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Bell: Competing in Phoenix season finale "extremely tough"

Christopher Bell’s rollercoaster NASCAR Cup playoffs took another bad turn even before Sunday’s season finale at Phoenix began.

Hours before the start of Sunday’s race, in which Bell was one of four drivers competing for the 2022 Cup series championship, he and his fellow Joe Gibbs Racing drivers were informed of the death of team vice chairman Coy Gibbs.

Coy, the father of 2022 Xfinity Series champion Ty Gibbs, and son of team owner Joe Gibbs, died early Sunday morning. He was 49.

The news sent a shockwave through the NASCAR garage and the JGR organization.

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“You wake up first thing this morning and super excited and thrilled with life and where you’re at and the opportunity given to you. To receive news like that a couple hours before you get in the car is extremely tough,” said Bell, 27, who was competing for his first series title.

“Just really kind of puts it in perspective that what we’re doing here is not the big picture for sure. Yeah, just thinking of Joe. I just can’t imagine what Joe is going through and the entire Gibbs family. That’s the important piece.”

For a while Sunday morning, Bell said he and the other JGR drivers were in shock, not knowing whether they should compete or not. Just before driver introductions, Bell said team president Dave Alpern encouraged them to do so.

“That was an experience like I’ve never gone through in my entire life,” Bell said. “In that moment you don’t know what’s right and what’s wrong and you don’t know if you should get in the race car and race, if you shouldn’t race.”

A real contender

Bell and his No. 20 Toyota team – which were one of top performing teams in the playoffs – still managed to give a good accounting of themselves.

Although he struggled in practice and qualified 17th, Bell managed to work his way to 11th by the end of the first stage.

He never led a lap but at one point late in the final stage he was in position to run down eventual winner and series champion Joey Logano but ended up unable to do so.

A slow final pit stop shuffled Bell back in the field but he rallied to finish 10th in the race and took third in the final season standings, a career-best.

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“There were a couple things that we definitely could have done different today, but ultimately (Logano) was lights out all weekend, winning the pole and being super strong in practice,” Bell said.

“We were just kind of playing catch-up, the rest of us were playing catch-up to him. The best car won the championship for sure.”

Bell ended the season with three wins, 12 top-five and 20 top-10 finishes and won four poles. He twice won last-chance elimination races in the playoffs to advance to the title race.

“I think the season was successful. To get to the final four is what every driver in NASCAR’s goals are. I’m very proud of that effort,” he said. “With 40 or 50 (laps) to go, the last green flag pit stop we put ourselves in position to race for it. You can’t ask for much more than that.”

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