Kyle Busch had used up his eligibility for this year in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.
Ty Gibbs had the week off.
But the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota they have driven to a combined seven victories this season was still around—much to the chagrin of the series regulars.
Competing in the Xfinity Series for the first time since he finished third in the final standings in 2019, Christopher Bell led 151 of 200 laps, swept the first two stages and won Saturday‘s Ambetter Get Vaccinated 200 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
The victory was Bell‘s third straight at the 1.058-mile track and the 17th of his career. It was the sixth straight win for Joe Gibbs Racing at New Hampshire, which did not host an Xfinity Series race last year because of schedule changes necessitated by the coronavirus pandemic.
Bell was the only former New Hampshire winner in the field for Saturday‘s race. He finished a comfortable 6.241 seconds ahead of runner-up Justin Allgaier, who held off third-place Daniel Hemric during the final 45-lap green-flag run.
From Bell‘s standpoint, the secret to success was easy to define.
“What I‘ve got figured out is I‘ve got really, really fast race cars to drive,” said Bell, who started 14th and took the lead for the first time on Lap 44—one circuit before the end of the first stage. “I just love being here with Joe Gibbs Racing. All these Supras I‘ve for the last three times I‘ve been here have been amazing.
“Hopefully, the Camry is just a good tomorrow (in the NASCAR Cup Series race), but it just feels good to win.”
A flat right front tire shot Patrick Emerling‘s Chevrolet into the outside wall in Turn 4 to cause the fifth and last caution of the race on Lap 149. After an adjustment to his No. 7 Chevrolet designed to create short-run speed, Allgaier battled Bell side-by side after the final restart on Lap 156.
But the strength and turning ability of Bell‘s car, set up by crew chief Chris Gayle, soon prevailed, and Bell pulled away as Allgaier and Hemric fought for the second position.
“Obviously, it was a good short-track battle there,” Allgaier said. “This place is difficult, but it‘s fun. You‘re out there and you‘re sliding around a lot. We didn‘t start off the race like we wanted to, and (crew chief) Jason (Burdett) and the boys did a great job of making adjustments and getting us where we needed to be at.
“I wish I knew what we needed there. The Gibbs cars definitely had something we didn‘t have today. We‘ll go back home, we‘ll keep working on it and hopefully get our Brandt Camaro into Victory Lane sooner than later.”
Series leader Austin Cindric ran fourth, followed by Harrison Burton, announced this week as the driver of the No. 21 Wood Brothers NASCAR Cup Series Ford for 2022. Justin Haley, Myatt Snider, Josh Berry, Brett Moffitt and Riley Herbst completed the top 10.
Herbst made a remarkable recovery from an early accident on a Lap 26 restart and now trails Michael Annett by 32 points for the final Playoff position. Annett missed Saturday‘s race—with Berry as his substitute—after undergoing surgery for a stress fracture in his right femur.
NASCAR opted not to apply traction compound to the third lane of the racing surface, though the PJ1 had been used for recent races at New Hampshire.
Accordingly, Bell believes racing on Saturday without the compound will give him an advantage in Sunday‘s Cup race.
“Especially coming here, the Xfinity rules package is really similar to the Cup rules package,” Bell said. “I hope we have a really fast Camry tomorrow.”
— NASCAR Wire Service —
See race details at: Race Results, Driver Points Standings, Owner Points Standings, Cumulative Report, Penalty Report.