Timothy Peters leads every lap for truck triumph at Bristol
Aug. 22, 2012
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn. -- Timothy Peters ran to a wire-to-wire victory in Wednesday
night's UNOH 200 at Bristol Motor Speedway, snatching back sole
possession of the points lead in the
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
Peters,
who started second, jumped to the lead past pole-starter Cale Gale at
the drop of the green flag and led every lap to roar to his second win
of the season and fifth of
his career. The effort broke a tie atop the standings with top rookie
Ty Dillon, who ran out of gas while running in the top five on the final
restart and finished 21st.
Parker
Kligerman, Peters' Red Horse Racing teammate, matched a career-best in
second with Ross Chastain third in his best finish in the truck series.
Joey Coulter and Brendan
Gaughan completed the top five.
Peters
became the first driver to lead from green to checkered since Ron
Hornaday Jr. paced all 225 laps at Louisville Motor Speedway on July 12,
1997. The 1-2 Red Horse Racing
finish also gave team owner Tom DeLoach a fitting present for his 65th
birthday.
"What
an awesome feeling," Peters said in Victory Lane. ". . . I just thank
the good Lord for being with me and letting me win two in one year.
We're working really hard, all
the guys in the shop. The sky's the limit right now."
Peters
withstood intense pressure on a handful of late-race restarts, most
frequently from Brad Keselowski, the only driver racing in all three
NASCAR national series this weekend.
But the pressure from the Sprint Cup star subsided on the only attempt
at a green-white-checkered finish that extended the race four laps past
its scheduled 200-lap distance.
Kligerman
slipped past Keselowski, his team owner until last week, on a restart
with seven laps to go when the yellow flag flew for a final time for
Gale's heavy crash on the
backstretch. That gave Peters a buffer in the form of a teammate
starting alongside for the final restart.
"It's
my bad for getting a bad restart," said Kligerman, making just his
second start for Red Horse. "I consider myself a lot better restarter
than that, so I'll be beating myself
up for the rest of the week, but congratulations to him. They've helped
us so much."
The
lengthy clean-up for Gale's wreck and ensuing overtime finish spelled
doom for Keselowski and Dillon, who lined up third and fourth,
respectively, for the final two-lap sprint.
Keselowski's truck was the first to stall out; Dillon's sputtered to a
near-stop moments later as Peters sailed away.
"I
don't know -- really confusing. I should have had a good three or four
laps of fuel left," said Keselowski, who finished 25th in a quest for
his first truck series victory.
"I don't know. Something happened, and we'll have to go back and figure
out what it was. We had a pretty good day going."
The
race was the first for a NASCAR national series on Bristol's
reconfigured .533-mile oval. Track officials opted to grind the top
groove of progressive banking ground down
with the desired effect of making the action closer. It was,
eventually, after the first 81 laps were run without a caution period --
the longest green-flag run to start a truck series race in more than
seven years.
Peters
boosted his points lead to 17 points over James Buescher, who finished
seventh Wednesday. Dillon faded from his tie for the lead to third, 25
points off the top.
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