Kyle Busch wins at Bristol for 60th Nationwide victory
Aug. 23, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL, Tenn.—Friday night's Food City 250 wasn't exactly a battle royal, as far as the outcome was concerned.
Heck, it wasn't even a food fight.
In
fact, when Kyle Busch wins the Coors Light Pole for a NASCAR Nationwide
Series race, as he did Friday afternoon at Bristol Motor Speedway, the
rest of the field might as well start writing concession speeches.
Pulling
away from runner-up Brad Keselowski over a green-flag run that consumed
the final 72 laps, Busch won his sixth NNS event at the .533-mile
short track. The victory was his ninth of the season and the
series-record 60th of his career.
In
winning for the 15th time at Bristol across NASCAR's top three series,
Busch led 228 of 250 laps. The pole he won earlier in the day was his
sixth of the season. Each time, Busch has gone on to win the race.
The
victory set up a try for a second weekend sweep at Bristol for Busch,
who started with a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win on Wednesday
night. To win Saturday's Irwin Tools Night Race in the Sprint Cup
Series, however, Busch will have to come from the back of the field,
having spun during his Cup qualifying attempt Friday afternoon.
"You've gotta win two to go for three, and this is 'two,'' Busch exulted in Victory Lane.
Austin Dillon ran third behind Busch and Keselowski. Justin Allgaier was fourth followed by rookie Kyle Larson.
When
Busch wrecked during Cup qualifying, many in the crowd cheered loudly.
But Busch found perhaps the best revenge — winning, and winning
emphatically,
scoring his 19th Nationwide Series perfect driver rating of 150.0.
"It
comes from preparation, it comes from the shop, it comes from practice
here," Busch said in explaining his dominance. (Crew chief) Adam
(Stevens)
and I - we work real well together. Those guys work hard. Today - just a
great car and great job by these guys putting together such a great
Monster Energy Camry.
"It
was a lot of fun tonight. It's cool when you can start up front, lead
laps like that, but yet you have some battles with holding off the 22
(Keselowski) and having to pass the 32 (Kyle Larson, who led briefly
after a restart on Lap 110) - just a fun day. Whether you're cheering of
booing, don't matter. We're here to win races, take trophies home and
that's what we're going to try to do (Saturday)
night, too."
Austin Dillon ran third behind Busch and Keselowski. Justin Allgaier was fourth followed by rookie Kyle Larson.
Busch frustrated Keselowski's bid to win his fifth NNS race in his fifth straight start.
"We
were close, just not quite good enough," Keselowski said ruefully. "We
just came up a little bit short. Obviously, on the track, I didn't have
quite enough speed to get by Kyle."
Brian
Vickers' wreck out of Turn 4 on Lap 167 continued a succession of
trouble for series championship contenders. By the time Vickers nosed
into
the inside wall on the frontstretch, Regan Smith already had lost two
laps pitting under green because of a loose wheel.
Sam
Hornish Jr., the points leader entering the race, also struggled,
losing a lap to Busch on the track. Shortly after a restart on Lap 179,
Hornish's
Ford slapped the outside wall in Turn 4 and fell back to 13th, one lap
down.
Elliott
Sadler also went a lap down with an ill-handling car but got it back
with a free pass as the highest-scored lapped car after the caution
for Vickers' accident. Sadler finished 10th, two positions ahead of
Hornish. Smith was 21st and Vickers 24th.
Notes:
Hornish retained the series lead by six points over Dillon... In the
battle for the owners' championship, Busch's No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing
Camry cut the lead of Keselowski's No. 22 Ford from 22 points to 16.
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