Kurt Busch edges Hamlin for Nationwide victory at Richmond
April 27, 2012 (EDITORS: Writethru/results)
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
RICHMOND,
Va. -- By the thinnest of margins, in a breathtaking finish that
featured two cars sideways and side-by-side at the finish line, Kurt
Busch beat Denny Hamlin to the checkered flag by .062 seconds to win
Friday night's Virginia 529 College Savings 250 at Richmond
International Raceway.
Busch
delivered the first-ever NASCAR Nationwide Series victory to the team
owned by his brother, Kyle Busch. The win was Busch's fourth in the
series and his first on a short track. Hamlin came up two feet short
after a phenomenal drive from the rear of the field after a pit road
mistake.
Pole-sitter
Kevin Harvick ran third, followed by defending series champion Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. and Sam Hornish Jr. Elliott Sadler finished sixth to cling
to the series points lead by two points over Stenhouse.
"To
get KBM (Kyle Busch Motorsports) its first win -- this is
unbelievable," Kurt Busch said in Victory Lane. "It's harder than you
think, putting a program together. You think you can come in here and
muscle your way to the top, but you have to think your way to the top."
Busch
parted ways with Penske Racing at the end of last season and took a
Sprint Cup job with James Finch's Phoenix Racing this year. He and Kyle
are sharing driving duties in the No. 54 Monster Energy Toyota in the
start-up Nationwide program.
"It
was unbelievable racing with him," Busch said. "I was pacing myself and
pacing myself, and -- boom! -- he came out of nowhere at the end."
For Kyle Busch, it was difficult to contain the excitement of the first victory with his own equipment.
"This
is the most emotional I've ever been for a win," said Kyle, himself a
prolific past winner in the No. 18 Toyota that Hamlin drove Saturday
night. "Man, this is cool. When you're behind the wheel, it's a lot
easier to do. When you're standing here watching the guy behind you
close in on you . . . Kurt ran him really tough, and then Denny ran us
clean."
In
a race dominated by Sprint Cup drivers Busch, Hamlin and Harvick -- and
featuring the relentlessly promoted Nationwide debut of X-Games gold
medalist Travis Pastrana -- the most noteworthy story was the
spectacular maiden voyage of 18-year-old Ryan Blaney, who finished
seventh in his series debut.
Hurt
by three slow pit stops, the last under green, Blaney otherwise would
have been a likely contender for the victory in his first Nationwide
race.
Hamlin likewise was a victim of a pit road mistake, but one of his own making.
Hamlin
missed his pit stall under caution on Lap 117, restarted 24th on Lap
125 and drove up to the third position before pitting under the green
flag on Lap 208.
Second
soon after the cycle of pit stops, Hamlin harried Busch until the end
of the race but ran out of time. Hamlin said he could have moved Busch
on the final lap but preferred to have the race decided fairly.
"I
could have moved him up and gotten him out of the groove, and it would
have been over with," Hamlin said. "But Kyle's a teammate (at Joe Gibbs
Racing) and (KBM general manager) Rick Ren and those guys have built a
great program, so I wanted it to be fair.
"He won fair and square, and (I was) just one lap too late."
Despite a pit road speeding penalty, Pastrana ran 22nd in his ballyhooed Nationwide debut. Danica Patrick came home 21st.
No comments:
Post a Comment