BRISTOL, Tenn.– Darrell Wallace Jr. endured the range of emotions Monday at Bristol Motor Speedway, from leading laps to being lapped.
Wallace led Laps 375-380, the first laps he led in his 12-race NASCAR Cup Series career and the first laps led by an African-American driver since Wendell Scott won in Jacksonville (Fla.) in December 1963, but the handling of his car went away. He settled for a 16th-place finish, one lap down, in the Food City 500.
The 24-year-old Wallace, a rookie on the NASCAR Cup Series circuit driving for Richard Petty Motorsports, sat in his car for a moment after the race.
« [The car] was on rails and then all of a sudden it was like a kick in the teeth, » Wallace said. « That was just the look of dejection, devastated, everything that relates to that. » Wallace sits 21st in the NASCAR Cup standings and has posted two top-10s this year — a second-place finish in the Daytona 500 to open the year and then an eighth-place finish last week at Texas.
« We fired off like a freaking badass and got our way up to 10th [by Lap 250] … and got up to the lead, » Wallace said. « I was as surprised as anybody. [I’m] going through the emotions. … You could be good for a second and then the next second you are not, but [we have] awesome takeaways.
« The momentum is still here. I’m just dejected because I’m scratching my head on where in the hell we went wrong. I don’t think we did anything wrong. I guess that is big-time auto racing, but it was a good day. »
Wallace is the eighth African-American driver in the NASCAR Cup Series and the first full-time driver since Scott, who retired in 1973. Between then and Wallace’s Cup debut in 2017, four African-American drivers combined for eight starts in the series.
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