Kyle Busch leads every lap in dominating Nationwide win at Richmond
Sept. 5, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
RICHMOND, Va.—-Picture perfect.
Coors
Light polesitter Kyle Busch led all 250 laps in Friday night’s
Virginia529 College Savings 250 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at
Richmond International Raceway and beat
runner-up and series leader Chase Elliott to the finish line by 1.323
seconds.
Driving
a No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota that was the clear class of the field,
Busch won for the fourth time this season, the fifth time at Richmond
and the series-best 67th
time in his career.
It was
the second time Busch has led every lap in a Nationwide Series race, the
first coming at Phoenix in 2011 when he led 200 laps after starting
from the pole.
“It's
been a while, if you think about it,” said Busch, who hadn’t won a
Nationwide race at Richmond since 2011. “We’ve had a lot of bad luck
lately, and it feels good, trying
to get some mojo back, get ready for tomorrow night (Saturday’s NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series race), see what we can salvage there and roll on into
the Chase.”
Busch
said Joe Gibbs Racing did considerable work on its short-track package
after finishing third behind the Chevrolets of Harvick and Elliott in
April.
“All in
all, the guys did a great job,” Busch said. “They were really smart
about what they needed, what we needed, what I needed.”
Kevin
Harvick ran third after ceding the second position to Elliott on the
race’s final restart on Lap 233. Ryan Blaney came home fourth, followed
by Brian Scott and Regan
Smith, who fell 19 points behind Elliott, his JR Motorsports teammate
in the series standings.
While
Busch spent the race comfortably out front after taking the green flag
from the pole position, Harvick systematically worked his way forward
from the 15th starting position.
Harvick passed Blaney for the second spot just before the caution flag
flew for the fifth time on Lap 166 because of debris on the backstretch.
But
that was as close as Harvick could get. Busch quickly pulled away to a
lead of more than two seconds after the subsequent restart on Lap 172
and continued to pull away.
The margin stabilized at roughly 3.3 seconds as Busch and Harvick
worked heavy traffic as the laps counted down.
Harvick began to eat into Busch’s advantage before a yellow flag interrupted his progress.
NASCAR
called the sixth caution on Lap 226 after Landon Cassill’s Chevrolet
brushed the wall in Turn 2, but the restart on Lap 33 produced more of
the same for Busch, who blocked
Elliott to the inside and took off.
“Kyle
had a much better car and was able to take off on the short runs and get
way out there,” said Harvick, who thought he might have been able to
catch Busch during the final
run, if not for the caution.
Note:
NASCAR is taking the rear gear from Busch's winning No. 54 Camry back
to its research-and
development center in Concord, N.C., for further evaluation. Should any
penalties be warranted, they will be announced next week.
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