Category: Race Central

Race Central Stories

  • Kyle Busch Wins North Carolina Lottery 200 After Going For A Spin

    Kyle Busch Wins North Carolina Lottery 200 After Going For A Spin

    When there’s a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event, you always have to watch for Kyle Busch as he will be in the thick of the action. Tonight was no exception, as despite spinning out on lap 52, Busch won the race.  It was his fourth win this year in seven truck races and 28th truck win the year.

    “I had an angel riding with me with Zarah Baker,” Busch said. “I didn’t have the truck to beat there at the end, Clint was strong, but we were able to do it. I’m not going to lie but its odd how things work out”

    “We spun out; we only lost 3 or 4 spots. We came to pit road, got four tires. Eric made some changes and got me something that was a lot better …more drivable. I was able to drive back up there.”

    Meanwhile, it was Clint Bowyer who finished second after leading the final laps before passed by Busch with seven to go.

    “Yeah, it was just too loose,” Bowyer said. “Its unfortunate. You know, you draft so big there and he just got by me. I tried to get back to him. They deserved to win today, but I didn’t give it to them.”

    Rookie Cole Whitt finished third to take over the points lead, one point over Johnny Sauter.

    “Our team has just been so constant each week,” Whitt said. “The Cup guys have always been strong. We’ve just been consistent, beating the guys that we need to beat. It feels pretty good to run third to those guys and do well. We’re just going to keep racing like we are, go for wins and do what we can.”

    James Buescher came home fourth after changing a battery with 65 to go, while Ron Hornaday came home fifth after spinning on lap 22.

    After the race, Hornaday had a heated discussion with Johnny Sauter, who came home sixth, due to contact that happened near the end of the event.

    “He told me it was a good race, I guess,” Hornaday said. “He told me I blocked him, but he didn’t know that I was three-wide. The truck got loose there and we got three-wide and he booted me there.”

    “Just close racing there and I had a run and you just can’t stop there,” Sauter said. “It hurt our night pretty good as it put a pretty big gouge in the front of the truck.”

    Austin Dillon finished seventh, followed by Parker Kligermann, Justin Marks and Brad Sweet.

    Kimi Raikkonen, making his first ever NASCAR start, would finish the night in 15th.

    The night saw a record-tying 10 cautions as a lot of trucks were loose all night long causing single truck and multiple truck incidents.

    The action started right away as on lap 10, Todd Bodine spun and made contact with the inside wall on the backstretch. Hornaday was the next to spin on lap 22 and then on the restart, Miguel Paludo had an engine let go. Then the winner, Busch spun on lap 52, followed by Timothy Peters getting in the wall on lap 63  while trying to pass Sauter.

    Just past halfway with 65 laps to go, Brendan Gaughan got into the wall and behind him, Jamie Dick and TJ Bell made contact trying to avoid. Gaughan would be apart of the next wreck with 59 to go as  he was slowing down, Max Papis would cut across the nose of Matt Crafton, taking them all out. With a wounded truck, Dick would find the wall, both with 49 to go and 39 to go. The last caution came out with 28 to go when David Starr got into the wall and cut a tire.

    The next Camping World Truck Series race is Saturday June 4th at Kansas Speedway at 2pm EST.

  • Monster Crash in Dover Nationwide Race Leaves Carl Edwards as Survivor in Victory Lane

    Monster Crash in Dover Nationwide Race Leaves Carl Edwards as Survivor in Victory Lane

    The Monster Mile lived up to its reputation, from a rain delayed start and a rain-induced red flag to one of the wildest endings ever during the second attempt at a green, white checkered finish.

    [media-credit id=26 align=”alignright” width=”201″][/media-credit]After Joey Logano, who was running in the second spot during the overtime session, hit the wall, sending Clint Bowyer airborne and Steve Wallace hard into the wall as well, Carl Edwards, in the No. 60 Fastenal Ford, remained the survivor, claiming the checkered flag in the 5-Hour Energy 200.

    In deference to the carnage on the track, Edwards declined to do his traditional celebratory back flip. He instead went to hoist the ‘Miles the Monster’ trophy in a subdued victory lane.

    This was Edwards’ 32nd career NASCAR Nationwide Series win, breaking the tie with NASCAR Hall of Fame Nominee Jack Ingram. Edwards now is fourth alone in that ranking for career Nationwide wins.

    “It was an amazing race from my seat,” Edwards said. “A lot was going on. We were playing a strategy with the rain, our pit stops were really good. I thought that rain was going to finish us.”

    “When we were coming to the white flag, Joey had a little advantage being on the outside,” Edwards said. “I thought I touched him but I saw the replay and it looked like he got loose and smacked the fence and the bottom fell out of it.”

    “It was a very different feeling than what you should have in a race car when you win a race,” Edwards said. “It’s just very fortunate that nobody was hurt.”

    “That’s why they call it the Monster Mile.”

    Although involved in the wreck himself, Kyle Busch managed to navigate his way through the pile up, claiming the second place for his No. 18 MAC Tools Toyota.

    “Well overall the weekend for us just wasn’t quite what we expected,” Busch said. “We unloaded and we weren’t very good off the hauler.”

    “The guys dug in and did a great job,” Busch continued. “We caught on some damage on pit road and mashed in the front end, which made it even worse. We passed a lot of cars but then we stalled out.”

    “The last lap got awfully crazy there,” Busch said. “I’m not sure if Carl touched him or not but Joey got a little loose and then tried to correct it and at that speed and at this kind of place, there’s not much you’re going to do besides spin out.”

