Cool-Down Lap: Kurt Busch could find redemption in Sonoma performance
June 25, 2012: Commentary
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SONOMA,
Calif. -- After doing all the right things on a sunny Sunday at Sonoma,
Kurt Busch can take an object lesson from the driver who finished right
behind him in the Toyota/Save Mart 350.
That driver is Brian Vickers, who six months ago was radioactive, unemployable, a laughingstock to a prospective sponsor.
Within
an extremely small window of opportunity, Vickers has achieved a
remarkable transformation. The driver who sullied his own reputation by
waging war on championship contender Matt Kenseth last fall at
Martinsville now has an opportunity to regain a firm foothold in NASCAR
Sprint Cup racing.
Vickers
can thank Michael Waltrip for a second chance. When Waltrip hired Mark
Martin to drive the No. 55 Toyota in 25 races this season, he needed a
fill-in driver for six races. Vickers, who lost his ride when owner
Dietrich Mateschitz pulled the plug on Red Bull Racing's NASCAR effort
last year, signed on for six of the races Martin chose not to run -- two
each at Bristol, Martinsville and New Hampshire.
Vickers'
rebound started with performance. In his debut for Michael Waltrip
Racing at Bristol in March, he led 125 laps and finished fifth.
Subsequently, Waltrip added the road course races at Sonoma and Watkins
Glen to Vickers' schedule.
Vickers
made the most of his opportunity on Sunday, shucking off a pit road
speeding penalty to finish fourth behind race winner Clint Bowyer, Tony
Stewart and Busch.
After the race, Waltrip waxed enthusiastic about Vickers' prospects.
"We
structured MWR and built our building and Toyota believes in the fact
that we could have four teams one day," said Waltrip, who fields cars
for Martin, Bowyer and Martin Truex Jr. "Certainly is a possibility to
add Brian to our driver lineup with a fourth team, or even have him hang
around another year, and if Mark ever gets done driving . . . "
Vickers
is a talented driver, but that's quite a leap of faith for a car owner,
considering that Vickers was all but untouchable at the end of the
year. Waltrip explained.
"If
you think of somebody's attitude that is 180 degrees different,"
Waltrip said, "he struggled years ago getting tangled up with folks, and
he started the season saying, 'I'm not that guy -- I know how to drive
these race cars, and I'm going to prove it.'
"He's been amazing for our organization."
That
should be an object lesson there for the embattled Busch, who came
tenuously close to chucking his career when he violated probation earned
at Darlington in May during a thoughtless, sarcastic confrontation with
a reporter at Dover in June.
But
Busch created his own window of opportunity for redemption at Sonoma --
not simply by running third, but by the way he ran third. Busch took an
underfunded car to the front of the field, and with victory there for
the taking, resisted the temptation to move Bowyer out of the way in the
closing laps.
Busch
hounded Bowyer lap after lap until he brushed a stack of tires on the
inside of Turn 11 and broke the panhard bar on his No. 51 Chevrolet.
Nonetheless, Busch manhandled the car to a third-place finish.
After
the race, Busch paid a visit to Bowyer in Victory Lane and
congratulated him on the win. He choked up in the media center during
his post-race interviews. Busch earned considerable good will for the
way he drove the race and for the way he handled defeat after coming so
tantalizingly close to victory.
If
Vickers is a talented driver with two Cup wins, one trip to the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and considerable potential yet to be realized,
Busch is an elite talent with 24 victories, six Chases made and one Cup
championship. His unquestioned skills already have afforded him plenty
of second chances.
Phoenix
Racing owner James Finch decided to stand by his driver despite a
suspension for the Dover incident that sidelined Busch for the Cup race
at Pocono. Crew chief Nick Harrison is solidly behind him, as is sponsor
Tag Heuer, which is on the No. 51 for a limited number of races that
did not include Sonoma.
On
one previous occasion this year, Busch emptied a reservoir of good will
with nothing to show for it. In a NASCAR Nationwide Series race at
Richmond in late April, he did what few other drivers could have done,
holding off Denny Hamlin, who had a faster car in the closing stages of
the race, in a photo finish for the win. The victory was the first as a
Nationwide owner for Kurt's brother Kyle Busch, leading to a touching
display of camaraderie after the race.
A
week later, Busch adopted the Ricky Bobby persona from the film
"Talladega Nights" for the Cup race at Talladega and tossed out lines
from the movie as he drove. That's what got the attention of producers
of the "Jerry Springer Show," who approached Finch about a sponsorship
opportunity.
Ultimately,
the Springer feelers failed to materialize (perhaps the show got the
publicity boost it needed when the story of a possible deal broke), and
Busch lost the opportunity to build on his successes with the incident
at Dover.
After
Sonoma, he has yet another chance, if he can only bury the ghosts of
the past and -- like Vickers -- say with finality, "I'm not that guy."
ITAL/The opinions expressed are solely those of the author/ITAL
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