- If you didn’t watch the replay of Ross Chastain’s last lap at Martinsville Speedway last week at least twice, you may be the only one.
- We interviewed the NASCAR driver ahead of this weekend’s championship runoff and got him to tell us what it was like to make such a bold move, and what he was thinking before, during, and after.
- Chastain will go up against Joey Logano, Chase Elliott, and Christopher Bell in the NASCAR Cup Series Championship race at Phoenix Raceway Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3 p.m. ET. We’d watch if we were you.
Even if you don’t know NASCAR from the Nasdaq, you saw Ross Chastain make history at the 2022 Xfinity 500 on Martinsville Speedway last week.
Down the points needed to progress into the Championship runoff at the final race, the driver of the TrackHouse Racing #1 Camaro had to pass at least two cars on the final lap of the race. Unlike in a Fast and Furious movie, you can’t just downshift 47 gears in a stock car, hit the NOS, and blow past the competition.
Instead, Chastain took the car up the track and slid it against the wall around the final two turns of the race. Like a little sibling flung off a merry-go-round, Chastain’s car went flying past the drivers who took the turn on the standard line, and he finished the race in fifth place, one spot in front of his nearest rival, Denny Hamlin, whom he bumped out of the championship running. It’s been nicknamed a “Hail Melon” pass (since Chastain’s nickname is Melon Man, a nod to his family’s long history of watermelon farming).
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This weekend we’ll see if Chastain can turn that bold move into his first Cup championship, but even if he doesn’t lead the pack at Phoenix Raceway this Sunday, he has already raced his way into NASCAR history. We managed a quick chat with Chastain about the move, and what he was thinking—or rather, not thinking.
C/D: Is this something it that’s always been in your mind as a possible move, or did you just come up with it during that race last weekend?
RC: It popped into my head on the final lap when we took the white flag. My spotter, Brandon McReynolds, was telling me we needed two spots and it was the white flag, last lap. The only option was to run the outside and I had a clear path to the corner and so I did it. I had not put any thought into it or any practice or simulation work. I mean, the last time I really did that move would’ve been playing Nintendo Game Cube with my brother. That was the 2005 game, so it’s pretty wild that it worked then and it worked now.
So it’s not something you guys talk about over beers, like, “Wouldn’t it be crazy? Do you think this would work?”
No. I mean, look, we’ve seen other guys do it. I saw Carl Edwards do it years ago and I saw Kyle Larson try it, and that I saw from the driver’s seat last year at Darlington. He was second, trying to pass Denny for the win. I watched those guys try it, but I never thought I would do it. I never thought that I would be in an opportunity where it would work or be worthwhile, but for this to transfer to Phoenix, it was worth the risk and the reward is really sweet.
So, Talk Us through It . . .
Okay, so talk us through it You’re in the car, you see the white flag, you’re talking to the spotter and physically what are you doing? What are you thinking? You don’t have a lot of time to make this decision, this is all happening very fast.
Top speed at Martinsville is normally 105, maybe 110 [in the straights]. The whole track is a half mile long. So I was a little more than a quarter mile away from where I decided to do it. It just popped in my head and then I had less than an eighth of a mile on the back stretch climbing from, I don’t know, somewhere around 75 miles an hour to the normal 105. And then at that point where I normally would’ve slowed back down to 75, I grabbed another gear up to fifth and went 130 and got against the wall and it didn’t slow down. It all happened in the span of about 10 seconds, maybe 12 seconds from the time it first popped into my head to when I grabbed fifth gear and kept going instead of slowing down.
What did it feel like? Could you tell how fast you were going? Did it feel radically different?
It did. Before I even hit the wall, I realized I’m moving fast and then I hit the wall and it’s not pleasant. I mean the walls and the cars are built to protect us, but hitting each other, they don’t like it. So, it’s something that I don’t really want to ever experience again. There’s a lot of talk right now about, “Where else will we do it? Will everybody be doing it?” I can speak from experience, I’m not looking to do that ever again. But yeah, the sensation of speed was high before I hit the wall. Once I got against the wall, I realized I’m not slowing down, which is a good thing. I was really happy and then I got about halfway around the corner, the whole time the thing is violently hitting the wall, and I know I’m still going at a pretty good speed, but I couldn’t see anything.
Did you do anything in the car at that point, or just hold on?
[Coming up to the last turn] I remembered that the crossover gate off turn four is there for the semi haulers to get in and out and I’m about to hit it with the side of the car. So, I took my hands off the wheel and the wheel was violently shaking and I just stayed in the gas and as soon as I felt it hit, it pushed me on the straightaway and when I knew I wasn’t hard against the wall anymore, I grabbed the wheel and held it up high across the line and tried not to crash anybody else.
Was anybody mad at you afterward?
I don’t think [Denny Hamlin’s] happy that it happened, but I don’t think he’s . . . He’s been a lot madder at me earlier in the year anyway.
What kind of damage was done to the car? Were you hurt at all?
I’m fine. Everything’s good here, but the car is hurt. All of the suspension on the right side is either bent or broken. The right front upper control arm is broken, but we’ve not actually taken the car apart to really see. It finished the race and it’s up at TrackHouse near the front lobby on display for fans and people to come see it.
Do you think it’s going to go in the NASCAR Hall of Fame?
I don’t know. They’ve asked. It’s up to Justin and Pitbull [Justin Marks and Armando Christian “Pitbull” Perez, owners of the TrackHouse Entertainment Group team]. They can decide, it’s their car. I’m definitely all for keeping it as a little token of history. But the thing is we only have seven cars total to work with. We’ll be racing these same cars again next year, so we might need to race this again.
There’s so much concern that we’ll see this tried all the time, but it sounds like it’s really a last-lap Hail Mary, not something that we’re going to see a bunch, because you’re just going to wreck a car.
Right. Yeah. As soon as I got on the straightaway, it was obvious something was broken. The brakes are gone. The brakes don’t work. So it was one corner and that was it.
“Wait a Minute, [That] Guy Is Me”
Have you absorbed how radical this move was?
I don’t think so. I mean, no, I haven’t. We didn’t physically celebrate together right after the race, because we didn’t actually win the race, we still only finished fifth and ultimately fourth. I’ve probably watched the video 15 times. Watch it, replay it, watch it. Trying to physically, in my brain, comprehend what I’m watching and then also say, “Wait a minute, the guy in the car doing that wild move is me.”
Look, if I wasn’t driving these race cars on Sunday, I would be farming with my family and then watching the race on the weekend. I’m a fan of this sport and always have been and always will be. The fact that I get to do this and do something that’s never been done before is really meaningful to me. So now we get to go to Phoenix and fight for a championship with TrackHouse. To be the one, as I watch the video, be the one doing it is mind-blowing. I really cannot comprehend it.
Watch Chastain go up against Joey Logano, Chase Elliott, and Christopher Bell in the NASCAR Cup Series Championship race at Phoenix Raceway Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3 p.m. ET.
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