    “Joey took a hell of a hit and I’m hoping he’s alright and not too sore for tomorrow,” Busch continued. “There with Clint climbing over him, it just got ugly. That was pretty crazy.”

    Reed Sorenson, behind the wheel of the No. 32 Dollar General Chevrolet, finished third in spite of a damaged race car. This was Sorenson’s ninth top-10 finish in ten races at the Monster Mile.

    “We were in fifth before the caution came out,” Sorenson said. “It usually gets dicey on green, white checkereds. I saw the 20 get into the wall and I was able to get up high and fortunately miss it for a good finish.”

    Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., in the No. 6 Mississippi Flood Relief-NASCAR Unites Ford, finished fourth and David Reutimann, driving for Rusty Wallace Racing, rounded out the top five in his No. 63 5-Hour Energy Grape Toyota.

    The final wreck of the race was not the only craziness that occurred in this Nationwide event at the Monster Mile. There was another melee that occurred on Lap 88 when Alex Kennedy, driving the No. 23 St. Baldrick’s/Funny Dan Racecar Man Dodge, spun and hit the wall, bringing out the fifth caution of the day.

    During the caution, however, Kennedy, trying to get his car re-fired and into pit road, drove back up the race track, slamming into the No. 16 Roush Fenway Ford. Kevin Swindell was called at the last minute by the team to substitute for the ailing Trevor Bayne, giving him the chance of a lifetime behind the wheel.

    “I don’t know what happened,” Swindell said. “We were just talking on the radio and whoever was wrecked just drove straight up the hill.”

    “This may have been my only opportunity,” Swindell continued. “And it gets ruined by somebody being an idiot.”

    Kennedy, when interviewed after coming out of the infield care center, explained that he was unable to turn the wheel.

    “All of a sudden, it stopped turning,” Kennedy said. “I just tried to stop. I feel horrible for Kevin and I ruined his day. I can’t apologize enough for that.”

    Points leader coming into this race, Justin Allgaier also had a monster of a day at Dover. He blew a right front tire and hit hard into turns three and four, causing his first DNF in 21 starts.

    “This was just a rough day,” Allgaier said. “Definitely not the way we wanted to leave Dover. Hopefully this is just a speed bump on the way to the championship.”

    Elliott Sadler, by virtue of his sixth place finish in his No. 2 OneMain Financial Chevrolet, assumed the points lead from Allgaier. Sadler is currently ten points ahead of Reed Sorenson, with Allgaier falling to fifth in the point standings.

    “Our goal was to lead the points and be competitive and consistent,” Sadler said. “At Daytona, we started in a hole but that shows how good our race team is.”

    Sadler’s day at Dover, however, was not without its challenges. On lap 141, Sadler was penalized for speeding entering the pits and remanded to the tail end of the lead pack.

    “We did get the pit road speeding penalty and we fought our way back to the finish,” Sadler said. “It’s special to leave here with the points lead.”

    Unofficial Race Results
    5-Hour Energy 200, Dover International Speedway
    May 14, 2011 – Race 11 of 35
    ====================================
    Pos. Driver
    ====================================
    1 Carl Edwards
    2 Kyle Busch
    3 Reed Sorenson
    4 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    5 David Reutimann
    6 Elliott Sadler
    7 Kenny Wallace
    8 James Buescher
    9 Aric Almirola
    10 Mike Wallace
    11 Jason Leffler
    12 Brad Keselowski
    13 Joey Logano
    14 Clint Bowyer
    15 Mike Bliss
    16 Steve Wallace
    17 Josh Wise
    18 Ryan Truex *
    19 Joe Nemechek
    20 Michael Annett
    21 J.R. Fitzpatrick
    22 Timmy Hill *
    23 Danny Efland
    24 Jeremy Clements
    25 Eric McClure
    26 Morgan Shepherd
    27 Derrike Cope
    28 Dennis Setzer
    29 Justin Allgaier
    30 Brian Scott
    31 Tim George Jr.
    32 Alex Kennedy
    33 Donnie Neuenberger
    34 Carl Long
    35 Scott Wimmer
    36 Tim Andrews
    37 Jennifer Jo Cobb *
    38 Kevin Lepage
    39 Brad Teague
    40 Brett Rowe
    41 Jeff Green
    42 Charles Lewandoski *
    43 Blake Koch *

  • Kyle Busch Wins Monster of a Truck Race; Nemesis Kevin Harvick Finishes Fifth

    Kyle Busch, behind the wheel of No. 18 Traxxas Toyota, put the controversy and trash talking with Kevin Harvick from last week’s Darlington race behind him to win the Lucas Oil 200 Truck Series race at the Monster Mile in Dover, Delaware.

    [media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”264″][/media-credit]Busch’s win also tied him with Mark Martin for the most wins in all three series, with both drivers now at 96 victories. He is also the first two-time winner in the Camping World Truck Series at Dover International Speedway.

    This was Busch’s 27th victory in 90 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races. The win also was his third victory and fifth top-10 finish in 2011.

    “It was a really good truck,” Busch said. “I can’t say enough about this Toyota.”

    While Busch seemed to dominate most of the race, he affirmed that it was not as easy as it seemed.

    “Overall the race went pretty well for us,” Busch said. “It wasn’t quite the walk in the park it seemed.  This place is so difficult and so challenging and you feel like you’re always on edge.”

    Busch said that he and his nemesis Harvick managed to race each other clean and without issues.

    “I thought today’s race was good,” Busch said of his competition with Harvick. “We had some close moments and we raced each other hard but it was fine. All is good as far as I know.”

