NASCAR: Austin Dillon move was “really close to crossing the line”
Dillon lost the lead to Joey Logano on the restart to overtime but as the two raced into Turn 3 on the final lap, Dillon drove hard into the corner and into the back of Logano, sending him into the wall.
Moments later, as Denny Hamlin raced up on the inside of Dillon, Hamlin got turned across the nose of Dillonâs car and also hit the wall.
The caution was displayed for the wreck and Dillon crossed the finish line first. NASCAR officials did not hesitate at the time to direct Dillon to Victory Lane.
NASCAR will review everything
NASCARâs senior vice president of competition, Elton Sawyer, said the sanctioning body would still review Dillonâs actions as well as those by Logano, who pulled into Dillonâs teamâs pit stall after the race and spun his tires with a crowd of people around.
âI thought the last lap, thatâs something that, you know, our sport has been a contact sport for a long time,â Sawyer said. âYou know we always hear âWhereâs the line?â and did someone cross the line?
âI would say that the last lap, it was awful close to the line. Weâll take a look at all the available resources from audio to video ⊠to see if anything rises to a level that we feel like we need to penalize.â
In the past, NASCAR has generally penalized retaliatory moves and also intentional wrecking opponents, but that is usually reserved for incidents on intermediate and superspeedways.
âHistorically, that hasnât been our DNA to take race (wins) away, but thatâs not to say that going forward this wouldnât start to set a precedent, or do we have to look at it,â he said.
âWe want our drivers to race hard but if we feel like maybe weâre getting to a point in time where that would have crossed the line. Weâll look at all data and discuss next week to see if anything rises to a different higher level where it would be a penalty.â
Austin Dillon, Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet Camaro
Photo by: Nigel Kinrade / NKP / Motorsport Images
Pressed on whether NASCAR would have called a penalty at the time if it really felt Dillonâs actions deserved it, Sawyer said, âIt happened fast, but I would say if you look at that, in my view, thatâs getting right up really close to the line.â
Dillonâs car owner and grandfather, Richard Childress, was adamant nothing transpired at the end of the race that hasnât happened countless times previously.
âShort-track racing is short-track racing. Youâre going to see it. Iâve seen it more than once,â Childress said.
âWhen it comes down to the end of the day, any of these guys do what it takes to win the race there at the very end.â
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