Ty Gibbs dominates for his second ARCA win in the Dutch Boy 150 on Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway. His first victory came in Phoenix.
In Saturday’s Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway, Ty Gibbs was hoping to prove his 27th-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway the week prior was an anomaly as it relates to his speed in 2021.
He could not have done more to prove just that.
Ty Gibbs Dominates for his Second ARCA Win
Driving the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, the 18-year-old Gibbs started the fourth race of the ARCA Menards Series season on the General Tire Pole and led every lap of the race en route to his second victory of the year.
Gibbs dedicated his win Saturday on the 1.5-mile oval in Kansas City, Kansas, to a childhood hero, the late Ayrton Senna, who won Formula 1 world championships in 1988, 1990 and 1991. Senna died at age 34 on May 1, 1994, eight years before Gibbs was born.
“It’s (been) 27 years since we lost, I feel like, the best ever: Ayrton Senna,” said Gibbs after performing another epic victory burnout. “This was for him and all his fans. And I want to say, the man above, I really feel like I’ve changed my life in the last couple weeks. I’m really focused on what’s right, and not what’s wrong.”
Gibbs won the General Tire Pole Award on Saturday morning at Kansas with a lap time that was almost a half a second and three mph quicker than second-place qualifier Bret Holmes.
The sign that Gibbs would be the class of the field at Kansas turned into the reality.
The Dutch Boy 150 Results
With the exception of a couple restarts, when Drew Dollar was able to challenge Gibbs on the inside at the drop of the green flag and through the first corner, nobody was able to run with the 18.
Drew Dollar finished second after running in that position the majority of the day. He now has four top-ten finishes in the first four ARCA Menards Series races of the season, with his second-place run at Kansas matching his season-best (Daytona).
“This Sunbelt Camry I think was the best I’ve ever had at a mile-and-a-half (track),” said Dollar. “Unfortunately, not enough to get the 18. He was pretty tough. … He fired off pretty good, was able to get out front (in) a few laps and get a good gap.
“I feel like we were able to gain on him 7-10 laps into a run, and then long run, once we started getting into traffic, we would just go tight. And I think his car looked like it continued to turn.”
The ARCA Menards Series Point Standings
Dollar’s Venturini Motorsports teammate, Corey Heim, finished third Saturday at Kansas despite losing a lap during a competition caution at the halfway point. Heim, the ARCA Menards Series points leader who won both the season-opener at Daytona and last week’s race at Talladega, got the free pass during a caution with a little more than 30 laps to go.
Heim then pushed his way through the field to salvage his third-place finish.
“Just adversity,” said Heim. “We fired off way too loose. Tried a couple things in the right front, and just didn’t work too well. We had that penalty — I don’t know if it would have changed the outcome of the race too much.”
Jack Wood and Derek Griffith finished fourth and fifth at Kansas, respectively.
Thad Moffitt, Greg Van Alst, Kyle Sieg, Nick Sanchez and Alex Clubb round out the top-ten.
With his win, Gibbs climbed back to third in the ARCA Menards Series points standings after dropping to fourth post-Talladega. He trails Heim by 23 points. Dollar remains second in points, 13 behind Heim and 10 ahead of Gibbs.
Holmes Looking for a Better Day
Holmes, who joined Gibbs on the front row to start Saturday’s race and had high hopes for the afternoon having won at Kansas last summer, got loose and crashed on the first lap.
“I’m fine. Just kind of what happens,” Holmes said of his spin, which also collected Scott Melton. “You get stuck in the middle three-wide. You’ve got no air on the side of your car, and you get sucked around real quick.”
Holmes, the defending ARCA Menards Series champion, was scheduled to compete in Saturday night’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Kansas.
Including the halfway break, Saturday’s Dutch Boy 150 featured three cautions. Eric Caudell brought out the third and final yellow flag when he lost control of his car and hit the wall on Lap 66.
Up Next
The ARCA Menards Series gets a three-week break before it returns to action May 22 at Toledo Speedway, the series’ home track.
The Herr’s Potato Chips 200, which also marks the first race of the 2021 Sioux Chief Showdown, is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. ET and broadcast live on MAVTV Motorsports Network.