    For his part, Kevin Harvick finished fifth after an eventful race. Harvick, piloting the No. 2 Bad Boy Buggies Chevrolet, had to rebound from a speeding penalty to work his way back through the field to score that top five finish.

    Red Bull rookie Cole Whitt had almost as good a race as winner Kyle Busch, finishing in the runner up position. The driver of the No. 60 Red Bull/Fuel Doctor Chevrolet posted his first top-10 finish, his first top five and his career best finish.

    “It’s crazy,” Whitt said. “I’m happy to be here in the first place. Trying to live the dream and chase it and drive door to door with half these guys, let alone Kyle Busch, is pretty cool.”

    “We had a great truck all weekend and this thing’s been pretty spot on,” Whitt said. “We’ve just been turning things around from the way the season started.”

    “Early in the race, we were good on long runs and our truck just couldn’t do it on short runs,” Whitt said, crediting that issue to his runner up status. “That’s what it just turned in to be. It was all short runs after that.”

    Whitt also acknowledged that he went to school at the feet of Kyle Busch, especially on those late race restarts.

    “Kyle is one of the best in the business on restarts,” Whitt said. “He definitely schooled me a few times and then I felt like I got a good one there at the end but it wasn’t good enough.”

    “We’re all small team trying to make it big.”

    Matt Crafton, driver of the No. 88 Menards/Certain Teed Chevrolet, came in third but that was good enough for him to claim the points lead in the Truck Series.

    “At the beginning of the race, I couldn’t fire off and I was really, really loose,” Crafton said. “But at the end of the run, we’d be one of the best trucks on the race track.”

    This was Crafton’s sixth top-10 finish in 11 races at the Monster Mile. He is now leading the points by five over teammate Johnny Sauter.

    “It’s great to be the points leader,” Crafton continued. “We just need to keeping doing what we’re doing and running top five every week and having these top three finishes and throw a couple of wins off and see where we are at Homestead.”

    Austin Dillon, behind the wheel of the No. 3 BassProShops/Remington/Tracker Boats Chevrolet, finished in the fourth spot. Harvick rounded out the top five.

    Another notable in the race finishing order was rookie Joey Coulter, who qualified fifth and finished sixth in his No. 22 RCR/Rip-It Chevrolet. This was Coulter’s first trip to the Monster Mile and the driver and his family were thrilled with the result.

    Brendan Gaughan, James Buescher, Ron Hornaday, Jr. and Justin Marks, the pole sitter rounded out the top ten.

     

  • Smith Wins at Darlington: Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick Continue Battling After Checkered Flag

    Smith Wins at Darlington: Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick Continue Battling After Checkered Flag

    Regan Smith held off Carl Edwards on the final green-white-checkered restart on Saturday night to win the Showtime Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway.

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Smith stayed out while the leaders pitted after a caution flag on lap 359. Edwards took two tires while Smith, Brad Keselowski and Tony Stewart all gambled by staying out.

    Smith got a push from Keselowski on the final restart, giving him enough of a lead to hold off Edwards in the final laps and win his first Sprint Cup Series race in 105 starts.

    As soon as the final green flag dropped, crew chief Pete Rondeau calmly guided Smith through the final two laps.

    “This is the Southern 500! We’re not supposed to win this thing.” Smith radioed to his crew after the race.

    “First of all, congratulations to Regan. He earned that. On the restart, he spun the tires a little bit and I thought, ‘Alright, I’m not gonna beat him to the line because I’ve got a good enough car with fresh tires. I can beat him here.’ And as soon as I started pedaling, Brad hooked on his rear bumper and they took off. I thought, ‘Oh, man. I’m in trouble now.’ I drove down into the turn real hard and Brad did a good job not wrecking underneath me and then we raced hard and he won the race.” Edwards said.

    After the celebratory burn out, Smith returned to the radio and asked his crew to please bring him a hat to Victory Lane. He promptly followed that request up with question: “Where is Victory Lane?”

    “I don’t know, replied Rodeau, I think it’s at the end of pit road, just follow the crowd.”

    On lap 363, Clint Bowyer, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch go three wide. Bowyer gets turned hard into the inside wall. Busch and Harvick continue on but Busch hooks the rear end of Harvick, spinning Harvick out.

    Harvick was clearly upset and found Busch on the cool down lap while entering pit row. Harvick placed his car in front of Busch’s No. 18 on pit road. Busch waited until Harvick exited his car then pushed Harvick’s car out of the way, sending it into the inside pit wall while avoiding a punch from Harvick though the car window.

    Busch drove his car down pit road to the garage, while Harvick walked. Both drivers were summoned to the NASCAR hauler.

    Just uncalled for. Just unacceptable racing,” Busch said. “You know, it’s in the last couple of laps but I gave him room off of two, I didn’t get the room. Just real unfortunate. I hate we tore up a few good cars there.” Busch said.

    As Busch headed to the NASCAR hauler, he said, “Good to hash it out now. Might as well.”

    A few moments later Harvick sent a message to his fans via twitter: “Had a good car tonight, things got exciting at the end… I love racing.”

    Brad Keselowski finished third, pole-sitter Kasey Kahne fourth and Ryan Newman rounded out the top five.

    Tonight’s win makes Smith eligible for the Sprint All Star race in two weeks.

