Kyle Busch cruises to carbon-copy Nationwide win at Dover
Sept. 27, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER, Del.---It was a case of Dover déjà vu.
Kyle
Busch took the lead from Joey Logano on pit road under caution near the
midpoint of a NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Dover International
Speedway
and led every lap thereafter.
In
winning Saturday’s Dover 200 at the Monster Mille, Busch duplicated an
accomplishment remarkably similar to his victory at Dover in May.
In
this case, he grabbed the lead from Logano with a lightning fast pit on
Lap 100 and stayed out front for the final 101 circuits in winning his
fifth
Nationwide Series race of the season, his fifth at Dover and the 68th
of his career, adding one to his series record.
Busch
got to the finish line 2.545 seconds ahead of Logano, who ran second.
Chase Elliott finished third and increased his series lead to 26 points
over JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith, who came home eighth.
Rookie Chris Buescher was fourth, followed by Elliott Sadler, Kyle Larson and Brian Scott.
Busch
swept the NNS season at the high-banked concrete track with an effort
that mirrored his victory on May 31, when he passed Logano on pit road
on Lap 77 and led the rest of the way.
“I
knew we had a good car,” Busch said. “I was just kind of biding my
time—I was just chillin.’… The second half of the race, when we beat the
22 (Logano)
off pit road—these guys here, they did a great job on that pit stop.
“It
was good for us to get out front like that, get in clean air and show
what this car had for speed. This Monster Energy Toyota Camry was
really,
really fast. It was awesome.”
Busch accomplished on pit road what had proven difficult on the race track, namely passing comparable cars in traffic.
“For
me, the fastest car here, I had a hard time passing the 60 (Buescher)
in front of me, the 2 (Scott) in front of me,” Busch said. “I couldn’t
quite
get to ‘em, I couldn’t quite get around the outside of ‘em. There was
just too much track you had to make up…
“So
you just kind of bide your time, pick at it and see what you can learn
to make yourself better for tomorrow (Sunday’s AAA 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race).”
In
the second half of the race, after he fell behind Busch, Logano’s car
developed a push, preventing him from racing for the lead.
“We
got beat there off pit road, and after that, he was able to check out,”
said Logano, who led 95 of the first 99 laps. “We started very fast
just
like the spring race also, so it was kind of a replay all over again.
“We’ve got to figure out what to do in the second half, it seems like.”
Elliott
sustained damage from a wreck involving Kevin Swindell and Tanner
Berryhill and dropped to 24th for a restart on Lap 47. But Elliott was
able
to cut through traffic and was running fifth before a Lap 96 caution
for fluid on the track set the stage for the decisive pit stops.
“I’m
proud and frustrated at the same time,” Elliott said. “I feel like we
had a super-fast car, really from the get-go, and we were kind of biding
our time in that first run. I made a mistake. I followed those guys
(Swindell and Berryhill) way too close. It was completely my fault.
“I drove ourselves into a wreck and got behind and could never get back up to the front.”
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