Kyle Busch wins Nationwide race at Texas to set up possible weekend sweep
Nov. 1, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Tex.—Texas Motor Speedway President Eddie Gossage may need a
broom as well as a pair of six-guns in Victory Lane on Sunday, after
Kyle
Busch completed the second leg of a possible sweep by winning
Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge.
In
winning his seventh NASCAR Nationwide Series race of the season, his
seventh in 18 starts at Texas, the 70th of his career and the 100th NNS
event
for Joe Gibbs Racing, Busch led 116 of 200 laps in completing the
second leg of a possible weekend sweep at the 1.5-mile speedway.
On
Friday night, Busch took the checkered flag in the NASCAR Camping World
Truck Series, and on Sunday he’ll try to record the second weekend
trifecta
of his career in the AAA Texas 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race (3
p.m. ET on ESPN), the second event in the Eliminator Round of the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Busch
beat polesitter Joey Logano to the finish line by 1.561 seconds in the
300-mile event. Logano could keep up with Busch in the short runs but
began to lose ground as each fuel run progressed.
The
combination of Busch’s long-run car and his migration to the high line
at the high-banked speedway was too much for Logano to overcome. Busch
saw
his own Kyle Busch Motorsports driver Darrell Wallace Jr. run the top
successfully in the Truck race on Friday and took the lesson to heart.
“That
was just something we found today—actually (Friday) night a little, to
be honest with you,” Busch said. “Bubba Wallace went up there and he was
really fast as well, too, up there. I took a little bit from that and
also what I learned in that race as well.
“I
never got as high as Bubba did, but I got somewhat up there. Just put
that to today and was able to use it to our advantage. It felt really
good
to run up there and be fast like that and have good speed. Hopefully,
some of that comes in (on Sunday).”
Busch
will be trying to duplicate the feat he accomplished in August 2010 at
Bristol, where he won races in Trucks, Nationwide and Cup.
“The
opportunity for that tomorrow would be something special,” Busch said.
“I’d cherish it as much as the first one… You don’t’ get very many
opportunities
to capitalize on all three.”
Ryan
Blaney, Logano’s Team Penske teammate, finished third, followed by
series leader Chase Elliott, who extended his margin in the standings to
48
points over 11th-place finisher Regan Smith. If he maintains that
advantage after next Saturday’s race at Phoenix, Elliott will clinch the
series championship in the next-to-last race of his rookie season.
Matt
Kenseth came home fifth, with Brian Scott, Austin Dillon and Kevin
Harvick behind him. Elliott Sadler got credit for a ninth-place finish
after
turning his No. 11 Toyota over to relief driver Clint Bowyer under
caution on Lap 9.
Bowyer
had qualified the car, but Sadler started the race despite suffering
from a severe bout of intestinal flu and accompanying nausea that had
sidelined
him for time trials.
With
all the back-and-forth between Busch’s No. 54 Toyota and Logano’s No.
22 Ford, Logano was hoping for a late-race caution to set up a short
run,
but the race stayed green for the final 63 laps.
“Kyle
and I had a heck of a race, that’s for sure,” Logano said. “We were
able to catch up to him and pass him, but then after about 20 laps or
so,
it was like a light switch.
“The
car would just switch to loose, and he would go by me and drive away.
That’s what ultimately beat us, having a long run like that at the end.”
Hard
luck continued to haunt Trevor Bayne, who had passed Logano for the
lead on Lap 34, only to slam the Turn 2 wall 15 laps later.
As
Bayne was rolling through the center of Turns 1 and 2, he cut to the
inside to pass a lapped car. At that instant, the car apparently hit a
piece
of debris on the track, deflating the right front tire and sending
Bayne’s No. 6 Ford rocketing into the outside wall.
The
car burst into flames and continued through Turn 2 trailing a plume of
fire behind it. Bayne escaped the inferno unhurt, but the car—one of his
best of the year—was destroyed.
“It
is never good to pop a right front tire, or whatever we did there,”
Bayne said after leaving the infield care center. “Whether it was a line
or
tire—I think it was a tire—it’s never a good time, but especially not
when you have the best car you have ever had in your career. That thing
was on a rail. I have never had a car so dominant, especially at the
Nationwide level.
“It
was easy today for the time we were on the race track. The first couple
laps I was really loose and needed a small adjustment, but, man, I
think
we had a great shot to win this race today. My guys have worked so hard
all season long and they deserve a win and some cowboy hats here. I
don’t even know what to say about it. It just blows your mind that
something like that can happen on such a great day.”
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