Buescher wins on fuel-strategy at Dover after contact with teammate
May 30, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER,
Del.—Chris Buescher had enough fuel left at the end of Saturday's
Buckle Up 200 NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Dover International Speedway
to do a celebratory burnout, but his No. 60 Roush Fenway Racing Ford
wasn't the only thing that was smoking after the checkered flag.
Yes,
Buescher won for the second time this season and extended his lead in
the series standings to 15 points over eighth-place finisher Ty Dillon,
but his winning pass of teammate and Coors Light Polesitter Darrell
"Bubba" Wallace Jr. left Wallace fuming.
Contact
between the cars on Lap 191 of 200 cut the left front tire of Wallace’s
No. 6 Ford and forced the car to pit road for an unplanned stop.
While
Buescher spent the final nine laps coasting to an 11.477-second victory
over runner-up Matt Kenseth, stretching 98 laps out of his last tank of
fuel, Wallace left the Monster Mile in 17th place—and understandably
unhappy about it.
“I
was saving fuel there, and Chris just ran over me and he ends up
winning,” Wallace said. “It should be interesting Monday morning (in the
team competition meeting). We just got run over. It sucks that it was
my teammate. I thought he got help from the 7 (third-place finisher
Regan Smith), but I just saw the replay there.
“I
was saving fuel. I didn’t think I was holding him tight and the next
thing you know we’re almost in the fence," continued Wallace, a NASCAR
Next and Drive for Diversity alum. "The crappy part about it is we had a
really strong Ford EcoBoost Mustang, and we couldn’t get off pit road
to save us, and we got caught in dirty air, and then we were in fuel
saving mode. I thought we were doing OK until that little incident. I
would say I am happy Roush won but I’m not.”
The
victory was Buescher’s third in the series and his second in the last
three races. The winner pointed out that his teammate, who also was on
fuel-conservation strategy, was running a slower pace when Buescher
caught him.
“That
was tough, because we are sitting there, and he was saving a lot more
fuel than I was because they were shorter, and I was able to run into
the corner harder, but I couldn’t do anything with the track being
pretty narrow and two guys racing for the win,” Buescher said.
“It
was tough. We got side by side and it (Buescher’s car) got pretty free,
but this Roush Mustang was good all weekend. The race wasn’t exactly
where we needed to be, but then (crew chief) Scott (Graves) pulled great
strategy and the team did a nice job, and we got to Victory Lane with
this Ford.”
As
the highest finisher among eligible series regulars, Regan Smith, who
thought he was racing Kenseth for the win before Buescher’s fuel
strategy paid off, won the $100,000 XFINITY Series Dash 4 Cash bonus.
“We’ll take some of XFINITY’s money as a consolation prize, but I want a win so freaking bad,” Smith said.
Buescher,
Smith, sixth-place finisher Chase Elliott and seventh-place Brendan
Gaughan are the four drivers eligible for the money in the second of
four Dash 4 Cash races on July 25 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Note:
Sprint Cup regulars Austin Dillon and Kasey Kahne finished fourth and
fifth, respectively, but in post-race inspection, Dillon’s car was
deemed too low in the rear on both sides. If penalties are forthcoming,
NASCAR will announce them next week.
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