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Emergency landing prevents JRM pit crew members attending Xfinity race

The three JR Motorsports NASCAR Xfinity teams competing for the series championship at Phoenix will be without their full complement of pit crew members in Saturday’s race.

Pit stop Justin Allgaier, JR Motorsports Chevrolet

Alexander Trienitz

William Byron, JR Motorsports Chevrolet
Justin Allgaier, JR Motorsports Chevrolet
Elliott Sadler, JR Motorsports Chevrolet
William Byron, JR Motorsports Chevrolet
Xfinity Series Playoffs flag

A ConSeaAir jet (similar to the one pictured) carrying several NASCAR team members, including the majority of JR Motorsports’ four Xfinity pit crews, was forced to make an emergency landing in Arkansas on Saturday morning, team officials confirmed.

JRM drivers William Byron, Elliott Sadler and Justin Allgaier will have to compete in Saturday’s Ticket Galaxy 200 with pit crews all missing a vast majority of their regular team members.

Saturday’s race will determine the four drivers who will compete for the 2017 series championship next weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Ryan Pemberton, director of competition at JRM, said Hendrick Motorsports had dispatched a plane from Phoenix to pick up the JRM members but they will not be back to Phoenix in time to participate in the race.

“A large majority of our pit crew guys are stuck on that plane in Arkansas. So, HMS is going to pick them up but they will not be here in time for the race,” Pemberton said.

“We have some guys that we normally use, we have some guys that are training with HMS and we have a little bit of help from some of our Chevrolet partners. There’s a few other teams that have a few guys who will assist us.

“We’re still working exactly who’s on first and what’s on second. It’s kind of like that routine right now.”

The ConSeaAir plane was also carrying some members of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series teams that were not planning to compete until Sunday’s race.

According to Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Tony Molinaro, the flight registered to DynaStar, was an E 145 aircraft flying between Memphis, Tenn., and Amarillo, Texas, when the pilot asked to divert to Little Rock, Ark., due to electrical problems.

The flight landed in Little Rock without incident and taxied to park at a gate, Molinaro said.

 

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