Ryan Reed gets first XFINITY win at Daytona; crash sidelines Kyle Busch for Daytona 500
Feb. 21, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—With a spectacular last-lap move to the inside, not to
mention a timely shove from Roush Fenway Raceway teammate Chris
Buescher, Ryan Reed stormed to his
first NASCAR XFINITY Series victory in Saturday’s Alert Today Florida
300 at Daytona International Speedway.
“Oh, my
God, we won Daytona!” exulted Reed, who has overcome a diagnosis of
Type I diabetes to drive full-time in the XFINITY Series.
Buescher
finished second, .089 seconds behind, with Ty Dillon, Austin Dillon and
Brad Keselowski claiming positions three through five. Keselowski was
leading at the white
flag, but a last-lap crash in Turn 1 left him alone in front of the
field and a prime target for the Roush Fenway tandem.
On Lap
112, during a 10-car wreck that started at the exit from the tri-oval,
Kyle Busch crashed nose-first into the concrete wall inside Turn 1.
Busch climbed from his car
but was unable to stay on his feet.
Emergency
medical technicians put an air cast on Busch’s right leg before lifting
him on a stretcher into a waiting ambulance. The driver of the No. 54
Toyota was transported
directly to Halifax Medical Center for further evaluation. Busch was
awake and alert and undergoing treatment for his leg injury. Joe Gibbs
Racing said Busch will not drive in Sunday's Daytona 500, and the
organization is making contingency plans. Sunday's
race will be the first Sprint Cup event since the penultimate event of
the 2001 season without one of the Busch brothers (Kurt or Kyle) in the
field.
In a race where attrition was the watchword, Reed was one of nine drivers to finish on the lead lap.
“For
every kid that gets diagnosed with diabetes, or anything that says you
can’t do something, just go out there and overcome it and do it,” Reed
said. “This is unreal. It
hasn’t even sunk in yet. ...
“When
the wreck broke out of the least lap, Keselowski was out there on an
island, and we got a huge run and it set up perfectly. ... It’s
amazing.”
After
failing to qualify for the Daytona race last year, Buescher was elated
with his second-place run, especially since he finished runner-up to a
teammate.
“We're
just happy to be running this race this year,” Buescher said. “After
last year going the way it did, we're proud that we were in it. Our Ford
Mustang was fast all weekend.
Just trying to stay out of trouble, and there was a lot of it.
“We
barely got out of it. I think we ended up, me and Ty, at one point
getting through one of those last ones. It was a melee, a lot of torn up
equipment. Just happy we could
get out of it. Happy for Ryan to get his first win, knowing the feeling
after last year (when he got his first win at Mid-Ohio) of finally
getting one off your back.”
Chase
Elliott’s XFINITY Series title defense got off to a rocky start. Elliott
was an innocent victim of a 13-car wreck on Lap 93 but continued after
repairs. The coup de grace
for the driver of the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevy came on Lap 112, when
he was sidelined in the same wreck that injured Busch.
The DNF (did not finish) was Elliott’s first in 34 XFINITY Series starts.
Darrell Wallace Jr. and Elliott Sadler finished 12th and 19th, respectively, in their first events for Roush Fenway Racing.
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