Christopher Bell had the losing hand at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the second consecutive NASCAR Cup Series playoff race.
Bell, just like a year ago, was running down the race leader at the end of Sunday’s race but came up short. He dominated the afternoon for 155 laps led and a stage win, but Joey Logano and the No. 22 team rolled the dice and won at Bell’s expense. Logano jumped the field by his team playing the fuel mileage game.
“I definitely feel like I executed my race, our team executed our race, and it just wasn’t meant to be today,” Bell said. “That’s a dagger. That’s more of a dagger than last year.”
There wasn’t much more Bell could ask for over the final stint. The final caution of the South Point 400 flew with 75 laps to go and Bell kept the race lead on and off pit road, but he wound up being one of a handful of drivers who was brought to pit before the end of the race to ensure making it on fuel.
Bell pitted from the race lead with 38 laps to go. Logano took the lead with five laps to go; Bell had reached third place by then. The gap was 2.6s, and it was under a second at the white flag.
“They got on me with probably 15 laps to go and said we can’t afford to have any loss of time and I didn’t feel I gave up any chunks of time,” Bell said. “I felt like all the lapped traffic was pretty respectful and I was able to get through pretty good.”
There was no accounting for Logano having a teammate behind him. Ryan Blaney, the reigning series champion who was multiple laps down from an incident earlier in the day, helped Logano get to the race lead and then trailed his teammate to the finish. At that point, it didn’t matter how much time was left or how fast Bell was coming when he felt Blaney was playing defense.
“It was going to take the right move to get by him, but we had, what was it, 30, almost 40 lap newer tires than him and clearly a lot more pace than what he had at that time,” Bell said. “I just didn’t get there in 267 laps, though.”