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KANSAS CITY, Kan. -- What simply had to be the two best saves of the Camping World Truck Series season occurred at exactly the same time and within inches of each other Sunday afternoon at Kansas Speedway.
When the two trucks involved finally got pointed back in the proper direction, it was the one driven by Johnny Sauter that had the lead and would go on to win the O'Reilly Auto Parts 250.

The other truck involved, that of Ron Hornaday, finished second but left its driver buzzing like a radio with a bad tube.
"You can't tell me that Kansas didn't like that one," Hornaday, not generally known to be all that excited about a second-place finish, shouted as he entered the post-race interview room.
Sauter, wearing a very large and sticky smear of birthday cake on his fire suit, was equally excited. As well he should be.
"I bet it looked pretty cool on TV," said Sauter, who turned 32 on Saturday.
With 13 laps to go, Sauter had the lead heading down the backstretch, but Hornaday pulled even on his low side. Hornaday's truck suddenly hooked right -- right into Sauter. Both spun simultaneously. With smoke pouring from the wheel wells of both trucks, they turned 60 degrees sideways.
The two drivers, who have a history of roughing each other up on the track and in the pits afterward, cranked the steering wheels and both executed highlight-clip saves.
"He got into me," Sauter said. "I couldn't help but sit there and think as I was trying to save it ... that darn Hornaday got me again within a month's time. But it all worked out. That was good. That was good for the fans."
The victory was the first of the year for Sauter and moved him from 14th to fifth in the points standings.
Sauter said he felt good about his truck before it even arrived at Kansas. It was the same truck he used to win his first Truck race last September in Las Vegas and finish 11th at Nashville the last time out.
Todd Bodine finished third and moved into second in the standings, 22 points behind Timothy Peters, who finished 23rd, six laps back.
Brian Ickler finished fourth and now has two top-five finishes in both of his starts for Kyle Busch Motorsports and rookie Austin Dillon had his best career finish, sixth. The race was stopped after 114 laps for more than 90 minutes by rain and hail.
Kansas Video: Final Laps | Victory Lane | Post-race reactions
| • This is Johnny Sauter's first win at Kansas, becoming the 10th different race winner in 10 races at Kansas. |
| • Johnny Sauter's last win came at Las Vegas, nine races ago. |
| • Ron Hornaday (second) has finished in the top three in the past three races and is now fourth in points, 97 behind points leader Timothy Peters. |
| • Todd Bodine (third) scored his third top-five in 2010, and moved to second in the point standings. |
| • Terry Jones (18th) and Jesse Smith (29th) made their series debuts. |
| • Austin Dillon (sixth) scored his best career finish. He was also the highest finishing rookie of the year contender. |
| Pos. | +/- | Driver | Points | Behind |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | -- | Timothy Peters | 760 | Leader |
| 2. | +1 | Todd Bodine | 738 | -22 |
| 3. | -1 | Aric Almirola | 730 | -30 |
| 4. | +2 | Ron Hornaday | 663 | -97 |
| 5. | +9 | Johnny Sauter | 643 | -117 |