Kenseth doubles up with Chase race win at New Hampshire
Sept. 22, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON, N.H.—Was this real or instant replay?
For the
second straight week, in the second race of the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup, Matt Kenseth led Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch to the
finish line — and for
Kenseth, who has struggled at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, that added a
dreamlike quality to the victory.
The top
seed in the Chase, Kenseth won Sunday's Sylvania 300 by .533 seconds
over Busch as JGR asserted its superiority for the second consecutive
week. A half hour after the
race ended, the magnitude of the victory was still sinking in for the
2003 Sprint Cup champion.
"For me
to win at New Hampshire, first of all, is more than a stretch and more
than a dream," Kenseth said. "This is probably one of my worst places.
That just shows you how
good this whole team is. ... I didn't even know there was a Victory
Lane here.
"I felt
really confident with my car today, but to have a fast car and to be
able to do all the right things with adjustments and strategy and pit
stops and all that stuff
and be out front and win is two different things. So I'm thankful to be
part of this group, and it honestly doesn't really seem real that we
won yet today."
Kenseth
led a race-high 106 laps in winning for the seventh time this season,
for the first time at the Magic Mile and for the 31st time in his
career. Winning in his 500th
start in the Sprint Cup series, Kenseth extended his Chase lead to 14
points over Busch.
Greg
Biffle drove from sixth to third after the final restart on Lap 258 of
300. Five-time champion Jimmie Johnson finished fourth, followed by
Jamie McMurray and Dale Earnhardt
Jr.
Though
Busch closed on Kenseth in traffic late in the race, the driver of the
No. 18 Toyota acknowledged that his teammate had the superior car.
"Certainly,
we were never as fast this weekend as the 20 (Kenseth) was," Busch
said. "They just had a special car. Sometimes you unload with them, and
they're just phenomenal.
The 20 had that here this weekend. We tried everything to try to keep
up with him and to get pace with him, but it was tough to do."
Kasey
Kahne saw his Chase hopes dim when he spun on the frontstretch on Lap
252 and nosed into the inside wall. Kahne came home 37th and fell to
13th in the standings, 71 points
behind Kenseth and all but out of the running for the championship.
Brian
Vickers, the July winner at the 1.058-mile track, started in the rear
and finished seventh. Vickers was racing in the Nationwide Series at
Kentucky Speedway and enlisted
Kenny Wallace to practice and qualify his Sprint Cup car on Friday.
Because of the driver change, Vickers had to drop to the back of the
field for the start.
Jeff
Burton, Carl Edwards and Martin Truex Jr. completed the top 10. Truex
led 98 laps but fell back during the final 43-lap green-flag run.
"We had
a good car the first half of the race, and then the second half, we
just started getting tight," said Truex, whose sponsor NAPA announced
Thursday it was leaving Michael
Waltrip Racing at the end of the season in the wake of penalties to the
organization for attempting to manipulate the outcome of the Richmond
race two weeks ago.
"It was
cooling off and clouding up. We just could never get it turning again.
Then that last set of tires was just terrible for us—just couldn't do
anything with it. It's
unfortunate. The guys did a good job all weekend. We struggled here the
last few times and obviously made some huge gains in the right
direction—just weren't good enough to be there when it counted."
Notes:
Kenseth ran a special paint scheme commemorating his 500th start. The
only other driver to win in his 500th Cup start was Richard Petty in
1970. ... Johnson is third
in the standings, 18 points behind Kenseth and the only driver other
than Busch with 36 points of the leader. ... Kenseth is the third driver
to win the first two races in the Chase. Tony Stewart accomplished the
feat in 2011 en route to his third title. Greg
Biffle won the first two Chase races in 2008 and finished third in the
final standings.
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