Matt Kenseth cruises to dominant Sprint Cup victory at Michigan
Aug. 16, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
BROOKLYN,
Mich.—From Matt Kenseth's point of view, the competition package NASCAR
used at Michigan International Speedway could well have had a big,
bright bow on it.
The
Coors Light Polesitter for Sunday's Pure Michigan 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race, Kenseth quickly exhibited his mastery of the high-drag
aerodynamic package, leading 146 of 200 laps in winning for the third
time this season, the third time at Michigan and the 34th time in his
career.
The
2003 premier series champion had to survive a restart with 13 laps
left, after Jimmie Johnson spun off Turn 4 to cause the eighth and final
caution of the race. With a push from Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny
Hamlin, Kenseth cleared Kevin Harvick after the Lap 187 restart and went
on to win by 1.722 seconds.
“Denny
did a spectacular job pushing me,” Kenseth said of the last run. “From
the restart zone to about Turn 2 was like a superspeedway race–whoever
got locked up—and those Chevys could really hook up.
“Denny
did a heck of a job giving me a good push there to get by. Honestly,
the toughest one was with the 3 (Dillon, with the two drivers swapping
the lead after a restart on Lap 131). We went back and forth a few times
and made some contact there, and it was hard to get away from him. My
car took about five laps to get going, but once it got going, it was
pretty stellar.”
Harvick
ran out of fuel under green on Lap 114 but recovered to finish second.
Martin Truex Jr. ran third, followed by Austin Dillon (who started from
the rear of the field after an engine change) and Hamlin.
Kenseth’s
victory was the fifth for Joe Gibbs Racing in the last six Sprint Cup
races but Kenseth stopped short of declaring the JGR cars the favorites
for the series championship this year. There are three regular-season
races left before the 10-race Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs
start at Chicagoland Speedway on Sept. 20.
“It’s
early to talk favorites—there’s so much racing to do, and there are 16
teams (in the Chase) that are capable of winning races on a weekly basis
as well as a championship,” Kenseth said. “It’s one week at a time like
always.
“It’s
been a great week, and we’ve had a great couple months. We definitely
have some momentum built. The guys gave us a rocket today and gave us
rockets the last couple months. We’re just going to work hard to try to
keep it rolling.”
Harvick,
the reigning series champion, has finished second in five of his last
six starts at Michigan, and he notched his seventh runner-up result
since winning his second race of the season at Phoenix in March.
“We
had an up and down day, that's for sure,” Harvick said. “The first half
of the race or so (we) really struggled with the handling of the car.
The guys did a great job of getting that, and then ran out of gas and
came back and didn't lose a lap and were able to have a good enough
handling car to drive back up through there.
“Just
really proud of my team and everything that they did. I didn't have
anything for the 20 (Kenseth) today, but for everything that we
overcame, it was still a good day.”
Despite
starting from the rear of the field, Kyle Busch finished 11th,
solidified his position in the top 30 in points and moved closer to a
spot in the Chase. Now 29th in the standings, Busch leads 30th-place
Justin Allgaier by 18 points and 31st-place Cole Whitt by 23.
A
four-time winner since returning from an 11-race injury absence, Busch
must be in the top 30 after 26 races to lock up a spot in the Chase.
Clint
Bowyer’s Chase hopes took the hardest hit on Sunday. After running
consistently in the top five, Bowyer’s No. 15 Toyota bounced off the
outside backstretch wall on Lap 126—the result of contact with Ryan
Newman’s Chevrolet—and careened into the inside wall.
Bowyer
finished 41st and dropped one position in the standings to 15th, 23
points ahead of Aric Almirola in 16th and 26 ahead of Kasey Kahne in
17th. Bowyer currently is in the final Chase-eligible position. If the
next three races produce one or more unique winners, however, his Chase
spot could be in serious jeopardy.
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