Chastain
Ross Chastain celebrates after winning Friday's North Carolina Education Lottery 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. (HHP/Chris Owens)

Chastain Breaks Through In Charlotte

Ross Chastain delivered Niece Motorsports its fourth NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory in dramatic fashion in Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Chastain inherited a golden opportunity to win after Carson Hocevar, his Niece teammate, was involved in a crash with Ryan Preece to set up the final caution. Chastain restarted second on the green-white-checkered restart with two laps to go, and used pushes from John Hunter Nemechek and Grant Enfinger to take the lead and maintain it in the closing moments.

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“My thoughts are, Carson Hocevar won this race,” Chastain said. “He did such an amazing job. He’s a great kid and he’s going to take somebody’s job in this sport, maybe mine, and he’s going to win a lot of races. There were times when I felt like one of our teammates could win, but I’m happy to pick up the smashed watermelon pieces and win this race.”

The win also marked the fourth Truck Series triumph for Chastain, who approached Friday’s race as a tune-up for Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 in his bid for a third NASCAR Cup Series win of the year.

“The Cup cars drive very differently than the trucks, but it’s always good to add to the muscle memory – especially at the same track as Sunday’s race (the Coca-Cola 600). I’ll race a wheelbarrow to get more laps.”

Hocevar’s hopes of a breakthrough Truck Series victory appeared all but set in the closing laps, when a three-second lead over Preece seemed to be more than enough. A caution with four laps to go, however, forced Hocevar to get aggressive in keeping Preece behind him on the restart – and both drivers paid a high price. Hocevar slid into Preece and both went into the wall, necessitating another restart and knocking each contender out of the running.

Chastain inherited a front-row spot on the final restart and sped to the point thanks to help from Nemechek, who finished third, and Enfinger, the runner-up.

Christian Eckes and Zane Smith completed the top-five. Tanner Gray was sixth with Kyle Busch seventh, Chandler Smith eighth and Stewart Friesen ninth. Defending series champion Ben Rhodes rounded out the top 10.