    Unofficial Race Results
    Showtime Southern 500, Darlington Raceway
    May 7, 2011 – Race 10 of 36
    ============================
    Pos. Driver
    ============================
    1 Regan Smith
    2 Carl Edwards
    3 Brad Keselowski
    4 Kasey Kahne
    5 Ryan Newman
    6 Denny Hamlin
    7 Tony Stewart
    8 Greg Biffle
    9 Jamie McMurray
    10 Martin Truex Jr.
    11 Kyle Busch
    12 Jeff Gordon
    13 Marcos Ambrose
    14 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    15 Jimmie Johnson
    16 David Reutimann
    17 Kevin Harvick
    18 Bobby Labonte
    19 Mark Martin
    20 A.J. Allmendinger
    21 David Ragan
    22 Paul Menard
    23 Juan Montoya
    24 Dave Blaney
    25 Matt Kenseth
    26 Travis Kvapil
    27 Kurt Busch
    28 Ken Schrader
    29 Landon Cassill
    30 Casey Mears
    31 Clint Bowyer
    32 David Gilliland
    33 Jeff Burton
    34 Brian Vickers
    35 Joey Logano
    36 Tony Raines
    37 Robby Gordon
    38 T.J. Bell
    39 J.J. Yeley
    40 Mike Skinner
    41 David Stremme
    42 Joe Nemechek
    43 Michael McDowell

  • Busch Inches Closer To Record With Win At Darlington

    Busch Inches Closer To Record With Win At Darlington

    Friday night’s Royal Purple 200 at Darlington International Raceway ended the same way each of the previous nine Nationwide races have finished; with a Sprint Cup regular taking the checkered flag.

    [media-credit id=22 align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch once again dominated the field, never falling out of the top 10, and notched his fifth win in just nine starts.

    Right from the start it was obvious that Busch, along with Sprint Cup regulars Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin were the teams to beat.

    Hamlin, who finished third, started 16th and climbed inside the top 10 within the first 10 laps. Like Busch, Hamlin would not fall below the 10th position for the remainder of the event.

    Early in the race Edwards, who started third, leapfrogged back and forth with Busch through the first 90 laps before being caught up in a back stretch crash on lap 95.

    Once the dust settled Edwards couldn’t over come the damage to the right front of his car and fell back as far as 20th. He would mount a charge into the top 15, but never seemed to be a contender, finishing 20th.

    Elliot Sadler finished third, one position ahead of series point’s leader Justin Allgaier. Looking ahead to Dover, Allgaier, who has no wins and six top tens, will tackle Miles the Monster with a five point advantage over Sadler.

    In his post race press conference, Busch said he was very happy with his Z-Lines Camry the moment it was unloaded from the truck. Busch said crew chief Jason Radcliff prepared him a fast car that paid off for his first Darlington win.

    Tonight’s win puts Busch just one win away from tying Mark Martin for the all time wins in the Nationwide Series.

    Busch stated he would like to achieve that record in his Z-Lines Toyota. This would have to happen after the Dover race. Next weeks entry for Busch is sponsored by Mac Tools. Busch returns to his Z-Lines Camry three weeks from now, May 28th, at Charlotte.

  • Deja Vu: Kyle Busch Dominates at Richmond International Raceway…Again.

    Deja Vu: Kyle Busch Dominates at Richmond International Raceway…Again.

    It felt like deja vu as Kyle Busch celebrated his birthday in style again by winning the Sprint Cup race at the Richmond International Raceway for the third year in a row, reminding his fans that if ever he should leave them, how could it be in springtime? Busch dominated the track by leading 235 of the 400 laps that made up the “Matthew and Daniel Hansen 400.”

    [media-credit id=5 align=”alignright” width=”230″][/media-credit]Hometown hero Denny Hamlin, who won the Nationwide race Friday night finished second, 1.805 seconds behind Busch. Kasey Kahne, David Ragan and Carl Edwards rounded out the top five.

    Busch’s dominating win and Hamlin’s potential sweep were hardly the stars of the show as the Friday night lights of the Nationwide Series race made way for the Saturday night fights of the Sprint Cup! The caution flag flew eight times and tempers boiled after debris, spins and accidents littered the race track during the night.

    The race started with a bang as pole-sitter, Juan Pablo Montoya led the field to the green flag. Hoping to be a strong contender and looking for a much needed short track win, Montoya held his position until lap 26 when Clint Bowyer slid under the Target Chevrolet and snatched the lead in turn two. The night was ending before it even began for Montoya, as on lap 27, Kasey Kahne shot by him to claim the 2nd spot in the field. Montoya’s hopes were not dashed as much as Robby Gordon’s, who on the same circuit when down a lap, the first of many more to come.

    Kyle Busch, who started in the 20th position, cracked the top 10 on lap 31 as countless others continued to lose ground and laps. Tony Raines became the next driver to be lapped by the leaders, followed by Mike Skinner on lap 33. Lap 35 took no prisoners either as Joe Nemechek, J.J. Yeley and Ken Schrader all went a lap down. Shortly there after, all three drivers would take their cars to the garage for individual mechanical problems.

    Lap 45 saw the third lead change, as Kahne got around Bowyer for position and lapped the cars of Michael McDowell, Andy Lally, David Stremme and Landon Cassill in the following ten laps. Meanwhile, Denny Hamlin, who started 11th, strategically made his way through the pack as did Martin Truex Jr., who after starting 21st on the grid, claimed the 12th position on lap 64.

    Laps 66-71 weren’t kind to Dave Blaney, Kurt Busch, Casey Mears, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Marcos Ambrose, who each got an eyeful of the No. 4 Toyota’s rear bumper as each went a lap down. Red Bull gave Kahne wings, but only until lap 73 when Hamlin took over the lead as both drivers crossed the start-finish line.

