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Elliott Wins at Phoenix to Earn First Cup Title

Elliott Wins at Phoenix to Earn First Cup Title

Chase Elliott holds up the season championship trophy as he celebrates with his race crew in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Phoenix Raceway, Sunday. (AP/Ralph Freso)

Sunday, 08 November 2020 07:49 PM EST

Chase Elliott has spent the last several years being known primarily as NASCAR's most popular driver and the son of "Million Dollar" Bill Elliott.

But late on Sunday afternoon, the 24-year-old Elliott became known as something much better -- the Cup Series' 2020 champion.

Elliott passed fellow Championship 4 driver Joey Logano for the lead with 43 laps to go, stayed up front the rest of the way and won the Season Finale 500 at Phoenix Raceway and the championship.

"This is unbelievable," he said, trying to catch his breath after getting out of his winning Chevrolet Camaro. "Oh my gosh. We did it. We did it. It's all I got to tell you. Unreal."

The champ found the racing Sunday easier than finding the right words to describe his feelings afterward.

"Last week was a huge win," he said of his must-win victory at the Martinsville, Va. short track. "A shot to come here and have a shot to race. It's unbelievable. Heck, I don't know, I don't even know. This is unreal.

"We peaked at the right time. And that's all you can ask for.

"I mean, NASCAR Cup Series champion. You kidding me? Unreal."

The championship comes in the Hendrick Motorsports driver's fifth full season as a full-time driver in Cup.

And it comes as the result of an incredible drive which saw him having to drive up through the field after he was penalized when his car twice failed pre-race inspection.

The victory was his second straight, the 11th of his career and the fifth of the season.

The championship ties him with his father in that category as Bill Elliott won the 1988 title. It comes in just his first time in the Championship 4 round of the Playoffs.

He wound up leading a race-best 154 laps and beat runner-up Brad Keselowski of Team Penske to the finish line by 2.7 seconds.

Elliott said, yes, the pass on Logano for the lead was huge.

"I saw Joey was pretty loose there and I felt that I needed to get to him while I could," he said. "I knew I had been kind of tight on the longer runs and I knew he was probably going to get a little better."

Logano agreed.

"Just didn't have enough speed at the right time," said Logano, who led 125 laps. "Nothing really went wrong. Our pit crew was on it. Our strategy got us out front there at the end. Just the 9 (Elliott) seemed like he lit off pretty good there and the last run he was able to go really fast. We got another vibration there toward the end of the run. We were close.

"It stings not winning. I'm not going to lie, it hurts. At the same time, we're stronger because we went through it."

Keselowski was feeling the sting, as well.

"I would have loved to have one of those late-race yellows like we saw in the Trucks race and Xfinity race," Keselowski said. "We were pretty good there but just didn't have the track position" to catch and pass the winner.

"Solid day. Wish we had one more spot."

Behind Elliott and Keselowski at the finish were the two other Championship 4 drivers -- Logano of Team Penske and Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing, in that order.

"Our overall car speed, we just didn't have enough," said Hamlin, a three-time Daytona 500 winner and 44-time race winner in Cup. But he is still looking for his first championship. "We just, as an organization, have to get a little bit better. Especially on the short tracks.

"It was all I had. I was pushing for everything I had. Just didn't have quite enough today. We ended up fourth."

Still, Hamlin said he was not ready to hang his head. "Nobody's won more than we have the last two years. Daytona 500 two years in a row. Final four two years in a row. Pretty proud what this team's doing."

Logano and Keselowski were going for their second championships while Hamlin was attempting to win his first.

Elliott, who was to start on the pole, made overcoming the drive from the back of the pack look easy. He moved quickly forward and on Lap 27, he moved into the top 10.

Two star drivers were taking their final rides as full-time Cup drivers: seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson and fan favorite Clint Bowyer.

Johnson finished fifth while Bowyer was 14th.

© 2024 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


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Chase Elliott has spent the last several years being known primarily as NASCAR's most popular driver and the son of "Million Dollar" Bill Elliott.
chase elliott, nascar, title
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2020-49-08
Sunday, 08 November 2020 07:49 PM
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