The fireworks had long faded by the time the checkered flag finally flew early Sunday morning, but Chase Elliott still left Chicagoland Speedway without the trophy.
After weather pushed the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race well past midnight on Independence Day, Brandon Jones outdueled Elliott in an overtime restart to steal the victory, leaving NASCAR’s reigning Cup Series star to settle for second in the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet.
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Elliott spent much of the rain-delayed event near the front and looked capable of adding another win to his résumé. Instead, Jones, a longtime NASCAR Xfinity Series regular driving the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, capitalized when it mattered most and drove away in overtime.
Jones deserves credit for executing late. Chicagoland’s worn, abrasive racing surface has historically played to his strengths, rewarding drivers who excel at managing tire wear over long green-flag runs.
Even so, the outcome will leave many wondering how Elliott let one get away.
When a Cup Series champion climbs into top-tier equipment in a developmental series, the expectation is simple: win. Elliott had the speed, track position and experience to do exactly that, but Jones made the decisive moves over the closing laps and denied JR Motorsports a victory.
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It wasn’t a poor race by Elliott. Far from it. He consistently ran near the front, avoided major mistakes and put himself in position to win despite the unusual overnight schedule and late-race chaos.
But expectations are different for one of NASCAR’s biggest stars. Finishing second to a career Xfinity Series veteran in premier equipment—even one who thrives on abrasive intermediate tracks—isn’t the result Elliott or his fans were looking for.
Instead, after a marathon Fourth of July night that stretched into the early hours of Sunday, Brandon Jones celebrated in Victory Lane while Elliott was left to wonder what could have been.
