Kyle Busch completes Martinsville sweep with Sprint Cup victory
April 3, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
MARTINSVILLE,
Va. – Kyle Busch came to Martinsville Speedway this weekend with no
grandfather clock trophies from the shortest and tightest of the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series
short tracks.
He
left with two clocks after completing an unprecedented Martinsville
sweep in Sunday’s STP 500, and, appropriately, the first question he
radioed to his crew after his celebratory
burnouts dealt with telling time.
“What
time is it?” crowed the reigning series champion, who a day earlier had
won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Martinsville in his
own equipment.
Then
Busch answered his own rhetorical question. “Time to tell the haters to
shut up!” Busch shouted, a reference to the ambivalent relationship the
Joe Gibbs Racing driver
enjoys with the NASCAR fan base.
But
Busch can be forgiven for his over-the-top exclamation. With the
victory, he’s all but assured of defending his 2015 championship in this
year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup.
“I
can’t say enough about this whole JGR team,” who led the final 174 laps
after passing teammate Matt Kenseth for the top spot on Lap 327. The
(No. 18) M&M’s Camry was awesome
in practice (on Saturday). We had a really good car through practice,
and (crew chief) Adam (Stevens) made some really good adjustments
overnight to keep us where we needed to be, running up front all day.”
In
fact, Busch led 352 of the 500 laps on the way to his first victory of
the season and the 35th of his career. The 352 laps led were the most at
Martinsville since Bobby
Hamilton dominated the Apr. 20, 1998 Sprint Cup race at the .526-mile
track, winning from the pole and leading 378 circuits.
For
the final restart on Lap 489, after caution had slowed the race for the
eighth time when Jamie McMurray shredded a tire and lost control in
Turn 2, Busch pulled away to
cross the finish line .663 seconds ahead of AJ Allmendinger, who
matched his career-best Sprint Cup finish on an oval track, with his
previous second place coming at Martinsville in 2012.
Moreover,
it was Allmendinger’s first top five since he won at the Watkins Glen
International road course in August 2014 and qualified for the Chase for
the only time in his
career.
“God,
I wish we had one more spot,” said Allmendinger, who restarted third
with 12 laps left, forced his way past Kenseth and spent the final 10
laps in an all-out — albeit
futile — attempt to run down Busch before the finish.
“We
got our car really, really good on the long runs. That’s kind of where I
thought we shined. We didn’t have great short-run speed, but after
about 30, 40 laps we could really
get rolling there. I was kind of hoping we’d stay green the last 120
laps. I figured that wasn’t going to happen, but I was praying we had a
shot at that, because I felt like, if that happened, we had a great
chance to win the race.”
Kyle
Larson, who, like Busch, competed in Saturday’s truck race, used the
extra track time to full benefit in finishing third, one spot ahead of
Austin Dillon, who stayed out
on old tires for the final restart (as did Busch, Kenseth and
Allmendinger) and held the fourth position.
Brad
Keselowski recovered from a Lap 93 pit road speeding penalty to run
fifth. Carl Edwards, who started 25th and spent much of the race a lap
down, fought back to finish
sixth. Brian Vickers, Paul Menard, Jimmie Johnson and Ryan Newman
completed the top 10.
Polesitter
Joey Logano struggled with the handling of his car from the outside.
Busch put him a lap down on Lap 76, but Logano recovered to finish 11th,
despite damage to the
nose of the No. 22 Ford—so much so that he finished the race with his
hood flapping above the engine compartment.
Denny
Hamlin, like Logano a pre-race favorite, wheel-hopped his No. 11 Toyota
into the Turn 1 wall on Lap 220 and retired from the race in 39th
place.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. and Kevin Harvick were shuffled back during the final
restart and finished 14th and 17th, respectively. Harvick retained the
series lead by four points over
Johnson and five points over Busch.
Hung
on the outside on the final restart, Kenseth dropped to 15th after
Allmendinger passed him. Danica Patrick came home 16th, her best result
so far this season.
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