Suarez first Mexican-born driver to win Cup race

NASCAR

SONOMA, Calif. — Daniel Suarez became the first Mexican-born driver to win a NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday, holding off Chris Buescher for a historic victory at Sonoma Raceway.

Suarez, a 30-year-old from Monterrey, finally won in the 195th career start of a Cup Series career that began in 2017. He also drove his Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet to the third Cup Series victory of the season for the rising 2-year-old team co-owned by former driver Justin Marks and music star Pitbull.

Suarez got past Buescher and took charge early in the final stage on this hilly road course in Northern California wine country, and he persevered through a pit stop and a caution to emerge in front with 23 laps to go. Buescher pushed him aggressively, but Suarez made no significant mistakes while rolling to victory.

“It’s crazy,” Suarez said. “I have so many thoughts in my head right now. It’s been a rough journey in the Cup Series, and these guys believed in me. I have a lot of people to thank in Mexico. My family, they never gave up on me. A lot of people did, but they didn’t. I’m just happy we were able to make it work.”

Suarez’s team partied wildly when it was over, even pulling out a celebratory pinata shaped like a taco. The pinata was requested by Suarez for whenever he got his first win and clinched a spot in the playoffs — and he celebrated by punching a hole through it with his fist.

“They believed in me since Day One,” Suarez said of his team. “[We’ve got] all the people, all the resources to make it happen.”

Suarez then addressed his fans briefly in Spanish, saying: “This is the first one of many.”

Buescher’s second-place finish was a season best in his RFK Racing Ford. He fell just short of his second career victory.

“Hurts to be that close, but congratulations to Suarez,” Buescher said. “We were trying, trying to get him. Ran out of steam there.”

Suarez, who won the Xfinity Series championship in 2016, is the fifth foreign-born driver to win a Cup Series race. He joins Colombia’s Juan Pablo Montoya, Australia’s Marcos Ambrose, Canada’s Earl Ross and Italian-born American Mario Andretti.

The success of Suarez and Trackhouse Racing could be a welcome boost to a sport eager to expand its cultural footprint. After moving to the U.S. 11 years ago with a desire to race on bigger stages, Suarez is a major success story for NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, which aims to bring new perspectives and backgrounds to an organization that has been largely monocultural for much of its history.

Michael McDowell finished a season-best third in front of Kevin Harvick in cloudy conditions in Sonoma Raceway’s first Cup Series race at full capacity since before the coronavirus pandemic. The crowd included about 350 fans from Suarez’s program, Daniel’s Amigos, which allows kids in several NASCAR cities to attend races.

Austin Cindric was fifth in the final race before the Cup Series’ one-week midseason break.

CHUTE WORKS

Sonoma Raceway restored the 1.99-mile Chute track layout for this race after using the longer Carousel configuration in the previous two editions in 2019 and 2021. The shorter track didn’t appear to lead to more contact in the racing, and not much happened in the first two stages, which were won by Kyle Larson and Joey Logano.

NO REPEAT

Defending champion and pole sitter Larson led the first stage, but he fell back from there and eventually lost his right front tire with 27 laps to go. Larson started on the pole for the fifth consecutive time at the race closest to his childhood home in the Sacramento suburbs, but his decision not to pit in the first stage left him buried in the field from there. He finished 15th.

UP NEXT

After the break, the season resumes with a trip to Nashville Superspeedway on Sunday, June 26.

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