Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Reutimann gambles to maiden win

David Reutimann claimed his maiden Sprint Cup series win in a rain-interrupted Coca Cola 600 at Lowe's Motor Speedway

The event, which had been postponed from Sunday due to rain, was itself interrupted by rain four times, including three red flag periods, which added up to nearly four hours of waiting for drivers, teams and fans.

During the sixth and final caution of the day, which was called due to a slight drizzle on lap 221 of 400 scheduled, Kyle Busch led the field into the pits as the leaders all needed to refuel, but three drivers, led by Reutimann, gambled on staying out hoping the rain would intensify and the race would be stopped.

As they had already passed the halfway mark, the order could eventually become the official race results if efforts to resume the event were not successful.

After two hours of waiting, and nearly six-and-a-half hours after the green flag waved for the first time, officials decided to call it a day as the rain intensified, making Reutimann the sixth driver to take his maiden Sprint Cup series victory in the longest race of the calendar, which celebrated its 50th anniversary this year.

As well as Reutimann claiming his first win, his team Michael Waltrip Racing also took their maiden victory in its third season in NASCAR's premier series.

"You never dream about winning a rain-delayed race," Reutimann said. "But I'm proud of my guys and [crew-chief] Rodney Childers made a great call.

"He said 'OK man, we're going to stay out, we're going to gamble here a little bit and see what happens. He won us the race, it was the right call."

Polesitter Ryan Newman finished second also staying out during the final round of pitstops. He led the first two laps from pole position but a penalty for a loose lug nut on lap 43 had dropped him down the order and he struggled to make much of a recovery after that.

Robby Gordon, who also stayed out on that final caution finished third, earning some valuable points that allow him to get further away from dropping out of the top-35 in the owner standings, as he arrived at this weekend's race in 34th place.

Carl Edwards changed only two tyres on his last stop and finished fourth as the best of those who pitted before the race was stopped for the fourth and final time.

Brian Vickers ran the same tyre strategy to finish fifth, something he didn't really celebrate as he had been leading the race twice, looking to be the car to beat at one point. However lengthy stops lost him track position and rain wouldn't allow him to recover that on the track.

"I'm disappointed," said Vickers. "Would have liked to have finished the race because I know we had a car capable of winning. It would mean so much to get a win at Lowe's. We get closer and closer to winning each time we come here. We'll just have to wait a few months longer (until October) for another chance."

Kyle Busch led the most laps with 173 upfront, but he seemed to lose pace at the end of every stint. He made the most of his front-row starting position and being quick in the short runs to put his car in the lead and benefit from clean air, but he certainly didn't have the fastest car of the day, finishing sixth in the end.

"We had to come down and put gas in it," said Busch about stopping while in the lead during the final caution. "Fortunately a lot of guys like us took four tyres so we didn't lose that much ground. The 99 (Carl Edwards) and the 83 (Brian Vickers) took two (tyres) so they got out in front of us. It only hurt us two spots."

Last year's event-winner Kasey Kahne ran in the top-five for most of the race, and got close to passing Busch for the lead right before the final caution came out. After his last stop, he emerged from the pits in seventh, which is where he was classified in the end.

Juan Pablo Montoya had probably his best showing of the year finishing in an eighth place which didn't reflect his true pace. The Colombian was not good on short runs, but the longer the green flag periods were, the faster he would be relative to the opposition, running as high as second behind Vickers while looking capable of fighting for his first victory on an oval.

"We ran within the top 10 all day and I really thought we'd be racing for the win," said Montoya. "We had to pit under that caution, but didn't think we'd end it that way. Another top 10 is good.

"We normally don't run well here, so it just shows how much we continue to improve. We'll head to Dover and hope to get the Target car another great finish."

Rookie Joey Logano also impressed by running solidly in the top-ten and finishing ninth, matching his best result of the season, although a top-five looked on the cards for the 19-year-old.

Matt Kenseth rounded out the top-ten while Jeff Gordon didn't have a great day but still managed to finish ahead of those close to him in the championship, extending his lead in the points over Tony Stewart.

Out of the six caution periods only one was caused by an incident, that caution coming out on lap 17 when Kevin Harvick went against the barrier after his right-front tyre blew due to earlier contact with Sam Hornish Jr. On lap 165 the red flag waved as NASCAR held a minute's silence to honour the memory of fallen heroes on Memorial Day.

Pos  Driver             Car        Laps
 1.  David Reutimann    Toyota      227
 2.  Ryan Newman        Chevrolet   227
 3.  Robby Gordon       Toyota      227
 4.  Carl Edwards       Ford        227
 5.  Brian Vickers      Toyota      227
 6.  Kyle Busch         Toyota      227
 7.  Kasey Kahne        Dodge       227
 8.  Juan Montoya       Chevrolet   227
 9.  Joey Logano        Toyota      227
10.  Matt Kenseth       Ford        227
11.  Denny Hamlin       Toyota      227
12.  Bobby Labonte      Ford        227
13.  Jimmie Johnson     Chevrolet   227
14.  Jeff Gordon        Chevrolet   227
15.  Bill Elliott       Ford        227
16.  Sam Hornish Jr     Dodge       227
17.  Mark Martin        Chevrolet   227
18.  Scott Speed        Toyota      227
19.  Tony Stewart       Chevrolet   227
20.  Greg Biffle        Ford        227
21.  Jamie McMurray     Ford        227
22.  David Stremme      Dodge       227
23.  Martin Truex Jr    Chevrolet   227
24.  David Ragan        Ford        227
25.  Jeff Burton        Chevrolet   227
26.  Marcos Ambrose     Toyota      227
27.  David Gilliland    Chevrolet   226
28.  Dave Blaney        Toyota      226
29.  Paul Menard        Ford        226
30.  Michael Waltrip    Toyota      226
31.  Elliott Sadler     Dodge       226
32.  A.J. Allmendinger  Dodge       226
33.  Casey Mears        Chevrolet   226
34.  Kurt Busch         Dodge       226
35.  Reed Sorenson      Dodge       226
36.  Clint Bowyer       Chevrolet   226
37.  Joe Nemechek       Toyota      226
38.  Scott Riggs        Toyota      225
39.  Tony Raines        Chevrolet   225
40.  Dale Earnhardt Jr  Chevrolet   225
41.  Kevin Harvick      Chevrolet   224
42.  Max Papis          Toyota      219
43.  Mike Bliss         Dodge        42

Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Bliss wins Nationwide at Lowe's
Next article Earnhardt Jr splits with crew chief

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe