Love floored by last-lap defeat at The Glen

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Jesse Love sat in his No. 2 Chevrolet for an extended moment after Saturday’s devastating finish at Watkins Glen International. It was an uneasy bit of reflection, made all more harsh by how it happened and who had the ultimate benefit.

Love finished with the hardest of hard-luck second places in Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series tilt at The Glen, letting the lead and what would have been a first victory of the year slip away in the last turn of the last lap. Connor Zilisch, his longtime friend and a road-course standard bearer, was there to pounce, easing by to win by a scant 0.262 seconds.

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Love, the defending series champion, had been in the unenviable task of managing a fuel conservation strategy over the final stretch of the Mission 200 at The Glen, all while watching Zilisch close in through his rearview mirror. The 21-year-old Richard Childress Racing driver said he felt those factors broke his focus. A late entry to the last turn and a right-front tire lock-up were the miscalculations that gave Zilisch the room he needed.

“It’s been a lot of work,” Love said, apologizing as his voice cracked with emotion. “Sorry, I put so much effort into the road-course side of things over the last year and a half, and because of that, I care so much about it. The pieces were there today, this weekend, and I probably wasn’t missing the skill today, I was missing the mental strength to do my job in a situation like that, and it catches me off guard because that’s not who I am, and I’m better than that. And you know, I probably need to feel this pain for a while to be better because of it.”

Zilisch’s mother was among the first to arrive at the No. 2 Chevy to console Love, and the race winner noted the level of respect that the two have held for each other. Love got the better of Zilisch in a bit of turnabout here in an ARCA Menards Series thriller, brushing his way by at the same point of The Glen course in 2023. It was also Zilisch on the crushing end of their championship battle in last year’s O’Reilly Series finale at Phoenix Raceway.

Saturday, Love took the loss especially hard.

“I’ve been very fortunate to not have many traumatizing experiences in my life, but this is the worst pain I’ve ever experienced,” Love said. “I don’t know why. I think I’m just embarrassed at myself and frustrated. He’s been my pedestal on this style of racing since I met him, and I’ve worked so hard, and so many people have worked so hard for me to have days like this where I come out on the other side of it, and you know, I let those people down today so that I don’t take that lightly.”

On a day where Zilisch, Brent Crews and Shane van Gisbergen had some of the strongest showings, Love eventually rotated to the lead after a pit stop on the 48th of 82 laps, positioning him for a 34-lap run to the finish on his final tank of gas. Love took the top spot on Lap 64 after the pit-road cycle was complete.

Zilisch launched a furious pursuit over the final stretch, pressing on even after his No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet suffered damage in a pair of incidents — clipping the inner loop grass and also brushing the final-turn barrier on Lap 77. Love was forced to manage an aggressive fuel-conservation play, all while staying aware of Zilisch’s resilient charge.

It was a tough spot, conceded No. 2 RCR crew chief Danny Stockman Jr. told that Love was reeling after the turn of events, Stockman said, “Yeah, I’m struggling myself.”

“I’m struggling, but these races are so hard to win, and it’s difficult,” Stockman told NASCAR.com. “It’s a difficult pill to swallow, but I’m behind my driver 110%. I try to teach these kids right and right from wrong, and I’m glad to hear that he did a good interview and all that stuff, but it’s just when you’re that close and you’re however many feet it was (behind), it’s just a heartbreak, for sure.”

Jesse Love gets a pat on the back from crew chief Danny Stockman Jr. on pit road at Watkins Glen International
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

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The defeat extended Richard Childress Racing’s void in O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races on road courses. The last such triumph came in August 2016, when Michael McDowell scored his lone O’Reilly win driving the RCR No. 2 Chevrolet.

For a time, it appeared Love’s teammate Austin Hill might also carry the team’s hopes. He ran second to Love in the late stages until giving way to Zilisch with seven laps remaining. Hill was on the same pit strategy as Love, but his No. 21 Chevy sputtered dry on the final lap and he coasted home in 11th place. “Very surprised,” was how Hill reacted when a nearly assured top-five finish evaporated.

“I mean, with how the season’s been for us and things that have happened, that’s just another thing to add to it,” said Hill, who has now gone 10 consecutive races without a top five. “You know, I don’t want to call it luck or anything like that, but just the way that we execute throughout the day and the things that have happened to us, I don’t know what we’ve got to do to, like, have some solid days and finish where we think we should have finished. But all in all, hats off to everybody — RCR, ECR Engines. We went for it. We at least tried.”