AVONDALE, Ariz. — Alpha Prime Racing team owner Tommy Joe Martins had to be restrained after a physical altercation with one of his team’s crew chiefs following Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series season finale at Phoenix Raceway.
Martins confronted Joe Williams, crew chief of the No. 4 Chevrolet driven to a 27th-place finish by Parker Retzlaff, in the 1-mile track’s pit area after the season-ending event. The argument turned physical and Alpha Prime crew members intervened.
“Yeah, we got into a little bit, but I mean ultimately, that’s just tempers boiling up at the end of the race,” Martins said outside the teams’ haulers. “I don’t have anything personal against Joe or anybody on the team. It’s fine. It is what it is, man. We’re racing. We’re all big boys.”
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Williams told reporter Noah Lewis that the incident was “heat of the battle,” citing frustrations all around. Martins said the dispute stemmed from the team’s tire management in the 200-mile race.
“We are a smaller-budget team. We very often get tires from the Truck Series,” Martins said. “We very often get tires from other teams when they fall out of a race, because it is cheaper than buying the full allotment of tires. We do this all the time. There was a set that came from the Truck Series that the crew chief didn’t like. Obviously, it’s his decision to not put them on the car, but when you put on 11-lap tires instead of putting on a set that’s a mock qualifying set, you’re generally going to fall back a little bit further in the race, and ultimately, what was told to me was that there was a problem with that set of tires, that it was chewed-up or blistered, and it’s like, that’s a decision that can be made in the morning when we inspect the tires, and it didn’t get made.
“I mean, I understand if something’s wrong with the tire, don’t put it on the car, but at the same time, like it’s not because … I definitely would get another set of tires. I didn’t know there’s a problem with the tire. I’m not over there inspecting the tires. It’s a decision that we make financially over the course of a year for the team, and it’s something that we do all the time. So this is not new, ultimately. It’s not like, all of a sudden, it’s the end of the year, and I’ve got to pinch some pennies here. No, it’s a decision we make all the time.”
Martins said some of the angst stemmed from Retzlaff’s car losing ground, then feeling blamed for being overly miserly.
“That, to me, was just a little frustrating when I see our car falling back further and then at the end of the day, we wind up catching the flak for it,” Martins said. “I would tell you on the team management side, that’s very frustrating, because ultimately I root for Joe and I root for Parker, I root for our entire team. I want them to have everything they need to go run good. It’s the end of the year. I’m really not that worried about 1,500 bucks. I would go buy another set of tires.”
Another component of the post-race frustration was that Martins was attempting to celebrate a 20th-place finish in the Xfinity Series owners’ standings, with the No. 44 Chevrolet team driven by Brennan Poole, who placed 18th in Saturday’s race. Retzlaff’s No. 4 team ended up 24th in the owners’ points.
“I would say overall, it was a positive year for our company, Brennan getting top 20 points there and the owners points there at the end of the race. That was the thing that I was in the midst of trying to celebrate while I basically was getting insulted, and that frustrates me. Ultimately, I want every one of our teams to run really good. Parker has been a great driver for us, and Brennan’s been a great driver for us, and Josh Williams came over ran a limited schedule on kind of a screwed-up deal, and I want him to run good. I want all of our cars to run good.
“So if I had to rate our year overall, yeah, you’ve got a team that’s got the probably the 33rd and 34th budget in the field, and they finished 20th and 24th in owner points, that’s pretty good. I mean, it’s hard for me to really say that we had a bad year. It’s just at the end of the year, at the end of every race, I think everybody’s just a little frustrated with everything not going perfectly.”








