Gutsy call lands Todd Bodine in Victory Lane for "Lucas Oil 200" NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race
By Brian Smith, Dover International Speedway
June 1, 2012
Dover, Del. -- Kevin Harvick entered
Friday’s "Lucas Oil 200" NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race as one
of the most successful drivers at Dover International Speedway who has
never won a race. Through 39 events in the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series and the NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series, Harvick had run near the top several times, but had
always fallen victim to something – equipment failure, someone else’s
equipment failure or some other form of bad luck.
On Friday, Harvick was able to add rain to that
list. Although he had a dominant No. 2 Tide Chevrolet truck that could
outrun any other on the track in clean air, it could not outrun the
weather. Harvick was running third when the race
was ended on lap 147 with Todd Bodine declared the winner. Bodine
recovered from a spinout on lap 69 to be in the right place at the right
time when the skies opened up.
In a race where just about everybody expected rain
to arrive, there were a few delays before it did. There were three
cautions in the first 29 laps and a total of five in the first 100 for
various reasons. Jason White lost an engine in
a fiery fashion on lap 13. John Wes Townley spun out on lap 25, and
four laps later a five-car wreck slowed affairs for four laps.
Harvick, who started from the pole, led the first
29 laps until pitting after Townley’s ride through Turn 2. He drove
through traffic to take the front spot again on lap 55 and led by more
than three seconds at times. But he gave up the
lead during a pit stop under yellow on lap 121. After his stop, the
track got its first shower and NASCAR stopped the race for 15 minutes.
From there, it was a guessing game for teams as to
what to do. The skies continued to threaten, and there were two more
accidents that brought out the yellow and complicated matters – a Max
Gresham accident on lap 129, and a wreck involving
points leader Justin Lofton and Ron Hornaday, Jr. on lap 137. Once the
race went back green on lap 139 after the second yellow, it only lasted
five more laps before rain started to fall again.
That was exactly what Bodine and crew chief Rick
Gay, Jr. wanted to see. They’d elected to stay out rather than pit,
putting them in a fuel conservation mode – Bodine was actually cutting
the engine off and on again during the caution periods
to save on gas.
“We were either going to win it or we were going to be 20th behind all those guys,” Bodine said. “Sometimes it works out.”
As a result, Bodine ended up with his first career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win at Dover in the "Lucas Oil 200."
“It’s my first series win as well, so I’m excited
about what we did there,” Gay said. “We took a pretty good gamble and it
paid off for us.”
Harvick lamented the rain’s timing, and wasn’t sure
the first yellow flag was completely necessary. But he chalked it up to
bad luck.
“We had a great truck all weekend and just got beat
by the weather there,” he said. “It wound up raining and not finishing
the race. The guys did a great job of controlling all the things they
could control and that’s all you can do.”
Parker Kligerman took home a second-place finish, a
fantastic day considering he was one of the five cars collected in the
accident on lap 29.
“We were fast, just biding our time,” Kligerman
said. “We knew we’d probably get to halfway with the rain. We were just
in the wrong place in the wrong time, got a little front end damage. The
guys did a great job repairing it. I was angry
and just kind of drove with my hair on fire.”
The trucks were noticeably slower across the board
in traffic, and Bodine thought Harvick, despite all his success, might
have had trouble catching himself or Kligerman if the weather had
allowed the race to go the distance.
“From what I saw in the mirror, I don’t know if he
could have done it,” Bodine said. “When you get back behind somebody,
the air’s so dirty that it really becomes difficult to pass. I think
Parker and myself both would have had to make
mistakes and get out of the groove. When our truck was out in front
like that, it was half a second faster per lap. All the problems I’d
been complaining about went away magically when we got out in front. It
would have been interesting to see.”
After Harvick, Nelson Piquet Jr. and Cale Gale
rounded out the top five. Ty Dillon, who will make his NASCAR Nationwide
Series debut on Saturday in the "5-hour ENERGY," finished sixth, with
James Buescher, Matt Crafton, Timothy Peters and
Lofton completing the top 10.
The “5-hour ENERGY” NASCAR Nationwide race takes
the green flag at 2 p.m. EST tomorrow in Dover. Tickets for the event,
along with Sunday’s “FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks,” are available
by calling 800-441-RACE, visiting DoverSpeedway.com,
or at the ticket office at the track on raceday.
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