Running
26 17 22 Joey Logano Team Penske Ford 252 DVP
27 33 15 Garrett Smithley* Rick Ware Racing Ford 252 Running
28 23 42 Ty Dillon Petty GMS Motorsports Chevrolet 174 DVP
29 4 8 Tyler Reddick Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet 170 Accident
30 13 24 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 170 Accident
31 20 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. JTG Daugherty Racicng Chevrolet 162 Engine
32 8 48 Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 160 DVP
33 11 17 Chris Buescher RFK Racing Ford 107 Accident
34 29 16 Noah Gragson* Kaulig Racing Chevrolet 91 Suspension
35 26 3 Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet 90 Accident
36 35 78 B.J. McLeod* Live Fast Motorsports Ford 77 Accident
Italics – Competing for Rookie of the Year
* – Ineligible for points

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