Greg Biffle's victory at Michigan breaks winless streak for Roush, Ford
Aug. 19, 2012 (EDITORS: Updates with results, quotes)
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN, Mich. -- They're baaack!
Greg
Biffle, Roush Fenway Racing and Ford Motor Company all celebrated the
end of a drought Sunday with Biffle's victory in the Pure Michigan 400
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race
at Michigan International Speedway.
With
his third victory at the two-mile track, his second of the season and
the 18th of his career, Biffle broke a seven-race dry spell for both
Ford and owner Jack Roush. Biffle
also grabbed the points lead from Jimmie Johnson, who finished 27th
after his engine failed in the closing laps.
Brad
Keselowski tried to catch Biffle during a two-lap run to the finish but
fell .416 seconds short, taking second in a photo finish over
fast-closing Kasey Kahne. Dale Earnhardt
Jr. came home fourth, followed by Marcos Ambrose.
The
victory was the 12th for Roush as a car owner, breaking a tie with the
Wood Brothers. It also gave Biffle the confidence to declare himself a
contender for the series championship.
"We're
going to make a run at the title," Biffle promised. "I know they don't
talk about us a lot, but they will when we get to (Las) Vegas (site of
the postseason Sprint Cup
awards banquet)."
Biffle
leads teammate Matt Kenseth (17th Sunday) by 20 points with three races
left before the Chase for the Sprint Cup field is set at Richmond.
Earnhardt is third, 22 points
back, and Johnson fell from first to fourth, trailing Biffle by 28
points.
It was Earnhardt who gave Biffle the push he needed on the final restart on Lap 200.
"Junior
gave me a huge push for that win," Biffle said. "I have to thank him
for that. I saw Brad laying back (on the restart) like always, and he
got a little jump on me."
But
the push did the trick and got Biffle to the front. He cleared
Keselowski through Turn 2 and kept the No. 2 Dodge at bay the rest of
the way, disappointing Michigan native
Keselowski.
"This
is my home track," said Keselowski, who has finished second in two
straight Cup races. "I want to win here just as bad as I want to win a
race in the Chase -- probably more.
There was a stretch where I felt like we were going to win it. I had
some goosebumps going on.
"But
it wasn't meant to be, and I'm still very proud of the effort. . . . I
just want to get that one more spot. I want to win races, and we've been
running solid -- and I'm proud
of that -- but we want that one more spot, too."
Johnson
took the lead from Keselowski on Lap 191, but four laps later his
engine expired, handing the lead to Biffle, who had passed Keselowski
for the second spot on Lap 192.
NASCAR called a caution for oil in the tri-oval, the result of
Johnson's engine failure.
That set up a restart that sent the race one lap past its scheduled distance of 200 laps.
Pole-sitter
Mark Martin suffered a vicious hit on Lap 64, when his No. 55 Toyota
slammed into the butt end of the pit road wall at an opening to the
garage. Martin was an innocent
victim of a wreck involving Juan Pablo Montoya and Bobby Labonte, who
spun off Turn 4 in front of the race leader.
Kahne spun alongside Martin and slid through the grass but suffered no significant damage and rallied for a top-five finish.
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