Late pass gives Kyle Busch NASCAR Nationwide Series victory from the pole at Charlotte
Oct. 11, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD, N.C.—Status quo.
Kyle
Busch won from the Coors Light pole—as he almost always does—and the
race for the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship remained excruciating
tight.
Busch
held off charging series leader Austin Dillon in Friday night’s Dollar
General 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Earlier in the day, Busch had
won his ninth NNS pole of
the season, and for the eighth time in nine tries this year, Busch won
from the top starting spot.
The
victory was the series-best 11th of the season for Busch, who won for
the eighth time in the series at Charlotte and for the 62nd time in his
career, extending his own
series record. In Victory Lane, Busch announced that he and wife
Samantha were donating all the race winnings to the Pretty in Pink
Foundation to combat breast cancer.
“I
didn’t think we were going to win the thing, but somehow I got to the
top (of the track) and started making time and was able to get back up
there (to the lead),” Busch
said. “I certainly want to do this tomorrow night also (in the Sprint
Cup race).”
Sam
Hornish Jr. ran third and remained eight points behind Dillon in the
battle for the Nationwide Series title. Hornish scored an extra point
for leading most laps (76) and
matched Dillon’s 43 points scored in the race.
“We had
three guys fighting it out there till the end with everything we had,”
Dillon said. “It was a heck of a race. I told Sam it was the best race I
felt like I was a part
of all year, slicing and dicing out there.
“Man,
it was so easy to miss your line out there. The track’s obviously
getting some character, and it’s creating some better racing, I feel
like. It was a good run for us.
This isn’t one of our better tracks, and to come here and do that, I’m
very happy.”
Kevin Harvick came home fourth, followed by Matt Kenseth and Justin Allgaier.
Busch,
the pole winner, was first off pit road under caution for a restart on
Lap 163 and held the top spot until Hornish ran him down on Lap 180.
Over the course of the run,
however, Hornish’s Ford began to fade, and Busch regained the top spot
with a pass to the outside of Turn 2 on lap 193.
Hornish said the handling of his car loosened up as the run progressed.
“Tonight
we had it turning plenty good, and as the run went on, it got freer,”
Hornish said. “I’m just happy we came in here tonight, and we ran well.
It’s very frustrating
to be leading with 10 laps to go and pulling away from the 54 car
(Busch), and to not be able to win.
“We
could never get far enough ahead of the track to get our car right where
we needed to be. I had to work hard just to keep the car underneath me
there the last 10 laps.”
Kyle
Larson restarted 10th on Lap 117 but, running the outside lane next to
the wall, he diced his way through traffic and inherited the lead when
Regan Smith came to pit road
on Lap 141. At that point, Larson held a lead of more than four
seconds, but Busch, running second, trimmed nearly three seconds off the
advantage before Jeffrey Earnhardt’s blown engine caused the fifth
caution on Lap 156.
Trouble
with the right front tire cost Larson four spots during pit stops under
yellow on Lap 157. Ultimately, the talented rookie scraped the wall in
Turns 3 and 4 on lap
183 while chasing Austin Dillon during an intense battle for third.
Despite
finishing 13th, Larson nevertheless made a huge impression on the eve
of his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start in Saturday night’s Bank of
America 500.
Elliott
Sadler, fourth in the standings before the race, started from the rear
of the field after backup car after wrecking his primary No. 11 Toyota
during qualifying. Sadler
charged through the field and ran as high as 14th before a bizarre
wreck in Turn 1 spoiled his night.
The
incident started in the tri-oval, where Reed Sorenson clipped the edge
of the infield grass with his left-side tires and shot up the track into
the No. 14 Camry of Eric
McClure. Brian Vickers, darting to the inside to avoid the wreck,
clobbered Sadler, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, just as Sadler was
exiting pit road.
Sadler
returned to the track but crashed in Turn 3 on Lap 66, ending his race
in 35th place and effectively ending his run at the series championship.
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