
FORT WORTH, Texas -- Mark Martin is back in the title hunt again. At least this week.
The Nextel Cup veteran returned from his three-week vacation to drive in Sunday's Samsung 500 at Texas Motor Speedway, and he proved the time off wasn't a problem.
Martin scored yet another top-10 finish in his highly publicized and often doubted part-time schedule by bringing his No. 01 Chevrolet home in third place.

Kurt Busch had the lead when he went in for a green-flag pit stop. Then the yellow flag came out for debris, effectively ending his chance to win.
"This team is awesome," Martin said. "They're the best I've ever worked with. The closer we got to the front, the better it got. About halfway through the race we stopped adjusting on it and just made it go."
He's been able to do that a lot this season. Martin has entered only five of the seven races, skipping the two Car of Tomorrow events at Bristol and Martinsville. When he opted to stick to his part-time schedule and not run at Bristol, he walked away holding the points lead. Since then he fell to 15th in the standings, 337 off the lead.
Until Texas.
His third-place finish bumped him up to 11th in points, although he lost ground in terms of points -- he's 342 behind.
With the COT reappearing at Phoenix next weekend, Martin will take his first laps in race conditions driving the new machine. Then he'll take a week off. Regan Smith will again fill in while Martin skips Talladega.
"I have hit the lotto, no question," Martin said. "To be able to drive these cars for this team is a dream come true and to be able to step away when I want to step away. I just couldn't ever imagine having that kind of privilege."
Busch gets hurt by caution
At one time it appeared the shift of power had gone to Kurt Busch's ride when he motored past Dale Earnhardt Jr. to take the lead halfway through the race.
Jeff Gordon began chipping away at the margin as green-flag pit stops approached, so Busch dipped his No. 2 Dodge onto pit road to make his stop and give up the lead on Lap 292. A lap later, the caution came out.
A huge chunk of debris sat in Turn 2 near the high groove, forcing the yellow and trapping Busch one lap down. Busch made up his lap when the leaders pitted and was able to rebound for an 11th-place finish. (Continued)