Kyle Busch dominates rain-shortened Nationwide race at Phoenix
March 1, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE, Ariz.—You can change the cars.
You can change the qualifying format.
You can change the weather from cloudy to sunny to rainy—multiple times.
But,
no matter what you do, you can’t keep Kyle Busch out of Victory Lane at
Phoenix International Raceway, at least not where the NASCAR Nationwide
Series is concerned.
In
Saturday’s Blue Jeans Go Green 200 at the one-mile track in the Sonoran
desert, Busch dominated—again—leading 155 laps en route to his
unprecedented
third straight NNS victory at PIR and his seventh overall.
Busch’s
first victory of the 2014 was his 64th overall, extending his own
series record, and it was his first in a rain-shortened race in any of
NASCAR’s top three series. Despite repeated efforts to dry the track,
NASCAR ultimately called the event 32 laps short of its scheduled
distance.
With
a hard rain falling, NASCAR brought the cars to pit road and halted the
race after Busch crossed the finish line to complete Lap 168, under
caution for Ryan Reed’s crash into the wall that guards the inside of
the backstretch dogleg.
After a red-flag period of two hours, eight minutes, NASCAR made Busch’s win official.
“I
think just the pure dominance we’ve shown here the last few times that
we’ve come here and the amount of laps we’ve led with how fast our cars
are is pretty phenomenal,” Busch said after a rain-soaked celebration.
“All the credit goes to Adam Stevens (crew chief) and everybody back at
the shop.
“It’s
fun to win them anyway. This is my first time winning a rain-shortened
one. Welcome to the tent. I don’t know that it really made a whole
lot of difference. We were really good. I would have loved to gone back
out there after, but the weather wasn’t on our side today.”
The
driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota had taken the point for
the first time with a pass of polesitter Brad Keselowski on Lap 6. From
that point on, he toyed with the rest of the field, extending his
advantage to more than four seconds at its widest.
Kevin
Harvick was second when rain halted the race, having passed Keselowski
on Lap 160. Keselowski recovered from an accident on Lap 20 to run
third. A tap from the pole winner sent Darryl Haar spinning into the
outside wall off Turn 2 in a collision that also damaged the nose of
Keselowski’s car.
The
2010 NNS champion restarted 27th on Lap 29 after pitting but worked his
way forward and took advantage of his earlier pit stop to retake the
lead, since most of the cars behind him had made green-flag stops for
tires and fuel before the second caution slowed the race on Lap 90.
Harvick led briefly for the restart on Lap 97, but Busch regained the top spot on the restart lap and never relinquished it.
Kyle
Larson was fourth, followed by Matt Kenseth, Elliott Sadler, Trevor
Bayne and last Saturday’s Daytona winner, Regan Smith, who retained a
five-point
lead over Bayne in the series standings.
In
his first run in the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, Harvick was loose
on restarts and soon fell approximately two seconds behind Busch.
“From
there, we were just able to maintain,” Harvick said. “But a good effort
for the first time out. ... Kyle had the best car today. We probably
finished where we should have.”
During
three breaks in the rain, NASCAR put its Air Titan track-drying system
to work, but three more intermittent downpours foiled the efforts
to restart the race.
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