Kyle Busch Wins At Homestead After Matt Crafton Clinches Truck Series Title
Nov. 15, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
HOMESTEAD,
Fla. -- It took Kyle Busch three attempts at a green-white-checkered
flag finish to win Friday's NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Ford
EcoBoost 200 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, but the overtime laps gave
him an unexpected bonus: an owners' championship for Kyle Busch
Motorsports.
First
things first. Matt Crafton qualified eighth, cranked his engine for the
start of the race and won his first series championship in his 13th
full year in the trucks, closing out Ty Dillon simply by starting the
race.
But
Crafton was wrecked on the first attempt at a green-white-checker and
limped home in 21st, losing the owners' title to Busch on a tiebreaker
based on the number of victories during the season.
The
win was Busch's fifth of the season in 11 starts in his own No. 51
Toyota. It was his second win at the 1.5-mile track and the 35th of his
career.
Ryan
Blaney rallied from contact with the wall to finish second. Jeb Burton
hit the wall twice and finished third. Fourth-place finisher Brendan
Gaughan posted his fourth top five in as many races, and Ron Hornaday
Jr. ran fifth in his first race in the No. 34 Turner Scott Motorsports
entry.
Busch
was leading when Burton scraped the wall for the second time on Lap 130
during a late green-flag run. That sent the race to overtime, and
Busch led the field to the green flag on Lap 136, but a four-car wreck
that collected Crafton in the melee necessitated the second
green-white-checker.
Johnny
Sauter's wreck on Lap 142 caused the eighth caution of the evening to
set up the third and final try at a two-lap shootout.
Blaney
also made a statement in a close rookie-of-the-year battle against
Darrell Wallace Jr., becoming the youngest Sunoco Rookie of
the Year in series history. Blaney
led 51 of the first 65 laps and was first onto pit road on Lap 65 after
Darrell Wallace Jr. tagged the outside wall one circuit earlier.
Busch
was first off pit road for a restart on Lap 70, but after a pitched
battle for the lead that went four-wide at one juncture -- with Busch,
Blaney, Crafton and Hornaday all involved -- Blaney reclaimed the top
spot from Busch on Lap 78 and began to pull away.
Blaney's
lead was cut to one second on Lap 88, but Busch began to close, and on
Lap 94 Blaney scraped the outside wall to cause the fourth caution
of the race but rallied late for the runner-up finish as the race went
14 laps beyond its posted distance.
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