Ty Dillon holds off Kyle Busch for first Nationwide Series win
July 26, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
INDIANAPOLIS—Ty
Dillon held off a charging Kyle Busch in the closing laps of the Lilly
Diabetes 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but he had to win the first
NASCAR Nationwide
Series race of his career with a fuel cell approaching empty.
Dillon
grabbed the lead from Busch, the pole winner, moments after a restart on
Lap 77 of 100. He soon opened a lead of one second over the most
prolific winner in series history,
but it wasn’t without some pinpoint calculations on the part of crew
chief Danny Stockman.
In what
was a family affair of the first order, Mike Dillon, the driver’s
father and spotter, told Ty Dillon to start backing up his corners with
six laps left. Dillon promptly
lost a third of a lead that had grown to more than 1.2 seconds.
Team owner Richard Childress, Dillon’s grandfather, broke into the radio channel a lap later.
“You can’t give up that much to him,” Childress said. “Go for it.”
From
that point on, Mike Dillon and Stockman kept repeating the same mantra,
“Hammer down!” — and Dillon obliged, getting to the finish line .833
seconds ahead of Busch. Matt
Kenseth ran third, and Kevin Harvick fourth.
“Boy,
that was all I had,” Dillon said. “When you’ve got the best in the
business behind you, it’s tough. It’s tough to stay focused and not give
up.”
As the
highest finisher among four eligible drivers for the Nationwide
Insurance “Dash 4 Cash,” Dillon pocketed an extra $100,000, but the
important thing was his first win
in the series.
“The car started getting a little tight, but we had speed all weekend,” Dillon said. “We got out front, and she unleashed.”
Harvick
led a race-high 33 laps but fell victim to the timing of a late debris
caution on Lap 71. The five laps run under yellow before the final
restart gave Dillon and Busch
the margin they needed to get to the end of the race on fuel.
In Busch’s estimation, the outcome hinged on the Lap 77 restart.
“I gave
it away on that last restart there in Turn 1,” Busch said. “I got down
in there, and the car never turned, and the car on my inside, Ty, drove
right on by me. He got
the lead, and it was over from there.
“I
tried to maintain with him and tried to do a few things to get by him
the first few laps before I got tight. And as soon as I got tight, he
distanced me, and that was it.”
Joey
Logano finished fifth, followed by Paul Menard, Brian Scott, Kyle Larson
and Trevor Bayne. Regan Smith ran 10th and trimmed the series lead of
JR Motorsports teammate
Chase Elliott, who came home 12th, to four points.
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