    With no caution in sight, drivers continued to falter on the lead lap and are picked off one by one by the lead pack. Travis Kvapil, David Gilliland are victimized by the race leader on lap 75, followed by Tony Stewart and Bobby Labonte on lap 79 and Jimmie Johnson on lap 83.

    After a cycle of green-flag pit stops, only 21 cars were on the lead lap. The top five in the field are, Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, Mark Martin, Denny Hamlin and Kasey Kahne. The first yellow flag waved on lap 106 as Ryan Newman got into Montoya, sending the No. 42 into the wall, scattering debris on the track. The leaders hit pit road as Earnhardt, Labonte and Kvapil opt for the wave around to regain position on the lead lap.

    Kyle Busch brings the field to green on lap 115 and claimed the lead as they went four-wide on the restart. Bowyer, Hamlin, Martin and Kahne make up the top five, but not for long. Jeff Gordon suddenly came on strong just three laps later taking the third position away from Bowyer on lap 118 while Busch and Hamlin fought for the lead with a 1.6 second lead over Gordon.

    Montoya’s injured machine is shown in the 22nd position on lap 132, but can’t hang with the leaders for long. His car along with Labonte’s Toyota Camry go a lap down on 144. As the race progressed, lap 169 would see both Paul Menard and Brad Keselowski lapped by the leader of the pack, Kyle Busch.

    Caution comes out for the second time on lap 185 for debris from Kurt Busch’s Shell/Pennzoil Dodge after hitting the wall in turn two on lap 184. Earnhardt Jr. receives the “lucky dog” pass and is back on the lead lap. The leaders hit pit road for fuel, tires and minor adjustments.

    Busch brought the field to green once again on lap 193, followed by Hamlin, Martin, Gordon and Bowyer. The No. 18 Toyota Camry jumped out in front to maintain the lead while Hamlin lost the second spot to Gordon. Setting his sights on number one, Gordon dove to the inside of Busch on lap 200 and took the lead like he stole it, but like another thief in the night, Busch stole it back three laps later.

    Predictions were made on lap 208 as Newman began expressing worry that Montoya might try to retaliate on the track for contact made between the drivers, bringing out the night’s first caution. It was a premonition that would prove true, on lap 236 Montoya served his revenge by sending Newman’s No. 39 Chevrolet around and into the wall. Kurt Busch, unable to slow down, hit Newman damaging both cars and bringing out the caution for the third time.

     

    Hamlin brings the field to green on lap 244, followed by Kyle Busch, Gordon, Truex Jr., and Bowyer. Busch jumps the restart and is forced to slow down, while Montoya is warned by NASCAR to run clean for the remainder of the race or he will be parked. An irate Newman could be heard on the radio wondering why Montoya hadn’t been penalized for what he thought was an “intentional retaliation,” but vowed to settle their differences after the race and not on the track.

     

    Truex Jr. made a bold move that took him from the fourth position to the lead on lap 246 just before the caution flag flew for the fourth time on lap 255. Jimmie Johnson and Joey Logano were recognized for the first time during the race, but sadly not because of their flawless driving abilities. Johnson got into Logano in turn two, spinning the Home Depot Toyota and sending him into the wall. It was however a much needed break for Tony Stewart who received the free pass and was back on the lead lap.

     

    The green flag waved again on lap 264 with a slight change in lineup. Matt Kenseth brought the field to the green, followed by David Reutimann, Kahne, Carl Edwards and Hamlin. Barely making it across the start-finish line, the yellow flag came out for the fifth time as Casey Mears spun in turn one during the restart. Jeff Burton receives the free pass and is back on the lead lap. Brian Vickers, in the 19th spot, is the highest-running car to pit.

     

    Whoever said that cautions breed cautions wasn’t lying! The green flag waved again on lap 270 and it almost isn’t worth it to mention who the top five were because nine laps later the yellow flag waved for the sixth time as Brad Keselowski and Landon Cassill got into each other in turn two, spinning Keselowski’s blue deuce, but avoided any contact with the wall.

     

    By now you know the drill, some cars pitted, while others opted to stay out. Let’s continue, we still have over 100 laps to go!

     

    Hamlin brought the field to the green on lap 284, followed by Truex Jr., Kenseth, Busch and Kahne. Busch wasted no time jumping from fourth to second before wrestling with teammate Hamlin for the lead.

    Keselowski spun again on lap 292, bringing out the caution for the seventh time. Johnson gets the free pass and is back on the lead lap. The field restarts on lap 299 as the drivers manage to bunch up four wide causing many of the leaders to get in to one another. The caution is back out on lap 301 after Gordon’s car spun out after contact from Kenseth and slamming hard into the corner of the inside wall , knocking the wind out of the driver of the DuPont Chevrolet. Along with Gordon, Menard, Martin, Reutimann, Labonte, McMurray and Kenseth all suffer damage while that sneaky Dave Blaney gets the free pass and got back on the lead lap.

    Menard and Reutimann hit pit road on lap 307 for repairs, while Gordon’s car is towed off the track, his night is over, finishing a dismal 39th.

    The green flag waved again with fresh faced lineup on lap 313. Jeff Burton lead the field, followed by Earnhardt Jr., Greg Biffle, Busch and Hamlin. Earnhardt Jr. spun the tires of the National Guard Chevrolet during the restart unveiling an opportunity for Busch to move into the 2nd position. Three laps later Busch passed Burton for the lead and never looked back!

