Bell & Cornell
Christopher Bell crosses the finish line to win Tuesday at the virtual Dirt Track at Charlotte. (Jeff Steward photo)

Bell & Cornell Win Final WoO eDirt Shootouts

CONCORD, N.C. – The third round in the trilogy of World of Outlaws eDirt Racing Shootouts on CBS Sports Network Tuesday night gave fans an explosive battle to the finish worth their while.

The iRacing invitational event at The Dirt Track at Charlotte saw NASCAR star Christopher Bell and Super DIRTcar Series standout Max McLaughlin wage a war of slide jobs for the final three laps, trading the lead every corner.

At the end, Bell claimed his fourth World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car iRacing win and second in a row.

Before their battle, however, 19-year-old Kaeden Cornell claimed his second World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model iRacing win in another epic showdown to the finish.

The intense action in the sprint car race was non-stop throughout the 35-lap feature. McLaughlin started on the pole in the NOS Energy Drink No. 17 and jumped to the early lead.

However, Bell — who already had one iRacing Invitational win at The Dirt Track at Charlotte — and Williams Grove Speedway iRacing Invitational winner Robbie Kendall pressured him early.

After a restart eight laps into the race, Bell dove underneath McLaughlin and Kendall in turn three and stole the lead from them exiting turn four. Kendall kept Bell in sight but hit the wall and handed the runner-up position to McLaughlin.

The next 20 laps became a Bell and McLaughlin show. Both rode the cushion against the wall the entire way around the virtual four-tenths-mile track.

McLaughlin tried a slide job on Bell but couldn’t complete it, allowing the black No. 21 to pull away. He then hit the wall with his right rear tire, seeming to hand the race to Bell.

However, a caution with 10 laps to go set up the most exciting final showdown in all of the World of Outlaws iRacing events this year. Bell got a good jump on the restart, pulling away from McLaughlin by a few car lengths.

McLaughlin didn’t waste any time to catch back up to him, though. Within a lap, his NOS Energy Drink car was back on Bell’s bumper. He followed him for a couple of laps, waiting to make his move.

During the final three laps of the race, Bell and McLaughlin traded slide jobs and the lead every corner. McLaughlin would lead down the backstretch, while Bell always took the lead back down the front stretch.

On the final lap, Bell’s car wiggled off turn four and he ran into the side of McLaughlin down the front stretch. McLaughlin held the lead to turn three before Bell threw a final slide job at him and reclaimed the lead for the final time.

McLaughlin made a charge back underneath him to the finish line but came up short by .035 seconds.

“I hope the fans enjoyed that one, because that was a hell of a race from where I was sitting,” Bell said. “Max was outstanding there. It was pretty tough. The cushion got dirty and marbled up and slick and it was hard to run.”

Bell totaled $4,000 in winnings between his four World of Outlaws iRacing Invitational wins.

While McLaughlin came up short of getting a win of his own, he still enjoyed him time in the virtual Stenhouse Jr.-Marshall Racing car.

“It is what it is,” McLaughlin said. “If you’re going to lose to anyone it might as well be Christopher Bell. It was a great race. I had a ton of fun. I can’t thank you guys (World of Outlaws and CBS Sports) for putting this on, making the most of this quarantine. This was great. I wish we had more green flag laps to go at it a little more, but I guess you can’t ask for a better race for the fans.”

Another former iRacing Invitational winner Kevin Swindell was third, with NASCAR Xfinity star Chase Briscoe finishing fourth, edging NASCAR Cup star William Byron by one spot.

NHRA champion Ron Capps advanced five positions to finish 11th.

Kaeden Cornell in action Tuesday night at the virtual Dirt Track at Charlotte. (Jeff Steward photo)

Before that exciting sprint car finish, the Morton Buildings Late Models had their own edge-of-seat battle over 35 laps that ended with another repeat winner on CBS Sports Network in Cornell.

