DARRELL WALLACE JR. - MARTINSVILLE, VA. OCT. 25, 2014
A WINNING TRIBUTE
1. Wallace Puts No. 34 In Victory Lane Once More
DRIVING A NO. 34 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota painted and numbered as a tribute to future NASCAR Hall Famer Wendell Scott, polesitter Darrell Wallace Jr. held off Timothy Peters to win the Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway. Wallace grabbed the lead from Johnny Sauter in heavy traffic on lap 188 of 200, moments before a record 11th caution slowed the race.
2 - Wallace then pulled away after a restart with six laps left and beat Peters had bumped Sauter out of the way in the closing laps, also opening the door for reigning series champion Matt Crafton, who came home third and extended his series lead to 18 points over fifth-place finisher Ryan Blaney. "I wasn't worried about anybody, honestly," Wallace said. "They kept telling me where everybody was, and I said I don't care. It's our weekend and we're going to come out and take this [ grandfather clock trophy ] home with us and we just did that. "That was so fun. Martinsville is my favorite place to come to. The whole Wendell Scott family is here and this is a special moment, just a perfect weekend for us. I know [ Wendell Scott ] just said up there, 'Hell yeah.' This is cool." Upset with Peters, Sauter attempted to confront the runner up on pit road after the race, but NASCAR officials and crew members kept the drivers apart. "It's Martinsville," Peters said. "If you're going to dish it out, you're going to need to be able to take it. Did I mean to run into him? Yeah. I'm not going to deny that."
1. Wallace Puts No. 34 In Victory Lane Once More
DRIVING A NO. 34 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota painted and numbered as a tribute to future NASCAR Hall Famer Wendell Scott, polesitter Darrell Wallace Jr. held off Timothy Peters to win the Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway. Wallace grabbed the lead from Johnny Sauter in heavy traffic on lap 188 of 200, moments before a record 11th caution slowed the race.
2 - Wallace then pulled away after a restart with six laps left and beat Peters had bumped Sauter out of the way in the closing laps, also opening the door for reigning series champion Matt Crafton, who came home third and extended his series lead to 18 points over fifth-place finisher Ryan Blaney. "I wasn't worried about anybody, honestly," Wallace said. "They kept telling me where everybody was, and I said I don't care. It's our weekend and we're going to come out and take this [ grandfather clock trophy ] home with us and we just did that. "That was so fun. Martinsville is my favorite place to come to. The whole Wendell Scott family is here and this is a special moment, just a perfect weekend for us. I know [ Wendell Scott ] just said up there, 'Hell yeah.' This is cool." Upset with Peters, Sauter attempted to confront the runner up on pit road after the race, but NASCAR officials and crew members kept the drivers apart. "It's Martinsville," Peters said. "If you're going to dish it out, you're going to need to be able to take it. Did I mean to run into him? Yeah. I'm not going to deny that."
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