    With less than 40 laps to go, the discussion turned to fuel strategy. Who could make it and who couldn’t? Busch’s camp said it was “iffy” that he could make it to the end. Truex Jr. could make it to lap 399. Hamlin could make it to 400. Kahne could make it. Burton and Earnhardt Jr. could not make it and would have to pit.

    We will never know if perhaps Truex Jr. could have squeezed out an extra lap of fuel, on lap 371 he pitted for a tire going down. He was black-flagged for missing a lug nut taking him out of contention for what was undoubtedly a great run for he and his crew. Add insult to injury, after his pit stop, he was penalized with a “pass-through penalty” after exiting pit road too fast.

    On lap 382, Busch put Biffle and Blaney a lap down leaving 13 cars on the lead lap. Burton then went a lap down because he had to pit for fuel on lap 384. Harvick would be the next to be lapped on 388. Earnhardt Jr. pitted on lap 390 for fuel, leaving only 10 cars on the lead lap.

    The last ten laps of the race went off without a hitch. Despite Hamlin showing to be a “little faster” on the track, Busch maintained his lead and took the checkered flag for the third consecutive year. Hamlin finished second, followed by Kahne, Ragan and Edwards.

  • Nationwide Series: Hamlin Wins One at Home!

    Nationwide Series: Hamlin Wins One at Home!

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert ” align=”alignright” width=”261″][/media-credit]
    Denny Hamlin celebrates winning Bubba 250 in Richmond
    Friday night under the lights at Richmond International Raceway often proves to be a fierce battle of skill and strategy; tonight was no exception.  As fans, we are used to seeing the field peppered with some of the hottest Sprint Cup double dippers, but Friday night’s Bubba Burger 250 played host to only a small handful: most notable Denny Hamlin, Carl Edwards and Brad Keselowski.

    As anticipated, pole sitter Edwards took the lead on the first lap and maintained it comfortably until Hamlin, who started in 11th position made his way through the field and on lap 44 slid under Edwards No. 60 Ford Mustang on turn four to take the lead.

    Edwards quickly lost ground to Kenny Wallace and Aric Almirola as well and by lap 71 found himself in the fourth position.

    Lap 80 proved to be the start of tire issues for Brad Keselowski, thinking that his No. 22 Dodge Challenger was suffering a flat tire. He slows dramatically on the backstretch before darting onto pit road.

    On lap 83, Keselowski brakes hard in turn three, producing a smoke cloud from the tires and nearly taking out Brian Scott in the process.

    Hamlin lapped pole-sitter and fellow Sprint Cup competitor, Edwards on lap 98.  With no cautions in sight, the drivers began making their green-flag pit stops around lap 100.

    At lap 105, after a round of green-flag pit stops, Hamlin resumes the lead, followed by Kenny Wallace, Aric Almirola, Paul Menard and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.  With just ten cars on the lead lap at lap 107, Hamlin has a solid 6.5 second lead over 2nd place of Wallace’s No. 09 Toyota Camry.

    Kelly Bires spun out on lap 124 in turn -four bringing out the first caution of the night, two laps later all lead-lap cars were back on pit road.

    The green flag waved on lap 131 with Hamlin leading the field ahead of Almirola, Wallace, Stenhouse Jr. and Menard.

    Almirola quickly took the lead from Hamlin in turn one on lap 132 only to have it reclaimed by Hamlin on lap 137 between turns three and four with Stenhouse Jr. in tow to take over the second spot.

    With Hamlin in the lead, the battle for position between Almirola,  Stenhouse Jr. and Menard ran hot for the next 60 laps.

    With 41 laps to go, Charles Lewandoski slid through turns three and four almost losing control and slowing dramatically, but made it to pit road without bringing out the caution.

    Lap 217 brought more bad luck for Edwards, as he slows on the track, his Ford out of gas.  After pitting, on lap 220 Edwards’ car stalls at the end of pit road, seven laps later he returns to the track five laps down in 24th place.

    There are only four cars on the lead by lap 232, Hamlin, Stenhouse Jr, Almirola and Wallace. Four quickly become just three as Stenhouse Jr.’s No. 6 machine runs out of gas and limps slowly around the field on lap 242.

    The yellow flag waved for the second time on lap 244 as Stenhouse Jr.’s car rolls to a stop in turn two.  The caution worked to Menard’s advantage as his car runs out of gas on the backstretch on lap 245 but makes it to pit road along with Hamlin for one last, quick pit stop.

    The green flag waved one final time on lap 249 with Hamlin in the lead and Menard hot on his trail, but Menard’s efforts were thwarted as Derrick Cope crashed between turns three and four preventing him for making one final hard charge on Hamlin.

    Hometown hero Denny Hamlin took the checkered flag making this his 11th career win in the Nationwide series. Paul Menard, Justin Algaier, Elliott Sadler and Aric Almirola rounded out the top five.

  • Edwards wins the Nashville 300

    Edwards wins the Nashville 300

    The Nashville 300 was a two-man show Saturday afternoon between Carl Edwards and Kyle Busch.  Edwards took the lead for good on lap 191 to win the Nationwide Series (NNS) race at Nashville Superspeedway.  

    [media-credit name=”Joe Dunn” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Edwards led five times for 148 out of 225 laps to claim his fourth career Nationwide Gibson Guitar along with his second straight NNS victory. With this win, Carl Edwards ties Jack Ingram for fourth in the all-time NASCAR Nationwide Series win list with 31 career wins now in the series.

    “It was an unreal race and a lot of fun.” said a relieved Carl Edwards post-race. “Early on in the race, we had a superior car to everybody, but at the end, we were pedaling for all we had. Kyle did a good job making adjustments on his car and gave us a good race. I thought early on in the race we were going to drive off from the field, but the later in the race it got, the harder we had to work for the win.”

