Kenseth breaks 51-race drought with win at rain-soaked Bristol
April 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL,
Tenn.—In a race delayed and interrupted by rain, and ended in overtime,
Matt Kenseth broke a drought of more than a year’s standing in Sunday’s
Food City 500 in Support of Steve Byrnes at Bristol Motor Speedway.
In
a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race that went 11 laps past its scheduled
distance of 500 laps—making it the longest race in the history of the
.533-mile short track—Kenseth crossed the finish line .287 seconds ahead
of Jimmie Johnson, who recovered from a succession of issues to claim
the runner-up finish.
Kenseth,
who inherited the top spot when Kurt Busch pitted from the lead under
the ninth caution on Lap 477, stayed out front the rest of the way. He
was three car lengths ahead of third-place finisher Jeff Gordon when
Carl Edwards got loose underneath Gordon’s No. 24 Chevrolet and ignited
the wreck that brought out caution No. 11 and demolished Busch’s Chevy
in the process.
After
a brief delay because of a late shower, a far cry from the 3 hour 58
minute hiatus that came after the first 22 laps, Kenseth pulled away on a
green-white-checkered-flag restart and was unchallenged to the finish,
as Johnson got past Gordon for second.
The
victory was Kenseth’s fourth at Bristol, his most at any track, and the
32nd of his career. Kenseth broke a 51-race winless streak dating to
the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at New Hampshire in September
2013. The win all but locks up Kenseth's spot in the Chase.
“It
feels good to be back here,” Kenseth said, sitting at the dais for the
winner’s press conference. "Really, honestly, it does, it wears on you a
little bit. We had such a good 2013 (seven victories), we came a little
short of the ultimate prize there, but we had such a great season, and
last year there were some races we had some chances to win and just
things wouldn't line up for us.
“We
just couldn't get it to happen. Tonight was kind of the opposite.
Everything worked out. We had a good car on the short run, not so good
on the last 40 or 50 laps of the run, and we had all them cautions and
short runs at the end that really benefitted us.”
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. ran fourth, followed by Ryan Newman. Danica Patrick was
ninth, recording her second top 10 of the year and the sixth of her
career, breaking a tie with Janet Guthrie for most ever by a female
driver.
Johnson’s
second-place finish was an adventure. The driver of the No. 48
Chevrolet survived two wrecks and a lost lap (which he regained as the
highest-scored lapped car under caution for debris on Lap 344).
Johnson first sustained damage when Kurt Busch’s car twitched underneath him in Turn 3 and sent Johnson’s Chevrolet spinning.
“Yeah,
the first half of the race or first third of the race I was behind the
24 (Gordon), and we just worked our way up through the field and things
went pretty smoothly,” said Johnson, who started 28th after a lackluster
qualifying effort. “I had a very fast race car and felt like we were
going to have a strong night. And then one of the restarts midway
through the race, the 41 (Busch)—I don't know what happened—but he lost
control, got into me.
“I
went into the outside wall in Turn 3, and a caution came out. We had a
fair amount of damage to the right rear quarter panel. I didn't think I
hit that hard, but after I got out of the race car and saw the damage,
no wonder it didn't drive very good after that, and we needed two or
three pit stops to get the quarter panel pushed back down so there was
some sideforce on the back of the car on corner entry and once we did
that, we weren't as good as we were at the start of the race but still
very competitive.
“(Crew
chief) Chad (Knaus) called for two (tires) late in the race. That
picked us up a few more spots, and then I think the last two restarts I
was in the outside lane, and that helped me out quite a bit. Wild night,
but glad to get it in.”
If
Kenseth’s winless streak ended, so did the productive streaks of three
other drivers. Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano and Martin Truex Jr. all had
posted top 10s in each of the first seven Cup races this season, but all
three drivers had major issues on Sunday.
Logano
slammed into Penske teammate Brad Keselowski after Keselowski lost
control on a slick track on Lap 18. After extensive repairs, Logano
finished 40th.
Truex’s Chevrolet experienced a bad vibration, then a loose wheel. He finished 29th, seven laps down.
Harvick
was unable to avoid the wrecked car of David Ragan after contact
between Johnson and Jeb Burton started a melee on lap 310. Harvick, who
led 184 laps before the accident, spent 43 laps in the garage for
repairs and came home 38th.
Nevertheless,
Harvick, Logano and Truex held the top three positions in the series
standings. Harvick leads Logano by 30 points and Truex by 33. Johnson is
fourth, 56 points back.
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