Kyle Busch continues march toward Chase with New Hampshire win
July 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON, N.H. – The odds in Kyle Busch’s favor made another dramatic surge on Sunday afternoon at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
In
winning for the third time in eight starts since returning from an
11-race injury absence, Busch solidified his chances of qualifying for
the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with a serendipitous victory in the
5-Hour ENERGY 301 at the Magic Mile.
Two
critical moves were essential to Busch’s winning for the second time at
New Hampshire and the 32nd time in his career. First, with the No. 18
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota sliding in a patch of oil and thinking he had a
tire going flat, Busch brought his car to pit road on Lap 244, sooner
than planned.
That
allowed Busch to gain time on the track while other contending cars
stayed out on old tires. The spur of the moment “strategy” ultimately
played out in his favor.
Second,
Busch got back on the lead lap with a gutsy pass of race leader Kevin
Harvick and second-place Brad Keselowski, weaving through traffic on the
frontstretch seconds before NASCAR called a caution for fluid on the
track on Lap 251 of 301.
Busch
inherited the top spot when the rest of the lead-lap cars came to pit
road on Lap 253, and he stayed up front the rest of the way. After
taking the white flag, Busch won the race under yellow when Alex
Bowman’s accident in Turn 2 on the final lap caused the race’s seventh
caution.
Given
the discussion on team radios about the probability of that Lap 251
caution being called, Busch felt a strong sense of urgency to make what
proved to be the decisive pass.
“I
knew I’d been running it hard and I’d been trying to catch (Matt)
Kenseth in front of me that entire run, and I had just been so tight
that I couldn’t get going and couldn’t get a rhythm going to close in on
Kenseth. And I figured I just chewed the right front off of it, because
I went into the corner and the thing just went straight one time so I
was like, ‘Man, I’m down to cords now, that’s it, it’s done.’
“We
shot to pit road and got it changed there, and evidently it was oil on
the race track that just made the car slip so bad from out from under
me. We got a lucky break and I hauled butt, man, those five laps I ran
were five qualifying laps through traffic trying to get back up to the
front and pass Harvick to stay on the lead lap. That was our saving
bucket right there. That was what we needed to do.”
The
offshoot of the victory is that Busch’s hopes of making the Chase now
are better than realistic. To qualify, he must finish the first 26 races
in the top 30 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings. With seven
races left before the cutoff, Busch is 33rd, trailing 30th-place David
Gilliland by 58 points.
“This
is such an awesome win and such an awesome comeback,” Busch said. “I
just can’t say enough about everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing, the work that
they’ve put in. Our cars are a lot better than what they were last year.
“It’s
so much fun to win these races and to win with this group of guys –
(crew chief) Adam Stevens and this bunch, all my pit crew since 2008,
they deserve all this.”
Keselowski,
who got two fresh tires on the last pit stop, was closing on Busch at
the end of the race but ran out of time and finished second. For the
second straight week, Keselowski failed to win in what was arguably the
best car.
“We
had a really fast car and led a lot of laps (a race-high 100),”
Keselowski said tersely. "I’m really proud of the team for bringing me
two fast cars these past two weekends.”
“It’s a joy to drive cars that fast,” added Keselowski, looking less than joyful.
Asked whether he was frustrated, Keselowski replied, “I’m ready to go home.”
Asked
whether taking four tires instead of two on the last pit stop might
have made a difference, Keselowski said, “It probably didn’t matter, so
it’s hard to say. It is what it is.”
Harvick
came home third, followed by Joey Logano and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Kenseth, polesitter Carl Edwards, Austin Dillon, Jeff Gordon and Kurt
Busch completed the top 10.
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