NEWTON, IOWA -- NASCAR overturned a victory for the first time under its toughened new policy on cheating when Brett Moffitt was declared the winner of the Truck Series race at Iowa Speedway after Ross Chastain failed a post-race inspection.
Chastain led the final 141 laps of Sunday's 200-lap race, but series managing director Brad Moran said the winning No. 44 was too low when it was measured with NASCAR's height sticks.
"The height sticks have warning yellows in them and reds, and it was right off of all of them, so unfortunately it was extremely low," Moran said.
The disqualification was the first under strict new rules put into place at the start of this season to deter the culture of cheating -- and it delivered a much-needed win for Moffitt, a native Iowan racing at his hometown track.
"I think, for the integrity of the sport, it's the right thing to do," said Moffitt, who never led a lap in the race.
"Obviously I came out on the good end of it. If I was in Ross's shoes, I wouldn't be too thrilled about it."
Niece Motorsports tweeted after the race that it will appeal the decision. Team owner Al Niece said in a statement that the truck passed opening and pre-race inspections.
"We believe that the No. 44 truck sustained minor damage, which left the truck too low following the race," Niece said.