* **Q: What caused Josh Berry's crash at Darlington?
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Nascar / Racing News
A promising run for Josh Berry in the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford Mustang came to an abrupt end during Sunday's Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Contact with Tyler Reddick on lap 196 sent Berry crashing out of the event, bringing ou...
The crash occurred shortly after a restart to begin Stage 3 of the Goodyear 400. Berry, driving a Ford Mustang adorned with a throwback paint scheme honoring 1965 Indy 500 winner Jim Clark, was vying for a top-5 position against Tyler Reddick. Exiting the tricky Turn 2 at Darlington, Reddick moved up the track, making contact with Berry's car. According to reports and Berry's own comments, Berry wasn't clear to make the pass stick and lacked sufficient room, leading to the contact.
The impact sent the No. 21 car first into the outside wall, then spinning down the backstretch into the inside retaining wall, causing significant damage. Berry noted the tight nature of Turn 2 at Darlington as a contributing factor. "It always gets tight off of two here at Darlington and it looked like just me and the 45 got together," Berry commented post-incident. "It’s hard to say one way or the other if he came up a little bit or I was a little too low... It’s a racing deal, I guess."
Before the crash, Berry and his team had worked their way forward through the field, even benefiting from a green flag pit sequence to gain track position. The incident was noted to be similar in nature to an earlier crash involving Kyle Larson on lap 4.
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This incident highlights the fine line drivers walk at Darlington. Do you think this was just a racing incident, or could it have been avoided? Let us know your thoughts!
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