Just two weeks after his CBS win at virtual Eldora Speedway, Cornell made a magical move on Charlotte’s red clay, swiping the lead away from Trent Ivey on a big slide job he threw in turn three with just seven circuits remaining.

Cornell had stayed up front the entire race, and soon found himself pacing the field under the final caution that set up a green-white-checkered finish.

As the field stepped on the throttle in turn four, Cornell got the best jump of anybody, rocketing down the front stretch and into turn one with a massive advantage over Nick Stroupe and Mike McKinney, who both slipped by Ivey on the restart.

“Whenever that dang caution came out there, I was throwing stuff in here, man I was ticked,” Cornell said. “That start, it was like I had some kind of nitrous button or something. I couldn’t ever do that again if I tried!”

As the field went into a frenzy behind him, Cornell was smooth sailing out front. Untouched, he led the field back to the checkered flag for his second career World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model iRacing win on CBS Sports Network.

In the final circuits after the restart, a huge dogfight broke out between the rest of the top-six, and McKinney was right in the middle of it.

Coming from his eighth-place starting spot, the real-life DIRTcar UMP Modified star found his No. 96 NOS Energy Drink ride sitting fourth as the field came back to the green-white-checkered.

After avoiding contact in turns one and two, McKinney threw a big slide job of his own to take the runner-up spot from Stroupe in turn three and made it stick as he crossed the stripe under the white flag.

He stayed up on the high side and out of the wreck behind him on the final lap to secure a second-place finish.

DIRTcar Nationals UMP Modified champion Nick Hoffman was the Penske Racing Shocks Hard Charger in the late models, advancing nine spots to finish ninth. Three-time DIRTcar Summer Nationals champion Bobby Pierce wound up 18th in the star-studded field.

The finishes:

Sprint Car Feature (35 laps): 1. 21-Christopher Bell [4] [$1,000]; 2. 17-Max McLaughlin [1]; 3. 39-Kevin Swindell [6]; 4. 5-Chase Briscoe [8]; 5. 25-William Byron [7]; 6. 17-Mike McKinney [12]; 7. 7-Tyler Courtney [18]; 8. 1-Logan Schuchart [10]; 9. 35-Mike Mahaney [13]; 10. 2-Wayne Johnson [14]; 11. 28-Ron Capps [16]; 12. 55-Robbie Kendall [2]; 13. 170-Bill Balog [5]; 14. 4-Justin Grant [15]; 15. 2-Carson Macedo [20]; 16. 5-Brent Marks [3]; 17. 41-David Gravel [11]; 18. 1-Jacob Allen [17]; 19. 21-Brian Brown [9]; 20. 18-Ian Madsen [19].

Lap Leaders: Max McLaughlin 1; 33; Robbie Kendall 2-9; Christopher Bell 11-32, 34-35.

KSE Hard Charger: Tyler Courtney (+11).

Late Model Feature (37 laps): 1. 50-Kaeden Cornell [5] [$1,000]; 2. 96-Mike McKinney [8]; 3. 88-Trent Ivey [2]; 4. 99-Matty Watkins [1]; 5. 1-Logan Seavey [3]; 6. 6-Nick Stroupe [6]; 7. 12-Ashton Winger [11]; 8. 0-Corey Gordon [7]; 9. 2-Nick Hoffman [18]; 10. 1-Logan Schuchart [15]; 11. 71-Cruz Pedregon [14]; 12. 41-David Gravel [16]; 13. 66-Matt Cosner [12]; 14. 7-Justin Allgaier [17]; 15. 39-Kevin Swindell [4]; 16. 29-Ethan Toedter [9]; 17. 5-Chase Briscoe [10]; 18. 32-Bobby Pierce [19]; 19. 9-Devin Moran [13].

Lap Leaders: Matty Watkins 1-9, 11; Trent Ivey 10, 12-28; Kaeden Cornell 29-37.

Penske Racing Shocks Hard Charger: Nick Hoffman (+9).