For the second straight year at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Christopher Bell found himself tantalizingly close to victory, only to see it slip through his fingers due to a bold fuel strategy from his rivals. Bell, who dominated the South Point 400 by leading 155 laps and securing a stage win, was ultimately left frustrated as Joey Logano and Team Penske gambled on fuel mileage and came out on top.
Despite an almost flawless race from Bell, the pit strategy called by Logano’s team proved decisive. Bell was forced to pit for fuel with 38 laps remaining, while Logano stayed out and inherited the lead with just five laps to go. Although Bell rapidly climbed back to third place, he simply ran out of time to catch Logano, who crossed the finish line with Bell just 0.662 seconds behind.
“I definitely feel like I executed my race, our team executed our race, and it just wasn’t meant to be today,” said a visibly disappointed Bell after the race. “That’s a dagger. That’s more of a dagger than last year.”
Bell had a strong grip on the lead after the final caution with 75 laps to go. He held his position on pit road but found himself one of the drivers forced to pit later to ensure he could make it to the finish. Meanwhile, Logano’s team played the long game, and with his teammate Ryan Blaney providing crucial assistance by running behind him, the strategy paid off.
“They got on me with probably 15 laps to go and said we can’t afford to have any loss of time,” Bell recounted. “I didn’t feel I gave up any chunks of time, and all the lapped traffic was pretty respectful. But at that point, it felt like no matter what I did, it wasn’t going to be enough.”
Blaney, who had fallen multiple laps down earlier in the race due to an incident, was trailing Logano at the end. While some speculated that Blaney was blocking Bell’s progress to help his teammate, Blaney rejected that claim.
“He didn’t get to me until the last corner,” Blaney explained. “I’m running my line, not taking anyone’s air away. If he had gotten to the 22 quicker, he would have passed me easily. But he was half a lap too late.”
Despite the bitter disappointment, Bell acknowledged that Blaney’s tactics were fair: “He was doing his job. It’s part of racing.”
The loss brought back painful memories for Bell, who experienced a similar situation in the 2019 Xfinity Series at the same track. “I lost an Xfinity race here in literally the exact same way… I’m leading the race, have to make a pit stop, and someone in the back stretches it. When we went green, Adam told me we were four or five laps short, and then I heard they were trying to stretch it. I thought, surely, they’re going to run out, right? They didn’t run out.”
Despite the setback, Bell remains 42 points above the cutline heading into the next race of the playoffs. “It’s a positive, but nothing is guaranteed in this sport,” Bell cautioned. “We had a win right at our fingertips.”
With Homestead and Martinsville still to come, Bell knows the importance of capitalizing on every opportunity. While Logano’s victory secured his spot in the Championship 4, Bell’s focus remains on punching his own ticket to the finale—and ensuring that next time, he’s the one making the winning move.