Ty Gibbs gets 5th Xfinity win of ’22 in Michigan

NASCAR

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Ty Gibbs won his Xfinity Series-high fifth race this year and ninth of his two-year career Saturday at Michigan International Speedway.

The 19-year-old grandson of team owner Joe Gibbs, in the No. 54 Toyota, led 54 of the 125 laps on the 2-mile oval.

“I’ve had an awesome time on this series,” Gibbs said. “I work as hard as I can to be the best I can. I don’t really have any other hobbies.”

Justin Allgaier finished second, followed by Noah Gragson, who won the pole and the first two stages at the New Holland 250.

Gibbs will start sixth Sunday in the NASCAR Cup Series race in the No. 45 Toyota for 23XI Racing, filling in for Kurt Busch, who is missing his third straight race with concussion-like symptoms.

A.J. Allmendinger was aiming for his second straight Xfinity Series win this season and second in a row at Michigan. He led seven laps before finishing seventh. Allmendinger has a 19-point lead over Allgaier in the standings.

Gragson led 39 laps, including the last one in the second stage when he passed Allmendinger on the last turn. Allmendinger was unhappy about that and voiced his displeasure with his team on the radio.

During the second stage under caution, Gragson chose to stay on the track instead of pitting and that might have hurt his chances of winning.

“We just needed a caution at the end,” he said. “The strategy put us too far back even with how fast we were all day.”

Allgaier was angry about cars that were a lap or more down getting in his way.

“They held us up and that’s annoying, especially when you see the leader pulling away,” he said. “At the end of the day, it’s my job to pass them, though.”

In the end, Gibbs was as good as he’s been all season. No one else in the series has more than three wins.

Articles You May Like

From Kellen Moore to Kliff Kingsbury: What’s gone right, wrong for every NFL OC, playcaller this season
NHL explains no ban for Knights’ Whitecloud
The drive to win a Rugby World Cup three-peat binds the Springboks’ DNA
Tyson-Paul was most heavily bet fight in years
‘I can one day tell my grandkids that I played Rafa’: Nadal retires, with an unreachable legacy

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *