Clint Bowyer wins Richmond as Kasey Kahne and Jeff Gordon make Chase
Sept. 8, 2012 (EDITORS: Updates with quotes, results)
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
RICHMOND,
Va. -- Clint Bowyer had a gulp of gas just big enough to win the race.
Rick Hendrick had Kasey Kahne and Jeff Gordon as a pair of Chasers.
In
a rain-interrupted race of accumulating tension, Bowyer made it to the
finish line 1.198 seconds ahead of Gordon, who knocked Kyle Busch out of
the final wild-card spot in
the Chase for the Sprint Cup in the closing laps of Saturday night's
Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond International Raceway.
The
victory was Bowyer's second of the season, his second at Richmond and
the seventh of his career. He and teammate Martin Truex Jr. are the
first two Michael Waltrip Racing
drivers to make the 12-driver Chase field.
MWR
teammate Mark Martin ran third Saturday, followed by Tony Stewart and
Matt Kenseth, but the big story was Gordon's miracle comeback that put
all four Hendrick Motorsports
cars in the Chase. Gordon joined Kahne, Jimmie Johnson and Dale
Earnhardt Jr. in NASCAR's 10-race playoff.
For
Busch, it was a failed pit strategy that led to his ouster from the
second wild-card spot, a position he held entering the race and for the
vast majority of Saturday night's
event. When a light rain caused the sixth caution on Lap 275, Busch
stayed out while others came to pit road for fuel. A slow pit stop under
green on Lap 334, thanks to a dropped lug nut on the right-rear wheel,
did further damage to his chances and allowed
Gordon to sneak into the Chase by a three-point margin.
Several
times in the last 11 laps, the second provisional wild-card spot
changed hands between Gordon and Busch, who entered the race with a
12-point lead over Gordon. When Busch
passed Martin Truex Jr. for the 15th position on Lap 390 of 400, he had
the berth. When Gordon passed Mark Martin on Lap 394, he took it back.
Ultimately,
Busch dropped positions to Marcos Ambrose and Hendrick driver and
pole-sitter Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was on a late-race mission to help
his teammate make the Chase.
"We missed," Busch said tersely after the race was over. "Plain and simple."
Team owner Joe Gibbs advised his mercurial driver to handle his disappointment the right way.
"There's no right way to handle this situation," was Busch's rejoinder.
Gordon
started second but quickly faded. By the time rain halted the race on
Lap 152, he was a lap down and going nowhere. Under the caution that
preceded the red flag, however,
his crew cut the chain to the rear sway bar to disconnect it, and the
handling of the No. 24 Chevrolet improved dramatically.
"I
felt like I won the race tonight," Gordon said. "When that was over,
when they told me I was in the Chase, we made it -- I mean, I was
ecstatic. I was going nuts. To me, after
you have that kind of effort, fall back, then come up there and finish
second, almost win the race, make it by (three points), man, I don't see
any reason why we can't go over these next 10 races and be a real
threat for the championship."
Bowyer
recovered from a spin just past the midpoint of the race and rallied
for the win. On Lap 234, contact with Juan Pablo Montoya's Chevrolet
deflated Bowyer's left-rear tire.
Fighting for control, Bowyer looped his car near the start/finish line.
"Thank
you, Juan Pablo, for wrecking me and then winning me the race--thank
you!" quipped Bowyer, who was then in position to gamble on fuel
mileage. "We had a bad race last weekend
(at Atlanta) and had a lot of adversity we had to bounce through, were
kind of bummed out as a team, as a whole, coming into this race.
"It's
a good way to get things bounced back headed into this Chase. You can't
ask for a better race team, my teammates, MWR, everybody that's a part
of this. It's just unbelievable."
The
consolation for Joe Gibbs Racing is that Denny Hamlin begins the Chase
as the No. 1 seed on the strength of four victories in the first 26
races. But that provides little
solace for Busch's crew chief Dave Rogers, who made the decision to
keep his driver on the track when a pit stop would have been the safe
play.
"We missed it -- my fault," Rogers radioed to Busch. "One hundred percent my fault."
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