    Joey Logano led the field to the green flag with a qualifying lap of 157.876 mph at 30.396 seconds and led the first 19 laps, but Carl Edwards took the lead as he and Kyle Busch were the two main cars that were pacing the field. Edwards and Busch would trade the lead a handful of times before Edwards got around Busch for the final time with just over thirty laps to go to claim his second straight Nationwide victory.

    Kyle Busch led three times for 39 laps on the afternoon and was forced to settle for second place. “It was a good race for us.” said Busch after the race. “The Z-Line Designs Toyota Camry was fast but not fast enough, and we could only muster a second place finish. We did pretty good and could keep up with Carl, but with the new car, things have kind of flip-flopped. Instead of our car being the car to beat, it’s now the #60 car that’s the car to beat, but all the Roush cars are strong. We just have to get our cars where they need to be.”

    Brad Keselowski took home third with Joey Logano fourth and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was fifth. Sixth through tenth were Trevor Bayne, Austin Dillon, Reed Sorenson, Josh Wise, and Aric Almirola.

    “A decent day for our Discount Tire Dodge. You hate to be happy with third-place.  It was a good effort.  We need to find a little bit more speed.  The Roush cars just have more speed and when you put a driver like Carl Edwards in a car like he had today, he’s going to win the race.” Keselowski said.

    “We were fourth, I felt like we were a third-place car — it just took us a while to get there.  We just fought a lot of different things today.” Logano said. 

    The new Nationwide points leaders are now Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Justin Allgaier. Two points back in third is Jason Leffler, and Trevor Bayne and Reed Sorenson were two more points back, tied for fourth.

    The race had an average speed of 125.375 mph and there were 6 cautions for 25 laps.

    Unofficial Race Results
    Nashville 300, Nashville Superspeedway
    April 23, 2011 – Race 8 of 35
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=8
    ==============================
    Pos. Driver Manufacturer Points
    ==============================
    1- Carl Edwards- Ford- 0
    2- Kyle Busch- Toyota- 0
    3- Brad Keselowski- Dodge- 0
    4- Joey Logano- Toyota- 0
    5- Ricky Stenhouse Jr.- Ford- 39
    6- Trevor Bayne- Ford- 39
    7- Austin Dillon- Chevrolet- 0
    8- Reed Sorenson- Chevrolet- 36
    9- Josh Wise- Chevrolet- 36
    10- Aric Almirola- Chevrolet- 35
    11- Justin Allgaier- Chevrolet- 33
    12- Kenny Wallace- Toyota- 32
    13- Elliott Sadler- Chevrolet- 31
    14- David Reutimann- Toyota- 0
    15- Jason Leffler- Chevrolet- 29
    16- Ryan Truex- Toyota- 28
    17- Steven Wallace- Toyota- 27
    18- Mike Wallace- Chevrolet- 26
    19- Michael Annett- Toyota- 25
    20- David Stremme- Chevrolet- 0
    21- Scott Wimmer- Chevrolet- 23
    22- Brian Scott- Toyota- 22
    23- Jeremy Clements- Chevrolet- 21
    24- Kevin Conway- Toyota- 0
    25- Blake Koch- Dodge- 19
    26- Danny O’Quinn Jr.- Ford- 18
    27- JR Fitzpatrick- Ford- 17
    28- Morgan Shepherd- Chevrolet- 16
    29- Mikey Kile- Chevrolet- 15
    30- Derrike Cope- Dodge- 14
    31- Mike Bliss- Chevrolet- 13
    32- Eric McClure- Chevrolet- 12
    33- Timmy Hill- Ford- 11
    34- Robert Richardson Jr.- Dodge- 10
    35- Tim Schendel- Chevrolet- 9
    36- Tim Andrews- Ford- 8
    37- Dennis Setzer- Chevrolet- 7
    38- Mike Harmon- Chevrolet- 6
    39- Matthew Carter- Chevrolet- 5
    40- Carl Long- Ford- 4
    41- Willie Allen- Chevrolet- 3
    42- Jeff Green- Chevrolet- 2
    43- Johnny Chapman- Ford- 1

    Unofficial Standings
    After Nashville 300, Nashville Superspeedway
    April 23, 2011 – Race 8 of 35
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/standings.php
    ====================================
    Pos Driver Points Behind
    ====================================
    1 Justin Allgaier 264 0
    2 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 264 0
    3 Jason Leffler 262 -2
    4 Reed Sorenson 260 -4
    5 Trevor Bayne 260 -4
    6 Elliott Sadler 259 -5
    7 Aric Almirola 257 -7
    8 Brian Scott 228 -36
    9 Kenny Wallace 216 -48
    10 Michael Annett 184 -80

  • Busch wins the NCWTS Bully Hill Vineyards 200 at Nashville

    Busch wins the NCWTS Bully Hill Vineyards 200 at Nashville

    Kyle Busch won the Bully Hill Vineyards 200 in dominating fashion, leading 140 out of 150 laps en route to his team’s third Camping World Truck Series victory in five races in the 2011 campaign, along with his second straight victory in sponsor Dollar General’s backyard. “It was a really good race.” said an ecstatic Kyle Busch. “The guys at the shop did a great job and brought a great piece of equipment out here to the track. The clean air really helped us out most of the race and with about ten to go, Hornaday got a jump on us on the restart and got along-side of our spoiler and took a little air off of me and got around us, but we got a caution and we thought we were in a good position on the restart. So we did the same thing that Hornaday did on the previous restart and we got a good run on him in turns one and two and sailed by him in turn three. It would have been a shame had we lost today. The guys worked so hard, and our pit-stops were great and we wored really hard to come away with the win.”

