Kyle Busch extends phenomenal streak with Brickyard win
July 26, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
INDIANAPOLIS—“This
is awesome!” Kyle Busch screamed as he crossed the finish line at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway and continued a run that has grown from
extraordinary to downright other-worldly.
Holding
off Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano during three late-race restarts,
Busch beat Logano to the finish line by .332 seconds to win Sunday's
Crown Royal presents the Jeff Kyle 400 at The Brickyard.
The
victory was Busch’s fourth in the last five NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
races, all coming after an 11-event absence to start the season, the
result of a broken right leg and left foot suffered in a crash during
the Feb. 21 NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Daytona International
Speedway.
“I
guess Kyle’s back,” a disappointed Logano said after he race, uttering
perhaps the biggest understatement in the modern era of stock car
racing.
Harvick
finished third, followed by Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin. Clint
Bowyer, Matt Kenseth, Kurt Busch, Kyle Larson and Brad Keselowski
completed the top 10.
To
the suggestion that the accident may have provided additional impetus
to his comeback, Kyle Busch replied, “I just think that maybe I’ve found
my happy place.
“Happy
Gilmore (a movie character) – he found his happy place and he just
dominated at the end, so maybe I’ve found that, too. Nothing better than
being in Victory Lane. Nothing better than being in Victory Lane for
one of the biggest wins of my career.
“I just want to celebrate with my team, my wife and my family.”
A quick inventory of Busch’s accomplishments shows that the driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota:
· is
the first to sweep both the Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series races at
Indianapolis. Busch won the Lilly Diabetes 250 XFINITY race on Saturday
with a last-lap pass of Ryan Blaney.
· gave
Toyota its first victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, breaking a
string of 12 straight wins by Chevrolet at the 2.5-mile track.
· won the 33rd NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of his career.
· continued
his relentless advance toward the top 30 in the standings and
consequent eligibility for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs.
In what now seems a foregone conclusion, Busch has six races to
overcome a 23-point deficit to 30th-place Justin Allgaier.
“We’re
a championship contending team,” Busch asserted. “We just have to be
championship eligible. Thank the good Lord for bringing me back when he
did. Obviously, thanking him for all the success I’ve had in my life,
where I’m at and all my blessings.
“To
get me back as quick as he did, to persevere through that and that
deficit. We’re still continuing on. We can’t have bad days. I don’t know
that any of that matters—we’re going to bask in this moment here.”
Perhaps
most astounding is Busch’s ability to win three straight races at three
different race tracks using three different competition packages:
low-downforce at Kentucky with a 3.5-inch spoiler; standard 2015 rules
at New Hampshire with a six-inch spoiler; and high-drag at Indianapolis
with a nine-inch spoiler and one-inch wicker.
Logano
fell just short of giving team owner Roger Penske, a 16-time
Indianapolis 500 winner, his first Sprint Cup victory at The Brickyard.
“You
come to Indy, and it’s all about the win,” said Logano, who took the
checkered flag in the season-opening Daytona 500 this year. “You either
win or finish last. It doesn’t really matter anywhere in-between. At
least that’s the way I race when I come to a track like this. I feel
like, at Daytona and Indy, it’s all about getting trophies and rings and
making out with bricks.
“Overall, it was a good day, but second hurts. It always does.”
Jeff
Gordon’s last race at The Brickyard as a full-time Cup driver—and his
hopes for an unprecedented sixth victory at the 2.5-mile track—suffered
an irreparable blow on Lap 50. Racing to the inside of Harvick, Bowyer’s
Toyota got loose and spun.
Gordon
checked up, trying to avoid Bowyer’s car, but the No. 24 Chevrolet
swerved out of control into the outside wall in Turn 3. The resulting
damage ended any hope of another Brickyard trophy for the four-time
Sprint Cup champion.
“I
was underneath Kasey Kahne and we were just racing for position,”
Gordon said as his crew worked feverishly in the garage to repair the
car. “I saw Bowyer get sideways. I don’t know what caused it. Me and
Kasey were trying to check up to avoid it. I don’t know if he got loose
or we just both got loose together. Then I just lost control and got in
the wall.”
Gordon
finished 42nd and lost one spot to 11th in the series standings.
Without a win this season, Gordon is in jeopardy of missing the Chase
and can ill-afford another day like Sunday.
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