Bowyer saves just enough fuel to win Chase race at Charlotte
Oct. 13, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD, N.C.—Clint Bowyer was burned up that he didn't have enough fuel to complete a righteous burnout.
But
that was the only thing that went wrong in Saturday night's Bank of
America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Saving fuel over the final 56
laps of the closing green-flag
run, Clint Bowyer snookered his Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup rivals
in winning his third race of the season and the eighth of his career.
Bowyer,
who won for the first time at Charlotte and the first time on an
intermediate speedway, beat Denny Hamlin to the finish line by .417
seconds. Jimmie Johnson, who like
Hamlin and Bowyer was saving fuel over the final run, came home third.
The top three finishers trimmed a significant portion off Brad
Keselowski's series lead.
"I want to do a burnout!" Bowyer lamented in Victory Lane. "Am I ever going to get to do a burnout?"
Keselowski
ran out of fuel before his final pit stop and finished 11th. Keselowski
leads Johnson by seven points and third-place Hamlin by 15 at the
midpoint of the Chase.
Bowyer climbed to fourth in the standings, 28 points back.
"Realistically,
we're still in the thing," Bowyer said. "We've just got to keep doing
what we're doing. Talladega (where Bowyer was the victim of a 25-car
last-lap crash and
finished 23rd) was a huge setback, but what a great way to bounce back
and get pointed back in the right direction."
Bowyer
moved from Richard Childress Racing to Michael Waltrip Racing this year,
and the depth of success in their first season together has been a
pleasant surprise.
"It
makes you almost giddy," Bowyer said. "It's so much fun to come to the
racetrack knowing that you've got cars that are capable of getting the
job done . . . Who would have
thought in a million years, after making the switch and coming over to a
new family, and everything that was new, that we'd be in Victory Lane
three times?
"With five races left, we're still in contention for a championship our first year together."
Greg Biffle ran fourth, Kyle Busch fifth and Mark Martin sixth, as only six cars finished on the lead lap
Keselowski,
who started 20th, gained track position by pitting under the first
caution on Lap 12 and then staying out when the rest of the lead-lap
cars came to pit road under
the third yellow on Lap 37. From Lap 42 through Lap 166, the race ran
caution-free, and when NASCAR threw the fourth yellow for debris in Turn
1 on Lap 166, the caution restored all the lead-lap cars to the same
tire cycle.
All
except Johnson, that is. Curiously, Johnson was the only driver to take
two tires (right sides) as opposed to four during pit stops on Lap 168.
The No. 48 Chevrolet restarted
the race in the lead on lap 173, but Johnson quickly lost six spots to
cars with fresher rubber.
With a
three-wide move to the outside on the restart, Biffle took the top spot,
but his stint at the point was short-lived. Keselowski slipped past
Biffle on lap 180, pulling
Hamlin with him, and began logging laps at the front of the field.
A
debris caution interrupted the proceedings on lap 223, but it didn't
deter Keselowski, who led the field to a restart on Lap 228 and began to
pull away from Kyle Busch. Johnson
and Hamlin came to pit road to top off their fuel cells under the
caution — whereas Keselowski did not.
Ultimately,
that cost the driver of the No. 2 Dodge, who ran one lap too many
before his next stop and ran out of fuel before getting back to pit road
on Lap 276. Keselowski's
car stalled in the pit box, and by the time he was back up to racing
speed, he was 13th in the running order.
Johnson
and Hamlin pitted on Laps 279 and 280, respectively, and were confident
they could make it to the checkered flag without stopping again. They
did — but so did Bowyer.
Neither
Hamlin nor Johnson was particularly thrilled at having to back down his
speed to save gas, but they were consoled by the dent they made in
Keselowski's points advantage.
"We ran
around in circles and were done," Johnson said sardonically when he
entered the media center for his post-race press conference. "It's a
tough way to race, for sure,
but I'm happy that as a group and a team, we've figured out how to get
better at fuel-mileage racing.
"It's
something that we didn't have in our repertoire for a lot of years. So
I'm very pleased with the progress we've made, that I've made in the
car. My driving style just
eats up fuel. Making good changes, and playing the game the way it
needs to be played right now, and closed in a little bit on that No. 2
car (Keselowski)."
Subbing
for Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was sidelined by a concussion, Regan Smith
turned in a strong performance in the early going of the first race
without an Earnhardt since
1979 and the first race without a driver from North Carolina since
1961.
Smith
ran as high as ninth and was firmly in the 10th spot when his engine
expired on Lap 61, ending his first run for Hendrick Motorsports.
"I
think the important part was that we had a really fast race car," Smith
said after exiting the No. 88 Chevrolet. "We had a good first adjustment
there, went just a little
too far with it and got a little too free.
"Needed one more stop and I think we would have had it dialed in . . . It's disappointing."
Smith will get his second shot in the car next weekend at Kansas Speedway.
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