Ty Gibbs celebrates his ARCA Menards Series victory Saturday at Iowa Speedway. (Ray Hague Photo)
Ty Gibbs celebrates his ARCA Menards Series victory Saturday at Iowa Speedway. (Ray Hague Photo)

Gibbs Conquers Iowa To Take ARCA Championship Lead

NEWTON, Iowa — Ty Gibbs spent the first half of the ARCA Menards Series season trying but failing to surpass Corey Heim for the lead in the championship standings.

The 18-year-old began the second half of the season accomplishing just that.

The driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota dominated Saturday night’s Shore Lunch 150 at Iowa Speedway, leading all but one of 150 laps en route to his sixth ARCA Menards Series win of the season.

Heim held the points lead through the first 10 of 20 races on the schedule after winning the season-opener at Daytona International Speedway. This despite the fact that Gibbs had won more races and more pole awards; he even tied Heim for the points lead after qualifying on the pole at Pocono before the latter won the race.

Gibbs entered the Iowa race trailing Heim by five points in the standings. Including the point he received for winning the General Tire Pole Award, the point he received for leading a lap and the point he received for leading the most laps, the Charlotte, North Carolina, native left Iowa with a four-point edge over his rival.

And he had fun doing it.

“You’re almost a painter here,” Gibbs said of racing at the unique, 0.875-mile oval. “You’re just working the brush on a canvas. There’s so much room to work with. It’s a Phoenix (Raceway); it’s an Atlanta (Motor Speedway). There are so many different places to go (on the track). The top, the bottom — you’ve got everywhere. All of the bumps; so many characteristics to this place.”

Gibbs made history Saturday night at Iowa in addition to his triumph in the standings. The winner of last year’s Shore Lunch 150 at Iowa, Gibbs became the first multiple-time ARCA Menards Series winner (and the first back-to-back AMS winner) at the D-shaped track. The first 14 AMS races at Iowa dating back to 2006 produced 14 different winners.

Gibbs faced few challenges for the lead Saturday night; the one lap he did not lead was the result of Taylor Gray getting a good jump on a restart on Lap 25 before the eventual winner pulled away.

With that said, a valiant effort in the closing laps was made by second-place finisher Daniel Dye, who last week at Berlin Raceway became the first driver not named Gibbs or Heim to win an ARCA Menards Series race this season, doing so in just his second series start.

Dye closed Gibbs’ lead to a little more than a second for the last couple laps, but the latter’s lead was too great.

“I did everything I could,” said Dye. “(Crew chief) Chad Bryant made good changes all day. We were just a little far from where we needed to be. I about wrecked the car a couple times trying to reel in Ty. …

“I’m truly blessed. Like I said last week, this is a dream. I’m racing in front of 5,000 fans at one of the coolest tracks I’ve been to and finishing second to one of the best there is in ARCA. So, mad we didn’t win, but we’ll take it.”

Gray finished third ahead of Heim in fourth. Heim, who has four wins in 2021, made clear he was ready to quickly move on from Iowa.

“We definitely had our struggles tonight,” he said. “We really struggled to fire off on short runs, and it kind of came to us throughout the run, but we were just so far back at that point that we couldn’t really make it up.

“We’ve got a little bit of work to do, but I’m confident we can get there.”

Nick Sanchez rounded out the top five, marking the rookie’s sixth top-five finish of the season.

The finish:

Ty Gibbs, Daniel Dye, Taylor Gray, Corey Heim, Nick Sanchez, Thad Moffitt, Jesse Love, Mason Diaz, Rajah Caruth, Bret Holmes, Drew Dollar, Max Gutierrez, Tim Richmond, Eric Caudell, Morgan Alexander, D.L. Wilson, Bryce Haugeberg, Sammy Smith, Brad Smith, Joey Iest, Conner Jones, Tony Cosentino, Stephanie Moyer.