By Luis Torres, Staff Writer
Both Ty Gibbs and Josh Berry made the most out of an unfortunate situation up front and crossed the line second and third respectively in Sunday’s Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway.
In the closing laps, Gibbs thrusted his way to second after both Tyler Reddick and Chris Buescher’s intense battle for the lead went south after rubbing fenders in Turn 3. Both frustrated racers saw their day go south when their tires went flat and forced to make an unscheduled pit stop.
From there, Gibbs was a man on a mission, hunting down the now race leader Brad Keselowski, who had a 110-race winless streak entering the 13th race of the season.
Gibbs’ vision of becoming a NASCAR Cup Series winner will have to wait another time as Keselowski scored his first points paid win as an driver/owner of RFK Racing.
Despite losing out to Keselowski by 1.214 seconds, Sunday’s runner-up finish marked a career best for the 21-year-old standout. His previous best result were a pair of thirds at Phoenix and Circuit of the Americas.
After the race, Gibbs hopped out of his No. 54 He Gets Us Toyota and coincidentally crossed paths with a visibly angry Buescher.
Gibbs wanted none of the smoke from Buescher, who went out to confront Reddick for his driving style that dashed their afternoons. A situation Gibbs shared on Instagram, referencing a SpongeBob SquarePants meme where SpongeBob gets up from his chair and leaves with the caption “Ight Imma Head Out.”
When the dust settled on and off the track, Gibbs’ seventh top-10 finish was highlighted with top-five stage finishes and leading 34 of 293 laps.
Rather than needing more laps to best Keselowski, Gibbs said he needed more track position leading up to the finish.
“Getting out front before those guys started racing,” said Gibbs. It was really hard to pass today and that middle is super, super slick and honestly really gummy and slick. It was just really hard to pass, and it’s just really important to keep track position.
“But overall we had a great He Gets Us Toyota Camry. My 54 group did a great job. Thank you to Monster Energy. All glory to the man above, and we’ll keep rolling.”
A spot behind Gibbs was Berry, who entered Darlington as one of a few drivers that’s yet to add a one in the top-10 tally.
Not only Berry was able to finally get the monkey off his back, he got his second career top-five in…
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