HAMPTON, Ga. – When the checkered flag finally flew over Sunday’s — and Monday’s — Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart at EchoPark Speedway, Bubba Wallace believed he had secured a runner-up finish. Instead, NASCAR assessed a post-race penalty for advancing his position below the yellow line on the final lap, dropping the No. 23 Toyota to the last car on the lead lap.
Wallace was credited with a 29th-place effort, a massive 27-point swing.
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“[The rule] says advancing your position, which I did not do,” Wallace stated to a group of media members after the penalty was issued. “I stayed third and I was all over the brakes to make sure I did not advance. As soon as I turned, I was like, ‘I am going to wreck.’ I got on the brakes, kept it underneath me and still ended up side-by-side.
“That move should have propelled us to the lead and it didn’t because I knew it was wrong because my car did not like that move. We will see what we can do, but I did not advance my position. I stayed third from the entry to three, all the way until 50 yards away, [Ty Gibbs] gave us a shot.”
Wallace took the white flag in third position and shoved Ryan Blaney to the race lead entering Turn 1. As the No. 12 car swung high on Carson Hocevar, the No. 23 Toyota darted to the bottom down the backstretch, making it three-wide for the top spot. In the process, he dropped below the yellow line and remained next to Hocevar and Blaney through Turns 3 and 4, when a shove from Christopher Bell propelled Blaney to the victory.
“You go back and look at the SMT; I’m on the brakes trying to keep it underneath me and not advance my position,” Wallace added. “We’ve seen that in the past, all day, two cars get side by side into the corner, the guy that pops bottom — clears. I didn’t clear, and that’s why we didn’t win the race, because I had to bail because I was going to crash. We will talk to the team to figure out what we want to do.”
Wallace bolted over to his 23XI Racing hauler to review the data with No. 23 crew chief Charles Denike and Dave Rogers, director of competition for 23XI Racing. After briefly evaluating their case, the trio walked to the NASCAR hauler for a 31-minute meeting with NASCAR officials.
Case closed.
It was deemed official that Wallace violated Sections 8.7.2.A of the NASCAR Rule Book. The rule states, “Passing below the double painted lines to advance position will result in a black flag.”
“A penalty is a penalty,” Wallace said as he departed the series hauler.
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The final-lap penalty cost Wallace 27 points alone. Add in the points he lost at the end of Stage 2, when Gibbs bumped him out of sixth coming to the green-white-checkered finish, and it made for a costly race, tallying a mere nine points despite racing at the front for the bulk of the evening, including 11 circuits ahead of the field.
After the race, Wallace and Gibbs met on pit road.
“I just said lift,” Wallace noted after having a post-race discussion with his Toyota quasi-teammate. “I said there’s an opportunity to give, and you didn’t. He was like, ‘Well, don’t block me.’ It’s like, bro, you hit me square in the bumper. The block was well ahead; you seen it coming.”
On the final lap, it was a shove from Gibbs that propelled Wallace into the runner-up spot before the penalty was assessed. Gibbs went over to apologize for the Stage 2 mishap but didn’t enjoy the interaction.
“I went to tell him sorry because he cleared himself and then, unfortunately, he showed a lot of disrespect,” Gibbs stated. “It seems like it didn’t work out for him. I tried to help him out there at the end and push him to win.”
With the 29th-place showing, Wallace has finished outside the top 20 in six of the last nine events. He remains 13th in the regular-season standings, 55 points above the cutline. He lost 22 points to The Chase cutline at EchoPark.