Marcos Ambrose holds off Kyle Busch for fifth Nationwide Series road course win
August 9, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y.— Recovering from an early
spin after contact with Kyle Busch’s Toyota, Marcos Ambrose held off
Busch in the closing laps of Saturday’s Zippo 200 at the Glen to win the
series-best fifth road course race of his Nationwide
Series career.
The Australian driver has won four consecutive
NNS starts at 2.45-mile Watkins Glen International, having triumphed in
three straight from 2008 through 2010 and this year after a three-race
hiatus from competition at the Glen.
Though Ambrose knows full well the big prizes—a
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory in the Cheez-It 355 at the Glen (1 p.m.
ET on ESPN) and a berth in the Chase—will be contested on Sunday, he
was eager to savor the NNS win.
“I just want to enjoy today,” Ambrose said. “You
get to victory lane, and it’s special. I would love to repeat, but it’s
a lot of work tomorrow. I want to think about this and get a good
night’s rest and come attack them tomorrow.”
During an exchange of pit stops with 32 of 82
laps left, Ambrose surged past Joey Logano as the driver of the No. 12
Team Penske Ford exited pit road. When the sequence of stops cycled
through, Ambrose, who had pitted one lap earlier
than Logano, held the lead, with Logano running second.
Ambrose kept the top spot after a restart on Lap
63 that followed the fifth and final caution of the race. With five
laps left, Busch roared past Logano but couldn’t get to the bumper of
Ambrose’s No. 9 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford
in time to make a move for the win.
Logano came home third, followed by pole winner
Brad Keselowski and Matt Kenseth. Rookie Chase Elliott ran sixth and
extended his series lead to 12 points over JR Motorsports teammate Regan
Smith, who finished 17th.
The way Logano saw it, losing the spot to Ambrose during the cycle of green-flag stops was crucial.
“That was definitely a key moment,” Logano said.
“If I was able to get in front of him there… all I needed was
three-tenths of a second probably, and that would have been enough
position into that corner to beat him through the esses
and get position. I felt like, if I got clean air and ran hard, that I
could have gapped him.
“I think at the end of the race, he would have
caught me and the 54 (Busch) also. It would have been close. I’m not
going to say we would have won the race. It would have been close. Our
car was good on the short run. Marcos was steady
all the way through and the 54, late in the run, was really fast. If I
didn’t run so hard and had clean air and didn’t burn the tires off,
would I have lasted longer? Yeah.
“Would it have been enough to beat him? We’ll never know. But I feel it would have been closer for us, for sure.”
Ambrose agreed.
“I think if I hadn’t cleared him right there, he
would have been gone,” Ambrose said. “Maybe I could have stalked him a
little bit and got him in traffic, but we had a fast enough car to lead
like that, but it would have been really
tough to pass.”
Before the battle with Logano was even a
consideration, Ambrose had to recover from a Lap 6 spin in the bus stop
chicane after he and Busch collided near the entrance.
“He ducked out late, and then the spotter was
late,” Ambrose said. “I was already committed to that line, and he
thumped my left rear there. It wasn’t intentional. I’ve got no malice
against him whatsoever—he spun out, too.”
Busch wasn’t quite as charitable in his assessment of the mishap.
“We didn’t qualify as well as we needed to and
tried to make a move on somebody who didn’t give a crap, and then he
just turned into me and spun us out, so that put us behind,” Busch said.
“We came back and got second.”
In a quirky sort of way, the accident may have
helped both drivers. Both Ambrose and Busch brought their cars to pit
road for fuel and fresh tires under caution on Lap 13. Knifing his way
through traffic, Ambrose worked his way back
to fifth before pitting again under green on Lap 20, covering stops made
by Keselowski (Lap 18) and Logano (Lap 19).
“If you’d told me that’s how we were going to do
the race, I would have said that’s a bad strategy,” Ambrose quipped.
“But it worked out for us—first and second. For two guys doing
pirouettes in the bus stop, that’s pretty cool.
“And it just shows you how these races are never
over. You can’t quit. Just because you’re in the grass backwards
doesn’t mean your race is done.”
No comments:
Post a Comment