One lap. That’s all it took for Ross Chastain to drop a watermelon and raise a trophy in celebration. The 29-year-old Floridian led only the last — typically frantic — lap in the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday to take his second career NASCAR Cup Series victory.
Chastain was running third behind Erik Jones and Kyle Larson with one lap remaining. Larson pulled out of line to the outside, poised to make a pass for the lead. But Jones pulled in front of Larson to block the momentum while Chastain kept his No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet steady below them maintaining pace, ultimately pulling away to the win as the other two cars lost momentum battling each other.
RELATED: Official results | At-track photos
“Holy cow, we didn’t do anything,” Chastain yelled on his team radio after taking the checkered flag by a mere 0.105 seconds. “We just stayed down there.”
And it worked.
“I’m always the one going to the top too early and making the mistake and there at the end, with like eight (laps) to go I was like ‘I’m not going up there again, I did that a couple times today,’ ” said Chastain, who earned his first career series victory at Austin’s Circuit of The Americas on March 27.
“I was like, I’ll just drive the bottom, I’m not going to lose the race for us. They just kept going up and moving out of the way.”
Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon crossed the line in second, followed by Joe Gibbs Racing’s Kyle Busch while the Hendrick Motorsports driver Larson was able to finish fourth for his first top-five finish in a superspeedway race in 31 tries.
Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. was fifth followed by Jones, who came less than one lap away from giving Petty GMS Motorsports and team owner Richard Petty its first win since 2014.
“Just the last lap, it’s typical here,” said a disappointed Jones, who finished sixth. “I’ve been close here so many times in this race and the fall race.”
“Looking back,” he continued. “I wish I’d stayed in the bottom but didn’t realize they were coming with that much speed. Tried to defend the 5 (Larson), but was too far ahead already and obviously it opened the door for the 1 (Chastain).
He did take solace in the showing, however.
“Happy to run up front and lead laps, just would really love to get that 43 to Victory Lane and thought today might be the day,” Jones said. “We were fast all day long, had speed and especially being out front there at the end I know we had a shot, just couldn’t quite close it out.”
Larson was equally as disappointed hoping to turn his best race performance at Talladega into a trophy.
“I felt like I did a pretty near perfect job for me at a superspeedway until the last lap there,” said Larson, the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion. “I should have faked going high and gone back low. I had that run there.’
“Just that little inexperience there, probably,” he added.
Larson’s Hendrick teammate Chase Elliott, a former Talladega winner, finished seventh, followed by former Daytona 500 winner Michael McDowell, Hendrick’s Alex Bowman and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick.
The race ending capped off a typically dramatic day featuring 41 lead changes among 16 drivers. Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron led a race-best 38 of the 188 laps and won Stage 2, but finished 15th, unable to make up ground after his final pit stop in the dicey closing laps.
Bubba Wallace, who won last fall at Talladega and led 15 laps on Sunday, won Stage 1 — his first stage win of the season — but as with Byron, lost positions in the final laps. He was involved in a wreck coming to the checkered flag and finished 17th in the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota.
A multi-car crash on a Stage 2 restart thinned the field of contenders. Joey Logano’s No. 22 Ford was shuffled out of line into the outside retaining wall, bouncing back into traffic and collecting several others. The No. 99 Chevrolet of Daniel Suárez, who had led 28 laps early, joined the cars of Logano, Ty Dillon and Harrison Burton among the eliminated.
MORE: Logano, Suárez out early
Elliott’s top-10 result was good enough for him to extend the championship lead over the 11th-place finisher, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney. He’s now 21 points up on the field heading to Dover Motor Speedway next weekend, where the NASCAR Cup Series will race Sunday (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Bowman is the defending race winner.
Note: Post-race inspection was completed in the Cup Series garage without issue, confirming Chastain’s victory. NASCAR officials indicated that six cars (Nos. 4, 5, 6, 11, 19 and 48) will be taken back to the wind tunnel and NASCAR’s R&D Center for further inspection.
Contributing: Staff reports