Kurt Busch wins at Michigan when rain halts NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race
June 14, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN,
Mich. – Starting 24th in a backup car, Kurt Busch fought his way to the
front of the field through intermittent rain showers and won Sunday’s
Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speedway when a deluge
halted the race after 138 of a scheduled 200 laps.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. was second when NASCAR red-flagged the event for the
fourth time. Martin Truex Jr. was credited with third, followed by Matt
Kenseth and Penske teammates Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski.
The victory was Busch’s second of the season. He won for the third time at Michigan and for the 27th time in his career.
“It’s
an unbelievable feeling to know what we went through, paced ourselves,
and found the lead toward the latter part of the race when the rain came
in,” Busch said in Victory Lane.
“You
know what’s more special about this? Winning in Chevrolet’s backyard.
That’s what’s most important about winning in Michigan, so thanks to
Chevrolet.”
That
his team had put in extra hours to ready a backup car after Busch hit
the wall in Friday’s opening practice was not lost on the winning
driver.
“Yeah,
you have to get down and dirty,” Busch said. “You have to really
roll-up your sleeves, get your elbows dirty, and put the work into it.
And (crew chief) Tony Gibson makes these guys work a little extra hard.
“I always say thanks. I’m always there early with them. And it’s a great team chemistry feel.”
Busch
grabbed the lead for the first time on Lap 133 when Kyle Larson’s
gas-mileage gamble came up short and the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
Chevrolet was forced to pit road for fuel just as a storm cell was
advancing toward the speedway.
Busch
had pushed Larson to the lead after a restart on Lap 130, but Larson
hadn’t gotten fuel since Lap 88, and crew chief Chris Heroy was gambling
that the rain would arrive before Larson ran out of gas. As it turned
out, the rain came three laps too late for Heroy’s strategy to bear
fruit.
The
heavy thunderstorm arrived on Lap 136, forcing NASCAR to throw a
caution and then to red-flag the race for the fourth time two laps
later, with Busch out.
Busch also got an unintended assist from teammate Kevin Harvick, who led 63 laps in the race’s dominant car.
Harvick
held a lead of roughly four seconds when he brought his No. 4 Chevrolet
to pit road on Lap 120, but the reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
champion had to return to his pit stall two laps later because of a flat
right front tire. Harvick lost two laps in the process and was 29th
when NASCAR called the race shortly after 6 p.m.
Earnhardt
was on the inside beside Larson for the final restart, but the push
from Busch propelled Larson to his short-lived lead, and Busch followed
to the outside of Earnhardt’s car.
“When
it came to the restarts, we didn't take off as well as the 41,”
Earnhardt said. “We saw the same thing at Charlotte, the 78 (Truex) and
the 41 take off real good.
“We
were just kind of tight waiting on the front to work, don't have the
good speed that they have the first three or four laps, and that was the
difference today, and the 4 (Harvick) having the trouble he had. He had
the field covered.”
If
fortune favored Kurt Busch on Sunday, the same can’t be said for
brother Kyle Busch, whose car slipped on damp asphalt in Turn 3 and shot
into the outside wall to bring out the third caution on Lap 52. In what
may be the decisive blow to his prospects of making the Chase after
missing the first 11 races because of injuries sustained at Daytona in
February, Busch finished 43rd.
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