Elliott into Round of 8 with Talladega victory

Driver concerns about safety hung over the playoff race

Chase Elliott celebrates in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race, Sunday, Oct. 2, 2022, in Talladega, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

TALLADEGA, Ala. — As the stars of NASCAR raged over safety concerns with the new car, rumors swirled the drivers would organize some sort of protest at one of the most dangerous tracks on the circuit.

Perhaps they’d outright boycott Talladega Superspeedway.

Or maybe they’d send their message to NASCAR by refusing to seriously race on Sunday.

But all 37 drivers showed up at their cars as scheduled. It’s the playoffs, after all, and there’s a championship to be won.

And it was Chase Elliott, NASCAR’s most popular driver who a day earlier accused series leadership of taking a step backward in safety, who drove to Victory Lane and earned the automatic berth into the third round of the playoffs.

Elliott, who typically avoids controversial conversations, joined the growing chorus of veteran drivers who found NASCAR’s slow response to their concerns unacceptable. Alex Bowman, his teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, and Kurt Busch missed Sunday’s race with concussions, and Cody Shane Ware competed with a broken foot. Busch has missed 11 consecutive races.

Rick Hendrick said he wasn’t surprised when his 26-year-old superstar took a rare public stance.

“I think these guys are concerned and he sees a teammate hurt, and he’s a young guy with a career ahead of him,” Hendrick said. “I think this has been on Chase’s mind. I’m proud of him. He doesn’t say much, but when he speaks, everybody knows he’s not just popping off. He’s concerned.”

The race was one of the cleanest in memory at Talladega and certainly the least dramatic through the first five races of the playoffs. NASCAR’s new Next Gen car developed a rash of problems in the first four playoff races, and Bowman’s concussion seemed to push the drivers to their breaking point.

NASCAR is scheduled to test this week a potential solution to the stiffness of the cars that drivers claim they’ve complained about all through the development of the Next Gen.

That did little to calm the drivers leading into Talladega, one of the most unpredictable and chaotic tracks on the calendar. The drivers certainly could have deliberately taken it easy, but they truly raced.

There were 57 lead changes among 17 drivers and of the six cautions, only one was for a multicar crash.

“That was a pretty calm Talladega race,” Elliott said. “That’s something different.”

Elliott was fifth on the final restart with two laps remaining and claimed control of the outside lane to stalk leader Ryan Blaney. The 2020 Cup champion surged ahead with a push from Erik Jones on the final lap, threw a block on Blaney’s attempt to reclaim the lead and then beat Blaney to the finish line by .046 seconds.

Elliott is the first driver through five playoff races to automatically advance into the next round with a victory, and he reclaimed the lead atop the Cup standings. The first four races were won by drivers not eligible for the championship in a chaotic start to the 10-race postseason.

“It gets you through to the next (round) and that’s all you can ask for is just to add more opportunities,” Elliott said. “So it’s a big deal and we’re excited for these final handful of events and hopefully we can give it a run.”

Next week’s elimination playoff race is Sunday at The Roval at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The field will be trimmed from 12 to eight after the race. Kyle Larson is the defending race winner, while Elliott has two wins on the hybrid course and Blaney won the inaugural 2018 event.