Saturday Watkins Glen Notebook
Aug. 8, 2015
Notebook Items:
· Kyle Busch likes Chase qualification rules just the way they are
· Buescher hopes good road course fortunes continue
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Kyle Busch likes Chase qualification rules just the way they are
WATKINS
GLEN, N.Y. – With four NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories since
returning from an 11-race injury absence, Kyle Busch will be eligible
for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup as soon as he cracks the top 30
in the series standings.
That
could come as early as Sunday at Watkins Glen International, if Busch
makes up a 13-point deficit to 30th-place David Gilliland in the
Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (2 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
Though
Busch is a prolific winner at NASCAR’s top level, he doesn’t begrudge
those who qualify for the Chase with a single victory, as both Aric
Almirola (Daytona) and AJ Allmendinger (Watkins Glen) did last year.
In fact, Busch fully supports the win-and-you’re-in aspect of the playoff eligibility rules.
“I
think winning in this sport is very, very tough and you see it every
single year,” Busch said. “I think the average is only between 12 and 14
(different) winners in a season, and that’s been that way for 15 years
or 20 years or whatever it’s been. It’s not all that easy to win these
races, and sometimes you look at teams – maybe last year you look at
Aric Almirola and AJ Allmendinger. They won races to get themselves into
the Chase, but were their teams really ready for the Chase?
“That’s
not for any of us to decide. It’s for them to be able to compete and
have that opportunity to compete for the championship… There’s
opportunity for teams like that, and I think this sport needs that. If
AJ were to win again this weekend, I think it would be perfect for him
to have the opportunity to race in the Chase and same for anybody else
like a Tony Stewart. If he were to win this weekend, I think it would be
a true revival story of his season and maybe of the rest of his
career.”
It’s
also worth noting that, if there’s a repeat winner on Sunday at Watkins
Glen, all 10 races winners this season other than Busch will be locked
into the Chase. Those with multiple wins — Jimmie Johnson, Kevin
Harvick, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kurt Busch and Matt Kenseth — already have
earned Chase berths.
BUESCHER HOPES GOOD ROAD COURSE FORTUNES CONTINUE
It would have been a smart bet to wager that Chris Buescher wouldn’t win his first NASCAR XFINITY Series race on a road course.
But it’s a bet you would have lost.
Advancing
to his current XFINITY ride at Roush Fenway Racing through Legends Cars
and ARCA Racing, Buescher may have seemed an unlikely candidate for a
road course win, but that didn’t stop him from taking the checkered flag
at Mid-Ohio last year.
And
Buescher will take offense if you attribute his victory to mere good
fortune. Nevertheless, to win his first XFINITY race on a road course
surprised the series points leader.
“Yes,
very surprised,” Buescher acknowledged. “Like I said, road racing is
not my background. Mid-Ohio, we showed up really fast off the truck and
we were able to maintain the speed throughout the weekend, so we knew we
had a shot. We were top-five every time we went on track, whether it
was qualifying or practice, and the whole race we were able to maintain
that.
“It’s
not like we lucked into it either. We were on a fuel mileage strategy,
but at the same time we had a late-race restart with 20 or 18 to go, and
they had their shot to try and get around us, so we were able to pull
it off. But it was a big surprise.”
Buescher
would like nothing better than to be surprised again, considering that,
starting with Saturday's Zippo 200 at The Glen (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN),
the XFINITY Series will race at three road courses within a four-week
span — including a return trip to Mid-Ohio next week.
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