Story By: NASCAR – SONOMA, CA – Considered NASCAR’s top road course racer, AJ Allmendinger has dazzled in qualifying at Sonoma Raceway with three top-two starts in as many years – but his results don’t match his speed.
Allmendinger entered all three races as the favorite to win, but finished 14th last year, 37th in 2015 and 37th in 2016. Despite the tough finishes, he’s led a series-high 56 laps across the three contests. The Chevrolet driver was doomed by a pit road penalty that cost him the opportunity to win last season, a fuel system issue in 2015 and damage to his car in 2014.
A native of nearby Los Gatos, California, Allmendinger will try to turn his Sonoma luck around in Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 (3 p.m. ET on FS1).
“It’s a place I truly love,” Allmendinger said. “It’s my home race. We haven’t really capitalized yet in a three-year span. Hopefully, we can do that this weekend.”
Allmendinger currently sits 26th in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series standings, 196 points behind Matt Kenseth for the final playoff spot, but can earn a berth in the postseason with a win on Sunday. In fact, he achieved the feat in 2014 when he won at the Watkins Glen International road course after entering the race 25th in the standings.
“We’ve got to clean up our own mistakes and make sure we are on point,” Allmendinger said. “If you can conserve rear tires – if you can do that – you have a great shot to win the race. We hope to go into Sonoma strong and come out on top.”
Byron hopes to bounce back at Iowa
Heartbreak summed up William Byron’s Saturday at Michigan International Speedway last week.
The 19-year-old JR Motorsports driver looked on his way his first career NASCAR XFINITY Series win when Denny Hamlin passed him on the final lap for the victory. Byron finished second by a miniscule .012 seconds.
He’ll attempt to bounce back in Saturday’s American Ethanol E15 250 presented by Enogen at Iowa Speedway (8:30 p.m. ET on FS1). Byron won at Iowa in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series last season after leading a race-high 107 laps.
“I am really looking forward to this weekend’s race in Iowa,” Byron said. “I won the [Camping World] Truck race there last year, so I kind of know the track. That was what helped me in Michigan last week, just knowing the track and how it was going to race. Going to a track where I have won at or run well at before, really helps me know what I want in my car.”
Nemechek goes for second straight win
A proven winner in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series finally visited Victory Lane after a tough start to the season.
John Hunter Nemechek passed two-time series champion Matt Crafton with five laps left to win last Saturday’s race at Gateway Motorsports Park – his fourth career victory.
Nemechek’s triumph followed a stretch of three consecutive finishes worse than 20th.
The 20-year-old NASCAR Next alum will go for his second straight win in Friday’s M&M’s 200 presented by Casey’s General Store at Iowa Speedway (8:30 p.m. ET on FS1). In three career starts at Iowa, Nemechek has a high showing of 10th and a 15.0 average finish. He won the pole there last year.
“I’m really looking forward to going to Iowa this weekend,” Nemechek said. “It’s a really fun race track. We ran really well there last year, qualifying on the pole, ended up leading a bunch of laps and didn’t have the finish that we wanted.”
Nemechek will pilot the same Chevrolet Silverado he won with at Gateway.
“We’re definitely looking forward to keeping the momentum rolling and hopefully doing a burnout on that corn start/finish line,” he said.