Kyle Larson gets breakthrough Nationwide win at Fontana
March 22, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FONTANA, Calif. –
Heralded NASCAR neophyte Kyle Larson finally had his day in the sun.
When a
cloud cover lifted with roughly 50 laps left in Saturday’s
TreatMyClot.com 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Auto Club Speedway,
Larson’s No. 42 Turner Scott Motorsports
Chevrolet came to life.
Larson,
who had posted five second-place finishes in 37 previous NNS starts,
grabbed the lead after a restart on Lap 135 of 150 and survived an
intense battle against Kevin
Harvick and Kyle Busch to win for the first time in the Nationwide
Series, arriving at the finish line 0.342 seconds ahead of Harvick, who
edged Busch for second by 0.04 seconds.
Joey
Logano, who led 96 laps, came home fourth, followed by Coors Light Pole
Award winner Elliott Sadler. Chase Elliott, Matt Kenseth, Ty Dillon,
Trevor Bayne and Regan Smith
completed the top 10, leaving Smith and Bayne tied for the series
points lead through five races.
“I’m
shaking still; this is awesome,” said Larson, who got an ice-water bath
in Victory Lane. “I thought maybe we could get away [after the last
restart], but the 54 (Busch)
and 5 (Harvick) were really good behind us, and I had to race with
those guys.
“Man,
it was amazing. Those last 11 or 12 laps were the longest laps of my
life… It was pretty cool to beat those guys. The 54 and the 22 (Joey
Logano) have dominated the series
for a while now, and Harvick’s with a good team. It was a blast.”
Larson,
Busch and Harvick spent the last 16 laps dicing for position, with
Busch actually leading Lap 145 before Larson charged back past him on
the outside and stayed out
front to the finish. For Harvick and Busch, the quality and intensity
of the racing took some of the sting out of finishing second and third.
“The fans won today,” Busch said, summing up the electric atmosphere of the closing laps.
With a
rear axle housing that was skewed outside of NASCAR’s tolerances,
Busch’s No. 54 Toyota failed to clear inspection before the end of the
first round of knockout qualifying
and started the race from the rear of the field.
What
might have been a daunting challenge to a lesser driver was a mere
inconvenience to Busch, who advanced to 25th on the first lap and was
16th by the time he completed
the second-green flag lap after an early caution for Jamie Dick’s
collision with the Turn 3 wall on Lap 1.
That
was the start of Busch’s methodical march through the field. By Lap 8,
Busch was 10th. On Lap 14, he passed Brian Scott for the fifth spot. On
Lap 22, he grabbed second
place from Kevin Harvick.
And
when Logano had issues with the right front tire during a green-flag pit
stop on Lap 41, Busch had the lead, with a margin of more than three
seconds. Just as methodically
as Busch had carved his way through the field, however, Logano cut the
No. 54 Toyota’s advantage to nothing and retook the lead with a pass on
Lap 61.
After
pit stops under caution for debris on the backstretch, Busch regained
the top spot following a restart on Lap 72, moving past Logano to the
inside. Contact in Turn 2
between the Chevrolets of Dylan Kwasniewski and Chase Elliott, which
knocked Elliott into the outside wall, slowed the field for the third
time and gave Logano a chance to regain the lead, which he did soon
after a restart on Lap 78.
Logano
took control of the race, despite a charge from Larson, who found
warmer, slicker conditions more to his liking after the sun broke
through the clouds as the race reached
Lap 100 of a scheduled 150.
Following
a round of green-flag pit stops, Logano led Larson in second by 4.147
seconds on Lap 116, but the 21-year-old California native immediately
began cutting into the
deficit, chopping it down to 0.233 seconds by Lap 125.
Larson
had the lead by a nose when the cars crossed the stripe on Lap 128, but
Logano regained the point a moment later, before NASCAR called the
fourth caution when Josh Wise’s
Chevrolet dropped fluid on the track.
Pit
stops under the yellow scrambled the running order, putting Harvick in
the lead for a restart on Lap 135, with Larson, Logano, Busch and Sadler
lined up in second through
fifth, respectively. Larson rocketed to the lead after taking the green
flag and held off repeated challenges from Harvick and Busch to secure
his first Nationwide Series victory.
No comments:
Post a Comment