James Buescher posts decisive win in Kentucky Trucks race
June 28, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SPARTA,
Ky. -- Streaking away from Ty Dillon and Brad Keselowski after a
restart with 36 laps left, James Buescher recorded his second NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series victory in Thursday night's UNOH 225 at
Kentucky Speedway.
Keselowski
passed Dillon with two laps left to run second, 3.805 seconds behind
Buescher. Dillon came home third, followed by pole-sitter Matt Crafton
and Timothy Peters, who grabbed the series lead from Justin Lofton.
Johnny
Sauter recovered from a pit road penalty to finish sixth, followed by
Joey Coulter, Jason Leffler, Ron Hornaday Jr. and 19-year-old Kyle
Larson, who was making his series debut.
Buescher drove the same No. 31 Chevrolet he drove to his first NCWTS victory at Kansas in April.
"I
think this race especially -- both the truck wins we have were won in
the shop," Buescher said. "This is the third time I've raced this truck,
the second time I've gone to Victory Lane with it. . . . The truck was
phenomenal.
"We
unloaded a little bit off and made some changes right away in practice
this morning, and the truck came to life pretty good. We worked on it
throughout practice, and I knew halfway through the first practice that
we had a truck capable of running up front, possibly a truck capable of
winning.
"Then,
in the second practice, we found some more speed. I'm so excited to be
able to get (sponsor) Exide Batteries to Victory Lane, to lead that many
laps and dominate like that."
A
three-car wreck on Lap 69, involving two-time series champ Todd Bodine,
Lofton and last week's Nationwide Series winner Nelson Piquet Jr. put
Lofton's points lead in peril.
With
a strong run to the inside in Turn 1, Bodine dived beneath Lofton,
broke loose and knocked Lofton's truck into the Chevrolet of Piquet, who
slammed into the outside wall. Bodine blamed Lofton for not giving him
enough room.
"I
thought Justin was blowing up," Bodine said. "I caught him so fast -- I
didn't know what was going on, if he got loose off of (Turn) 4 or what.
I caught him so fast, thought he was blowing up, so I went under him,
and, obviously, he wasn't blowing up. . . .
"He's
got plenty of room outside -- he's got to learn to give some space
here. When you get that close and that tight on somebody, you're just
taking all their air, and there's absolutely nothing you can do about
it."
Both
Bodine and Piquet retired from the race at that point, but Lofton was
able to continue. Taking a wave-around under the sixth caution -- called
on lap 102 because of Tim George Jr.'s spin into the Turn 2 wall --
Lofton regained a lap lost during repairs to his truck and salvaged a
14th-place finish to limit his damage in the standings.
Dillon
took the lead briefly with a two-tire pit stop under that caution, but
Buescher regained the top spot moments after a restart on Lap 108. All
told, Buescher led 119 of 150 laps.
Peters leaves Kentucky with a four-point lead over both Lofton and Dillon, with Buescher in fourth place, nine points back.
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