Motorsports
Kaulig Racing Race Recap | The Chilango 150 – Speedway Digest
No. 16 Celsius Chevrolet Start: 34thStage 1 Finish: 11thStage 2 Finish: 5thFinish: 4thChristian Eckes started the Chilango 150 at the rear of the field, following an unapproved adjustment to the No. 16 Chevrolet. Making up ground and battling his way through the field, Eckes went on to finish Stage 1 in 11th place, just shy […]

No. 16 Celsius Chevrolet
Start: 34th
Stage 1 Finish: 11th
Stage 2 Finish: 5th
Finish: 4th
Christian Eckes started the Chilango 150 at the rear of the field, following an unapproved adjustment to the No. 16 Chevrolet. Making up ground and battling his way through the field, Eckes went on to finish Stage 1 in 11th place, just shy of earning a stage point. He pitted during the first stage break for tires, fuel, and air pressure adjustments to help the No. 16 Chevy’s rear tires last longer in the next segment. He started the second stage from 18th place. Happy with the changes, Eckes radioed that the team was headed in the right direction. As the field began short-pitting the stage, crew chief Alex Yontz made the call to stay out, and Eckes earned valuable points with a fifth-place finish in Stage 2. He pitted during the final stage break for the same adjustments as the previous pit stop, before starting the final stage from 13th place. Mayhem ensued after the restart, and Eckes navigated through multiple wrecking cars, sitting in second when the caution came out. He held onto second place for multiple laps, before eventually falling to fourth place, where he finished the race, earning his career-best result in the NASCAR Xfinity series.
“I don’t know if our No. 16 Celsius Chevy quite had the speed of a fourth [place] today, but everybody did a great job of getting us in position to get a top five out of it. Obviously, we’ve struggled with some adversity — it’s been a tough season, so to get a decent finish out of it is definitely a step in the right direction.”
– Christian Eckes
No. 10 Race to Stop Suicide Chevrolet
Start: 29th
Stage 1 Finish: 34th
Stage 2 Finish: 6th
Finish: 13th
Daniel Dye reported early that the front end of his No. 10 Race to Stop Suicide Chevy was tight handling. The team decided to short-pit the opening stage, pitting with three laps remaining for tires, fuel, and an air pressure adjustment to help with handling. Dye stayed out under the stage break to start the second stage in eighth place. The adjustments proved to be positive for Dye throughout the second segment, as he finished Stage 2 in sixth place, earning valuable stage points. On the opening lap of the final stage, Dye avoided a wreck with minimal damage to his No. 10 Chevy and went on to finish in 13th place.
“Glad we got to get some really good stage points today. At the end we got a little bit of damage that maybe prevented us from a top 10, but I’m generally happy with how the trip went for this No. 10 team.”
– Daniel Dye
No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevrolet
Start: 29th
Stage 1 Finish: 21st
Stage 2 Finish: 32nd
Finish: 20th
Josh Williams lost three spots on the opening lap. On lap three, the No. 14 made contact with the No. 11, giving the Alloy Employer Services Chevy left-front damage that necessitated repairs. The yellow flag appeared on lap four, giving the team time to repair the damage and fuel up the Chevy on pit road. He restarted at the back of the field with 15 laps to go in Stage 1 and began churning out consistently improved lap times, even recording the fastest lap of all 39 drivers on the restart lap. He finished Stage 1 in 21st, staying out as others pitted. Under caution, Williams stopped for tires, fuel, and track bar and air pressure adjustments, restarting in 24th for the second stage. He continued showing speed, and crew chief Eddie Pardue called the No. 11 down pit road to flip the stage with tires and fuel; Williams, however, sped in one of the final sections of pit road and was given a penalty. He finished Stage 2 in 32nd and restarted for Stage 3 in 20th. Immediately, chaos ensued on the restart, and Williams dodged multiple wrecks as the caution reappeared. After refiring on older tires, the No. 11 dropped to 25th with 10 laps remaining, but Williams recaptured 24th before the caution came out with seven laps to go. He stayed out and took the green flag from 22nd with four laps to go, passing two cars on the restart en route to a 20th-place finish.
“A frustrating day overall. We definitely got faster as the race went on, but a few things didn’t go our way from the get-go. That’s just how it goes sometimes, but it’s not the finish I think we were capable of. Thankful for Alloy Employer Services and the team at the box. They stayed with me the whole time.”
– Josh Williams
Kaulig Racing PR