Sixteen-year-old Landon Pembleton shocked the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 field for his first victory in the prestigious event Saturday night at Martinsville Speedway. (Adam Fenwick Photo)
Sixteen-year-old Landon Pembelton shocked the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 field for his first victory in the prestigious event Saturday night at Martinsville Speedway. (Adam Fenwick Photo)

Pembelton Stuns Field, Collects Martinsville Grandfather Clock

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – A track that tends to lean in the favor of veterans chose a rookie Saturday night.

Sixteen-year-old Landon Pembelton, making his debut at Martinsville Speedway after recently being named the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Southeast Region Rookie of the Year, used cunning pit strategy and a fast race car to hold off veteran Mike Looney to win the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 late model stock car race. 

“It’s pretty unbelievable,” said Pembelton, who earned more than $32,000 for the victory as well as the traditional Grandfather clock trophy. “I never thought I’d win a clock until I got a lot of experience under my belt. It’s pretty amazing.”

The move that likely won Pembelton the race came during the first scheduled break in the action at lap 75, when Pembelton’s crew bolted on his allotment of two new Hoosier tires. He made his way back up to third by the time of the second break at lap 150, but unlike most of the field, he decided to stay out and inherited the lead as a result. 

“We were talking about it on the grid getting ready to go, strapping in, and my crew chief said let’s try something different,” Pembelton said. “It actually played out a lot better than I thought it would. I really didn’t know what I thought about it at that point, but it actually came out pretty good.”

Behind him, Looney followed the same strategy and stayed out, meaning the rookie Pembelton would restart alongside the veteran Looney for the final dash to the checkered flag. 

Pembelton got a great restart and held off Looney, but an immediate caution flag for a spin by Stacy Puryear set up another restart with Pembelton and Looney on the front row. This time around Pembelton got another great restart while Looney spun his tires, allowing Jacob Borst to sneak into second.

The top-three stayed that way until another caution on lap 171 when Corey Heim came to a stop on the track. Utilizing the choose rule, Borst opted to restart behind Pembelton on the bottom while Looney took the top to restart on the front row. 

This time around it was Looney who got the better restart, with the 2016 ValleyStar Credit Union 300 winner leading by a fender at the start/finish line the next time around. 

Pembelton hung to Looney’s inside and in turns one and two gave Looney a shove up the track, forcing Looney out of the way and allowing Pembelton to clear him to regain the race lead. 

Looney fell to third behind Borst after the shove by Pembelton and Looney spent several laps trying to get back around him. The two made contact at one point down the frontstretch that nearly sent both cars sideways, but they both recovered and Looney eventually got the position back.

By then it was too little, too late for Looney as Pembelton had stretched his lead to more than 2.5 seconds. He crossed the finish line well ahead of Looney to become the 26th different winner in the history of the event. 

“We wanted to run this race, we wanted to just try and make it,” Pembelton said. “It’s pretty unbelievable. It was kinda cool out front.”

Now all that remains for Pembelton is to decide where his new Grandfather clock will live.  

“I want to put it in my room, but I don’t have any room,” Pembelton said with a smile. “We can make it work.”

Despite finishing second, Looney was one of the first people to congratulate Pembelton in victory lane after the race. If anyone was going to beat Looney, he said he was thrilled that it was Pembelton. 

“The Pembelton family have been racing for a long, long time. They’re good people,” Looney said. “We had something for him. He was jumping me pretty good on the restarts. I don’t blame him. He jumped it and they didn’t warn him or say anything about it. That’s what you’ve got to do to win the race. If you’re going to beat me, you’ve got to do something. He done what he had to do.

“Once he got that gap on me we were too equally matched. I couldn’t run him down. On one hand I would have liked to have a green-white-checkered, but I’m pretty pleased to bring Billy Martin’s car back home in one piece.”

Layne Riggs, who was the leader at the end of the second scheduled break at lap 150, finished third. Recently crowned ARCA Menards Series East champion Sammy Smith was fourth, with Jared Fryar completing the top-five finishers. 

Bobby McCarty, who started second and was the race leader at the time of the first 75-lap break, finished sixth and was crowned the Virginia Triple Crown champion. He earned $7,000 for capturing the three-race championship that also included the Hampton Heat 200 at Langley Speedway and the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 at South Boston Speedway.

The finish:

Landon Pembelton, Mike Looney, Layne Riggs, Sammy Smith, Jared Fryar, Bobby McCarty, Jacob Borst, Justin Johnson, Daniel Silvestri, Kaden Honeycutt, Bubba Pollard, Brenden Queen, Doug Barnes Jr., Trey Crews, Blake Stallings, Connor Hall, Justin T. Carroll, Peyton Sellers, Dexter Canipe Jr., Kyle Dudley, Jonathan Shafer, Kres VanDyke, Josh Kossek, Matt Waltz, Dylan Ward, John Goin, Jake Crum, Stacy Puryear, Timothy Peters, Colin Garrett, Corey Heim, Mason Diaz, Trevor Ward, Matt Cox, Ryan Wilson, Jacob Heafner, Justin S. Carroll, Kevin Leicht, Trent Barnes.