The Richmond Xfinity race saw Joe Gibbs Racing sweep the podium emphatically as Chandler Smith picked up his second victory of the Xfinity season, with teammates Aric Almirola and Taylor Gray finishing behind him in that respective order. On the other side of the 38-car field, Joey Gase ended his race at P34 due to an “unwarranted” wreck, courtesy of former Emerling-Gase Motorsports teammate Dawson Cram.
This disappointing incident managed to generate a lot of buzz during the race on Saturday, as Gase went one step further with the frustrations at hand and ripped off his bumper under caution, flinging it straight at Cram’s #4 car. Adding to all the appeals after the race, Joey Gase had some scathing comments to make, and a $60,000 loss to claim for his recent regrets in Richmond and potential malfunctions in Martinsville.
Joey Gase fumes amidst apologies for Richmond’s “Bumper” drama
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The “accident” in question happened late in the race when JD Motorsports #4 Camaro made contact with Joey Gase Motorsports’ #35 and sent the part-time Xfinity owner/driver into the outer wall. Under caution, Cram made the necessary rotation around the 0.75-mile oval, moving from the back of the pack towards Gase’s initial position. It was at this moment that the “viral interaction” between these teammates-turned-fierce rivals took place between Turns 1 & 2.
Whether the 31-year-old “bumper star” is penalized for his actions is still unclear. However, Gase did not hold back when Noah Lewis of TSJSports1 inquired if this was a “lesson,” albeit at the “unfortunate cost” of the #35 car’s botched Richmond advance. Gase expressed his disappointment, and revealed the reason to Lewis, “Really nothing else you can say besides he needs to get his head outta his a*s… I mean we’re a small, small, small organization and we were gonna take two cars to Martinsville, and now after that hit we don’t know if we can do that.”
An update from Joey Gase after a conversation with Dawson Cram.
“There’s really nothing else you can say but he needs to get his head out of his ass.”#NASCAR pic.twitter.com/WAQQOICi36
— Noah Lewis (@Noah_Lewis1) March 30, 2024
Joey Gase Motorsports has fielded two cars, the #53 and the #35, in its last two years of competing in the Xfinity Series. Notably, a partnership agreement with current SS Greenlight-Racing driver Patrick Emerling had the team named Emerling-Gase Motorsports at this time. The “agreement” fell through this season, and Gase seems to be feeling the burn in his pockets, as he also stated between discussions, “That was a minimum 60,000 dollar hit for me today for no reason at all.”
With tensions still fresh off of an impressive second-tier spectacle at Richmond, the two drivers have been in private conversations already, and it is safe to say that Gase has been open about his “frustrations” to Cram as well.
Lack of trust between the former teammates
Trending
Chevy Prodigy Loses NASCAR Seat, Fans Allege Ignorance to Kyle Busch’s Daytona Setback Behind It
Joey Logano Leaks NASCAR’s Threat to Kick Teams Out of Daytona 500 After Chevy’s Defiance to $400,000 Fine
Michael Jordan’s Opponent’s Warning Comes True as Roger Penske Shuts Down NASCAR’s Infiltration
Brad Keselowski’s Trump Card Move Could Be a Career-Altering Transfer for Tony Stewart’s Underwhelming Driver
NASCAR Rumor: Despite Lawsuit Uncertainty, Tony Stewart’s Veteran Eyeing FRM Switch After Noah Gragson’s Lead
When the #35 Chevy was towed back to the garage, the media wanted the #35 driver’s first thoughts, and Gase was game. Complimenting the 22-year-old rookie’s personality, the near double-aged veteran fumed, “He’s a good kid but he loses his head every freaking race. He always has speed but he loses his head literally every race.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
“He loses his head every race.” @JoeyGaseRacing upset with @dawsoncram41 after contact with Cram sent Gase’s No. 35 car spinning.
📹: @TreyLyleVT pic.twitter.com/MBgZkQiWQX
— Frontstretch (@Frontstretch) March 30, 2024
But after changing from his firesuit and dealing with the “heat” of the moment, Gase had some interesting disclosures. He stated, as per Noah Lewis’ aforementioned interview video on Twitter, “His stories kinda kept changing but then at the end, he did admit he did it, but it wasn’t on purpose, I guess…”
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The Iowa native then iterated how he “told” Cram that a top National Series driver can “only get so many mistakes in the Series” until his “ride’s gone.” A gentle warning for a “viral mistake.” As Gase continued to reveal the latest updates, Cram, also the “youngest team-owner in NASCAR history,” apparently affirmed to his former teammate that he would “stop making all these mistakes like he’s doing every week.” But with the Richmond “bump and run” already big news, Gase had the apt conclusion. We will “see what next week looks like at Martinsville.”