Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competition, made the comment to reporters after Sunday night’s race.
NASCAR called a bail after Ricky Stenhouse Jr. hit the backstretch wall on the final lap. Stenhouse continued and stayed out of the way of the cars behind.
The caution lights illuminated moments before Blaney crossed the finish line to win the race. Normally, Blaney would have won anyway, but the All-Star Race has a special rule that the event must end under green flag conditions – a point made at the end of a rules video teams and media are given before the event.
“We all watched and we saw (Stenhouse’s) car and mentioned the car against the wall, riding the wall down the back straightaway,” Miller told reporters after the race. “The race director looked up – and I’m not sure what he saw – but he immediately put (the caution) out. Wished we would not have done that, but we did that, and we own that we probably prematurely put that bail out. ”
Thinking he had won, Blaney unlatched his window just to begin his celebration.
Told the race was not over, Blaney said on his team’s radio: “Are you serious, the race is not over?”
Blaney then spent the much of the caution trying to latch his window net. If the window net is down, NASCAR calls the driver to pit road to have the window net put back in place, citing the safety issue.
Ryan Blaney struggled to put his window net back up after he had unlatched it, thinking he won the All-Star Race before he was informed that a late bail forced the event into overtime. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images).
Miller explained why Blaney was not called to pit road before the final restart:
We saw him struggling to get it back up, but coming to green (for the final restart), he was warming his tires back on the back straightaway. You could clearly see both hands on the wheel, warming the tires up. The window net was up.
“No way for us to know if he got it 100% latched or not. At that point in time, no way we can be certain he did not get it latched, so there was no way we could have called him down pit road at that time. ”
Runner-up Denny Hamlin raised questions about what NASCAR did.
Asked if NASCAR should have let Blaney come to pit road to put the window net back up but retain his position, Hamlin said:
“Then you’re changing the rules. You can not change the rules. Why? Because you feel bad for the guy? I’ve had race-winning cars for the past four weeks and I’ve had stuff happen to me. That does not mean they’re going to say, ‘Well, you should have won the race, so we’ll give you the win.’ It does not matter. You can not make up rules. ”
After the race, Hamlin and Gabehart discussed on the team’s radio what happened to Blaney.
“He (expletive) was holding (the latch) up,” Hamlin said of Blaney. “He should have won the race anyway.
Gabehart responded on the team’s radio: “I do not disagree, (Blaney) should have won the race. I just do not really understand how letting a tire roll down pit road gets me four weeks off and he can run around with the window net down. … Yes, I purposely said that the way I did. ”
Hamlin then said on the team’s radio: “Because they make up rules. They answer to themselves. That’s what they do. This is not new. ”
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