Learn more

In the middle of Stage 2, Ryan Blaney got into the wall on a restart, courtesy of William Byron, at least, from Blaney’s perspective. Byron didn’t try to cause an incident, but sometimes in NASCAR, you can’t avoid it. Cautions breed cautions as they say. John Hunter Nemechek spun out with 62 laps to go in the second stage. That set up a restart where Ryan Blaney had moved into great position. Then William Byron went three-wide. Byron was on the bottom, Martin Truex Jr. in the middle, and Blaney on the top. Blaney felt he was pinched by the 24 on the bottom bringing the 19 up the track. Being t…

cuu