Kyle Busch masters new aero package in Sprint Cup win at Kentucky
July 11, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SPARTA,
Ky. – Adapting adroitly to a new competition package for NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series cars, Kyle Busch sped to victory in Saturday night’s Quaker
State 400 at Kentucky Speedway, taking a giant step toward the Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup with his second victory since returning from an
11-race injury absence.
Busch
won for the 31st time in his career and the second time at the 1.5-mile
track. Race runner-up Joey Logano was the only interloper in a top five
that also included all four Joe Gibbs Racing drivers—Busch, Denny
Hamlin in third, Carl Edwards in fourth and Matt Kenseth in fifth.
Busch
grabbed the lead from Logano after several laps of intense racing,
taking the point at the stripe on Lap 248 and clearing Logano’s Ford
through Turn 2 on Lap 249 of 267. From that point, Busch pulled away to
win by 1.594 seconds.
The
new aero package, in Busch’s view was a benefit as he closed on Logano
in a race that saw a track-record 22 green-flag passes for the lead.
“All
the drivers were kind of striving for this,” Busch said. “I felt like
it was a positive thing when I was chasing Joey down. Right when I got
to him, he moved up and tried to block my lane. With the old package,
you’d get stalled out, and get stuck behind the guy. I just moved down
and went a little bit lower and got my Camry to stick and was able to
power through and get back by him.
“We
swapped the lead back and forth a couple times. I thought it was pretty
good racing. You don’t want to spend too much time racing around and
putting on too good of a show for the fans to take yourself out of a
win. I thought that was a really good race, at least it wasn’t a guy who
checked out on the last run and you didn’t see a pass for the lead
coming down the final stretch.”
Long a proponent of lower downforce, Edwards was even more effusive in his praise of the new package.
“This
package, we need to keep going in this direction,” Edwards said. “We
could race closer together—I was steering right. We were using the whole
car. We just need to keep taking downforce away. It was an awesome
show. Just an awesome, fun day and I’m glad Kyle got the win.”
Busch
led a race-high 163 laps, scoring a maximum 48 points and moving to
35th in the standings, 87 points behind Cole Whitt in 30th. Busch must
finish the first 26 races in the top 30 in order to be eligible for the
Chase.
It
didn’t take long for NASCAR’s new lower-downforce aero package to have a
visible effect on the racing. On Lap 95, after he had trimmed Kyle
Busch’s four-second lead to a car-length, Keselowski tucked behind
Busch’s Camry, took the air off the shorter 3.5-inch spoiler and shot
into the lead.
Three laps later, Kurt Busch spun off Turn 4 when the rear of the No. 41 Chevrolet stepped out.
The
new package also had an ostensible effect on brakes, putting more
stress on the smaller rotors and calipers that have been in vogue with
higher-downforce configurations. On Lap 136, Dale Earnhardt Jr. slapped
the wall, unable to slow his car adequately in the corner.
Beyond
that, the absolute dominance of the Hendrick Motorsports
armada—including the Stewart-Haas Racing affiliates—was nowhere in
evidence on Saturday night. Jimmie Johnson struggled and salvaged a
ninth-place finish. Jeff Gordon (seventh) fell short in an ill-fated
attempt to complete a career sweep of active Sprint Cup tracks.
Kevin
Harvick (eighth) was good, but the reigning series champion was not up
to his usual untouchable standard. Kurt Busch (10th) was fast, but not
fast enough.
Overall,
based on a sample size of one race, the new package seemed to shift the
balance of power in the series, at least marginally, from the Chevys of
Hendrick and Stewart-Haas to the Fords of Team Penske and the Toyotas
of Joe Gibbs Racing.
Emblematic
was a late-race restart on Lap 192. Logano got past Harvick
immediately. Edwards followed in the No. 19 JGR Toyota 12 laps later,
right before the race-record-tying 10th caution for Danica Patrick’s
crash in Turn 4 (after a tap from Earnhardt, whose brakes were still
malfunctioning) brought the field to pit road with 58 laps left.
Hamlin
won the race off pit road and led JGR teammates Kyle Busch and Edwards
to green on Lap 213. By the time the teammates got back to the stripe,
they were three-wide barreling toward Turn 1. Hamlin shot ahead into the
lead, Logano surged past Busch and Edwards into second, and Keselowski
grabbed fifth place from Kenseth before Kyle Larson’s cut tire caused
the 11th caution on Lap 219.
Logano and Kyle Busch roared to the front moments after the restart on Lap 225, and, 23 laps later, Busch had the lead for good.
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