Chase Elliott was left frustrated after he finished sixth in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway as the No.9 team’s winless streak continues
Chase Elliott pointed the finger of blame squarely at himself after frustration at the Coca-Cola 600. Elliott entered the race with high hopes of ending his winless run but eventually had to settle for a sixth-place finish in the NASCAR Cup Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
The Hendrick Motorsports ace faced setbacks due to errors behind the wheel, leading crew chief Alan Gustafson to devise a daring strategy. The ‘Hail Mary’ strategy in the race’s final stage didn’t yield the hoped-for caution, ending Elliott’s hopes of winning.
The race, the first of a new Amazon deal which saw Carl Edwards admit he “got it wrong” on his return, saw Ross Chastain overtake Ellliott’s teammate William Byron late on to win. Despite securing a top-10 spot, Elliott openly admitted to Express U.S. Sports that he was the weak link for the No. 9 team as he insisted he was to blame for not finishing higher.
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“I thought our Napa Chevy was really good,” he said. “Our whole team did a great job except for me, honestly.”
Reflecting on the night’s performance, he lamented: “Gained spots on pit road all night, had a fast car…and I gave them all right back.”
When questioned about the late-race strategy, Elliott remarked: “It was great. We ended up finishing sixth. I think I had p—– away probably back to 12th or something before that.”
Elliott made a costly mistake on a restart early in the final stage after Carson Hocevar blew an engine and brought out the caution. Elliott fell from fifth to tenth almost instantly after being passed inside and outside and losing his momentum on turns one and two.
His team then made a daring call to stay out longer than most during green-flag pit stops, with only Ty Gibbs remaining on the track longer. Despite their hopes for a caution, it never came, and Elliott’s No. 9 crew decided to pit on lap 357 for the last time.
Amazon Prime Video’s pit reporter Marty Snider weighed in during the race: “Hail Mary over for Chase Elliott and Alan Gustafson. They tried all they could.”
He also recalled Elliott’s earlier self-critique: “Chase said a couple of runs ago, ‘I just need to be better on restarts tonight’. Four tires here.”
NASCAR analyst Steve Letarte offered his take on the strategy: “If you’re going to run this strategy, commit to it. Run until you need fuel. Because the longer you run, if the caution comes out, now the question is Byron, Hamlin, Chastain, they might come and get tires again.”
He praised the bold approach: “I love the gamble and I love the all-in aspect. The 54 (Ty Gibbs) is trying everything.”