Kyle Busch on his way to mastering 'The World's Fastest Half-Mile'
March 13, 2014
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Dominance. In the annals of sports lore, what constitutes a feat of pure dominance?
How
about when New York Yankees pitcher Don Larsen threw the only perfect
game in World Series history against the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956 … the
UCLA Bruins men's basketball team dominated the college ranks in the
1960s, losing only twice in four years … the Miami Dolphins put together
a perfect 17-0 season that ended with a Super Bowl victory … the 1992
U.S. Olympics basketball "Dream Team" steamrolled
the competition on their way to the gold medal in Barcelona, Spain …
the 1985-86 Boston Celtics went 40-1 at the Boston Garden en route to
the NBA title.
All
of these are fine examples, but when it comes to NASCAR and today's
drivers and race tracks, there is no better pairing than Kyle Busch and
Bristol Motor Speedway.
While
Busch doesn't have the most NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories at the
.533-mile track nestled in the mountains of Northeast Tennessee -- that
honor belongs to NASCAR Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip with 12 -- it is
easy to see why he'll be a favorite to win Sunday's Food City 500 (1
p.m. ET on FOX).
"When
they changed the track starting at the end of 2007, I just really took
to it right away," said Busch, who has a record 15 victories at Bristol
across all three of NASCAR's national series. "I really liked it and
I've been fast there, but also I've had great race cars from Joe Gibbs
Racing.
"It's just a fun race track no matter what series I'm running there."
In
18 starts in NASCAR's premier series at Bristol, Busch has compiled
five wins, eight top fives, 12 top 10s and 1,431 laps led. The victories
and laps led are personal bests for the Las Vegas native. Kurt Busch
(Kyle's older brother) and Jeff Gordon are the only other two active
drivers with five wins at the track.
The younger Busch has a series-best Driver Rating of 101.8, and series-highs in most laps led (1,431) and fastest laps (585).
Since
2006, he has finished outside the top 20 only once -- a 32nd-place
finish in March 2012. Over the past nine years, his average finish at
the
track is 9.9. His average since the track was repaved following the
2007 season is 8.1.
His
first Bristol win came March 2007 in a green-white-checkered finish. He
followed that up with a Bristol sweep in 2009. His last two wins at
the track came in August 2010 and March 2011. Since his last win, he
has two top-six finishes, including a runner-up performance in the March
2013 event.
In
the first three races of 2014, Busch has eclipsed the 100 driver rating
figure and collected fastest laps run in each; however, he only has one
top-10 finish to show for his efforts – a ninth at Phoenix. He finished
19th at Daytona and 11th last weekend in his hometown. He's currently
10th in the standings, 38 points behind leader Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Busch
is approaching a major series milestone, one that could come this
Sunday. If he leads 140 or more laps -- an accomplishment he's achieved
four times at Bristol, most recently in March 2011 -- he will become
the 15th driver in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series history to lead 10,000 laps.
In
August 2010, Busch pulled off the rare hat trick by becoming the first
driver in NASCAR history to win all three national series events at the
same track. Rightfully so, it's his most memorable moment at the track.
"We
won the Truck race on Wednesday night, backed it up with Nationwide
race Friday and took home the Cup race on Saturday night," Busch said.
"It's
something that's never been done in the 16 years there have been three
series and it hasn't been done in the four years since I did it. There
could be a chance for me to do it again."
Busch's
Bristol success extends beyond the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. He's
visited Victory Lane six times in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and four
times in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
ELLIOTT IN RHYTHM
Over
the first three races of the 2014 season, NASCAR Nationwide Series
Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender Chase Elliott has continued to make
progress.
In
the season-opening race at Daytona, the 18-year-old son of NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series champion Bill Elliott, finished a respectable 15th.
The following
week he notched his first top 10 in the series, coming home ninth at
Phoenix. Then last week, the younger Elliott posted his first top-five
finish at Las Vegas, when he placed fifth.
If
Elliott is able to continue his upward trajectory, its feasible that he
could be celebrating in Victory Lane following Saturday's Drive to Stop
Diabetes 300 presented by Lilly Diabetes (2 p.m. ET on ESPN2) in his
inaugural series visit to Bristol Motor Speedway.
"It's
going to be important to learn as much as we can to help build that
notebook for the fall," Elliott said. "The past two races, my NAPA AUTO
PARTS team has been getting into a nice rhythm and we want to build on
our fifth-place finish at Vegas this weekend in Bristol."
Prior
to this weekend, Elliott has competed at the .533-mile short track
three times, including the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event in
August
2013 where he finished fifth. He placed 10th in the NASCAR K&N Pro
Series East race in 2012. In his first race at the track -- in the X-1R
Pro Cup Series -- Elliott came home with a fifth-place showing.
He
is currently fifth in the standings, only 14 points behind leader Regan
Smith. In the rookie race, Elliott leads all rookies with Ty Dillon in
second (-four).
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