Brad Keselowski holds off Kyle Busch for Nationwide win in Las Vegas
March 8, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS VEGAS –
In the closing
laps of Saturday's Boyd Gaming 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Las
Vegas Motor Speedway, Kyle Busch was close enough to make Brad
Keselowski uncomfortable.
It didn’t help that Keselowski’s engine sputtered when the voltage in his battery dropped dangerously low.
But
Keselowski built a big enough lead after a restart on Lap 168 of 200 to
ward off Busch’s charge in the closing stages of the race.
Keselowski’s
first win of the season, his first at LVMS and the 28th of his career
left Busch, a Las Vegas native, frustrated in his 11th futile
attempt to win a Nationwide Series race on home turf. Busch was
runner-up for the second straight year and third time overall.
“Kyle’s
one of the best in the business, and he deserves a win here, and he’s
been real close, just like we have,” said Keselowski, who was leading
on the final lap in 2011 before a blown tire knocked him back to third.
“These
races aren’t getting any easier to win. I drove as hard as I could
every lap, knowing that Kyle was coming there, especially at the end.
We were having some troubles with the engine there, and I knew it was
just a matter of time before he caught me. I was just trying to get
through as much traffic as I could and extend that time and was counting
down the laps. It felt good that everything worked
out at the end.”
Kyle
Larson ran third, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr. and rookie Chase
Elliott. Matt Kenseth, Brian Scott, Trevor Bayne, Chris Buescher and
Regan
Smith completed the top 10, leaving Smith and Bayne tied for the series
points lead.
Busch
dropped to the rear for the start of the race, because his crew made an
unapproved adjustment to the No. 54 Toyota after impound, replacing
a frayed alternator belt. By Lap 12, however, Busch had cracked the top
10 and continued to advance through a 56-lap green-flag run to start
the race.
When
NASCAR slowed the field with a debris caution, Busch was third, having
gained two positions during an exchange of pit stops under green.
But
Keselowski was dominant during the middle third of the race, and after a
restart on Lap 75 — a result of the second caution for Dylan
Kwasniewski’s
brush with the Turn 3 wall on Lap 70 — he drove away from Busch, who
was running second.
A second cycle of green-flag stops put Busch in the lead on Lap 131. By then, there were seven cars on the lead lap.
Busch
had a half-second lead when NASCAR called the third caution on Lap 148
because of debris in Turn 2. During pit stops under yellow, Keselowski
overshot his pit stall, dropped three positions and restarted fifth on
Lap 152, with Busch leading the field to green.
Seven
laps later, after an intense battle for the lead, Kenseth spun in Turn 4
trying to keep pace with Busch but adroitly kept the No. 20 Toyota
off the wall and saved the car from damage.
Keselowski
rocketed into the lead moments after the subsequent restart on Lap 162
and held it the rest of the way. Busch picked the outside lane
for that restart and immediately dropped positions to Keselowski and
Elliott but didn’t consider that choice a decisive factor.
“I
stepped on the gas, and it felt like I was holding a parachute, the way
those guys went by me,” Busch said. “I was third before I even got to
Turn 1. Junior was pushing me there for a little bit. I don’t know
happened, if he fell off me or what, but… it just wouldn’t go.”
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