    [media-credit name=”Joe Dunn” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]On Lap 114, Kyle Busch led his 20,000th career lap in NASCAR national competition, which includes Sprint Cup, Nationwide, and Camping World Truck Series competition. But the win wasn’t without its share of drama. On a late race restart with eight laps to go, Ron Hornaday Jr. overtook him on the restart, but a spin by Max Papis with seven laps to go would bunch up the field one last time, as the race restarted with three laps remaining and in the exit of turn 2, Busch retook the lead from Hornaday Jr. and never looked back to score his 26th career Camping World Truck Series win and 11th career win as an owner by 1.061 seconds over Nelson Piquet Jr., who came home a surprising second place with Timothy Peters in third. Hornaday Jr. faltered to fourth in the final run-down, with James Buescher rounding out the top five.

    “It was a really huge deal for us to win a race in Dollar General’s backyard. ” reflected Busch post-race. “They’ve been awesome with their support and they had a bunch of people in the stands this week-end and we had a lot of their guys on pit road and on our pit box.”

     There were 5 lead changes among 4 drivers and a total of 6 cautions for 24 laps. The  average speed of the race was 119.433 miles per hour.

    Unofficial Results
    Bully Hill Vineyards 200, Nashville Superspeedway – April 22, 2011
    =================
    Pos. Driver
    =================
    1 Kyle Busch
    2 Nelson Piquet Jr. *
    3 Timothy Peters
    4 Ron Hornaday
    5 James Buescher
    6 Matt Crafton
    7 Johnny Sauter
    8 David Starr
    9 Craig Goess *
    10 Parker Kligerman *
    11 Austin Dillon
    12 Cole Whitt *
    13 Jason White
    14 Ricky Carmichael
    15 Justin Johnson *
    16 Justin Lofton
    17 Brendan Gaughan
    18 Elliott Sadler
    19 Todd Bodine
    20 Travis Kvapil
    21 Ryan Sieg
    22 Bobby Hamilton Jr.
    23 Max Papis
    24 Joey Coulter *
    25 Justin Marks
    26 Shane Sieg
    27 Miguel Paludo *
    28 Brad Sweet
    29 Cale Gale
    30 Jamie Dick
    31 Clay Rogers
    32 Johanna Long *
    33 Chase Mattioli *
    34 Nick Hoffman
    35 Johnny Chapman
    36 Mike Garvey

  • Johnson holds off Bowyer by 0.002 seconds for first win of the season

    Johnson holds off Bowyer by 0.002 seconds for first win of the season

    (c) CIA Stock Photo

    Jimmie Johnson edged Clint Bowyer by 0.002 seconds, about a foot, on Sunday to win the Aaron’s 499 at Talladega Superspeedway. This also ties the closest finish in NASCAR Sprint Cup history (2003 at Darlington).

    “We were just the lucky guy at the end with a good run. We had some big mo on our side, and off we went.” Johnson said.

    This was Johnson’s first win of the season and 54th of his Sprint Cup career.

    Johnson and teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. laid back most of the day but made their move coming out of the fourth turn on the final lap. They passed Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin. With just enough of a push from Earnhardt Jr., Johnson stayed just in front of Clint Bowyer to win.

    “I can’t thank Junior enough. He made the decision that my car was faster leading. And the way these things are finishing up, the lead car’s going to get the win.” Johnson said.

    Bowyer finished second, Gordon third, Earnhardt Jr. fourth and Kevin Harvick finished fifth.

    “With as crazy as it gets in these closing laps, sometimes a third is almost like a victory at these type of race tracks.” Gordon said.

    The race had 26 leaders with 88 lead changes, tying the record set in last year’s spring race at Talladega.

    Unofficial Race Results
    Aaron’s 499, Talladega Superspeedway
    April 15, 2011, Race 8 of 36
    ============================
    Pos. Driver Make Pts.
    ============================
    1 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 47
    2 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 44
    3 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 42
    4 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 41
    5 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 40
    6 Carl Edwards Ford 39
    7 Greg Biffle Ford 38
    8 Mark Martin Chevrolet 37
    9 David Gilliland Ford 35
    10 Joey Logano Toyota 35
    11 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 33
    12 Paul Menard Chevrolet 33
    13 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 32
    14 David Reutimann Toyota 30
    15 Regan Smith Chevrolet 30
    16 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 29
    17 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 27
    18 Kurt Busch Dodge 27
    19 Andy Lally * Ford 25
    20 Robby Gordon Dodge 24
    21 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 24
    22 Casey Mears Toyota 23
    23 Denny Hamlin Toyota 21
    24 Bobby Labonte Toyota 21
    25 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 20
    26 Bill Elliott Chevrolet 18
    27 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 18
    28 Michael Waltrip Toyota 16
    29 Travis Kvapil Ford 0
    30 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 14
    31 Landon Cassill Chevrolet 0
    32 Marcos Ambrose Ford 13
    33 Brad Keselowski Dodge 12
    34 Terry Labonte Ford 10
    35 Kyle Busch Toyota 10
    36 Matt Kenseth Ford 9
    37 Kasey Kahne Toyota 8
    38 Brian Vickers Toyota 6
    39 David Ragan Ford 6
    40 Trevor Bayne Ford 0
    41 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
    42 Steve Park Chevrolet 0
    43 Kevin Conway Toyota 0