Myatt Snider got his first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory.
Noah Gragson got another heartache at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
With perfect execution from the inside lane on his second chance at an overtime restart, Snider held off charging Tyler Reddick to win Saturday‘s Contender Boats 250.
RELATED: Official race results | Weekend schedule
For his third straight race at the 1.5-mile track, Gragson was close enough to taste victory, but it was his ill-fated crash with just over two laps left in regulation that set up overtime and Snider‘s victory.
Reddick’s second-place finish didn’t stand, however. His No. 23 Chevrolet was disqualified after post-race inspection, because the ride height measured too low in the rear.
On the first attempt at extra laps, Snider spun his tires, and Reddick grabbed the lead before AJ Allmendinger spun toward the infield grass in Turn 1 to cause the eighth and final caution.
In the second overtime, Reddick returned the favor, and Snider pulled clear in the bottom lane. With a determined charge on the final lap, Reddick gained ground, but he was .085 seconds in arrears when Snider crossed the finish line in the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.
“Yeah, I guess I learned my lesson on that first restart, ‘cause I spun the wheels,” said Snider, who won in his 36th start in the series. “Then I saw Tyler spin the wheels on the next one, and I knew I might have a chance.
“Just a shout-out to all these RCR guys, (sponsor) Taxslayer, all these people that supported me over the years. It‘s been a rough journey, but we‘re here with a win, and I can‘t complain.”
Reddick, who drives full time for RCR in the NASCAR Cup Series, was moonlighting with RSS Racing, making his first Xfinity start since winning his second straight series title at Miami in 2019.
RELATED: No. 23 of Tyler Reddick disqualified after failing post-race inspection
“I just needed to work better there with Austin Cindric (restarting fourth for the final overtime) on that restart,” Reddick said. “I don‘t know if I just didn‘t go when he was wanting me to, but it didn‘t allow me to get a push — so that‘s on me.
“He‘s really good at pushing. So I‘ve got to do better next time. But, hey, I‘ll take second place. I work out with Myatt quite a bit. I‘ve seen him progress a lot. I knew this wasn‘t far around the corner. I was just hoping that it wouldn‘t come here at Homestead when I was racing against him… I wanted to fight. I wanted to make it as hard as I could, but he just got me at the end there.”
Gragson was about two laps away from a redemptive victory when the No. 13 Toyota of David Starr — the last driver on the lead lap — blew a right-front tire and shot up the track into the outside wall and right into Gragson‘s path.
RELATED: Watch Noah Gragson run into David Starr to lose lead
Gragson, who led 83 and 81 laps in last year‘s two Miami races but failed to win either, couldn‘t avoid the collision that destroyed his No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet. At the time, Gragson led second-place Reddick by more than eight seconds.
“What are you going to do,” Gragson said after a visit to the infield care center. “We dominated the last three races here, including this one, and have stuff like that (happen). We were saving fuel. I was half-throttle the last 30 laps, and we were still pulling away.”
The first stage of the race was eventful — but not primarily for Stefan Parsons’ spin in Turn 4 on Lap 26 or for Daniel Hemric missing his pit stall under the resulting caution and knocking his tire carrier to the pavement.
What Stage 1 demonstrated with jarring clarity was the enormous value of fresh tires on the abrasive asphalt surface. AJ Allmendinger restarted 25th on fresh tires with 10 laps left in the stage and grabbed the lead from Kaulig Racing teammate Justin Haley eight laps later.
Allmendinger won the stage with Haley second after restarting 20th and moving into the lead on Lap 33 before surrendering the top spot to his teammate. Reigning series champion Cindric, on the other hand, stayed out during the caution, restarted in the lead on old tires and fell to 14th by the end of the 10-lap run.
Stage 2 was the mirror image of Stage 1. When fluid from Parsons‘ car necessitated the third caution of the race on Lap 68, drivers who had stayed out under the Lap 26 caution to save a set of tires came to pit road — Cindric among them.
Allmendinger led the field to the restart with six laps left in the second stage. Cindric restarted 22nd and in less than three laps took the lead on the way to a stage win and a playoff point.
Pit stops followed at the end of the stage, on Lap 83, leaving almost all drivers on equal rubber for the final run, with two sets of sticker tires left in the pits. But in terms of track position, the exchange favored those who had pitted late in Stage 2 and charged to the front.
First off pit road during the fourth caution, Cindric led the field to green on Lap 87. But neither Cindric nor Allmendinger was a major player in the overtime. Brandon Jones finished second, followed by Hemric and Jeb Burton. Cindric, Haley, Brett Moffitt, Ryan Sieg, Jeremy Clements and Josh Berry completed the top 10.
Xfinity stalwarts Harrison Burton and Justin Allgaier were the first two drivers out of the race, Burton with and engine failure and Allgaier after contact with the Ford of Riley Herbst on Lap 98.
NOTES: Race winner Myatt Snider’s No. 2 Chevrolet passed post-race inspection at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The No. 23 Chevrolet of Tyler Reddick was disqualified after failing post-race inspection. The car failed the rear height requirement, dropping Reddick to last in the 40-car field after initially finishing second. The No. 8 Chevrolet of Josh Berry, No. 16 Chevrolet of AJ Allmendinger, No. 19 Toyota of Brandon Jones and No. 51 Chevrolet of Jeremy Clements each had one lug nut unsecured.