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Daniel Suarez surged to his first NASCAR XFINITY Series victory Saturday at Michigan International Speedway, taking the lead from Kyle Busch with two laps left.
Suarez, the series’ points leader, recovered from an early race speeding penalty and rallied in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 Toyota. He led twice for four laps and became the first Mexican-born driver to win in any of NASCAR’s three national series. He also became the XFINITY tour’s sixth foreign-born winner in his 48th career start.
“I just have no words honestly. I don’t think I can speak English or Spanish right now honestly,” Suarez said after emerging from his car in Victory Lane. “I can’t thank these guys enough for all the hard work — Joe Gibbs Racing for having the confidence in me along with Toyota, Telcel Mexico, Coca-Cola and everyone who helped put this program together. I have no words to describe what I’m feeling right now.”
The victory drew special notice from NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France.
“Daniel Suarez has competed in NASCAR for a relatively brief time, yet his impact on the sport has been immeasurable,” France said in a statement. “Combining impressive talent and an incredible personality, Daniel has attracted fans throughout North America. His accomplishments already are too numerous to list, so I congratulate him on his latest, and so far greatest one — a NASCAR XFINITY Series victory. He has come close to victory on occasions, and clearly, today was worth the wait, as he had to pass Kyle Busch, the series’ all-time winningest driver, in the closing laps.
“Today’s victory proved what many already knew: Daniel has the skill, fortitude and passion for future NASCAR stardom. I look forward to watching his career grow, and accomplishments mount, as he battles for a championship this year in the inaugural NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase.”
Busch, a Sprint Cup Series regular, led a race-high 88 of 125 laps in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota but settled for second in the Menards 250 Presented by Valvoline.
In passing Busch for the win, Suarez beat the best. Busch holds the XFINITY Series record for victories with 80. And Busch has been a willing mentor to Suarez, who also drives a limited schedule for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
“The Kyle Busch School of Charm finished 1-2-4 today, so not too bad,” said Busch, a four-time XFINITY Series winner this season. “Obviously we want to win. We thought we should have won. We had the best car for the majority of the race there, but not the last 20 laps or so — just got really loose on me.”
“But congratulations to Daniel Suarez. He earned that one. It’s cool to see. It’s a little bittersweet to lose like that, but it’s all right. It’s one of my students. So the student beat the teacher today.”
Paul Menard finished third, JGR driver Erik Jones fourth and Elliott Sadler fifth.
Jones started second and led 18 laps on an emotional day for the 20-year-old driver. Jones, a Byron, Michigan native, announced through Twitter during Saturday’s pre-race that his father had died Tuesday at age 53 after a bout with cancer.
Before the race, he paid tribute to his father, affixing a decal with the name “Dave” in place of his own above the driver’s door of his Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota. Suarez dedicated his breakthrough win to the Jones family in Victory Lane.
Suarez was first off pit road during the first caution period, but a speeding penalty knocked him back to 25th place for the Lap 32 restart that followed. The speeding penalty wasn’t the only obstacle Suarez had to overcome. As he was working his way back to the front after the infraction, the clutch in his No. 19 Toyota failed, causing the car to stall during a green-flag pit stop on Lap 71.
Suarez gradually regained ground over the final half of the 250-miler, making his most dramatic charge over the long green-flag run to the finish. Suarez caught and inched ahead of Busch as the two drivers flashed side-by-side under the white flag for the final lap. The 24-year-old Suarez — a NASCAR Next product and last season’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year — held on for a .281-second margin of victory at the finish.
“Honestly, I was trying as hard as possible — I was driving a little more on the edge,” said Suarez, who virtually clinched a berth in the XFINITY Series’ Chase playoffs. “Honestly, I was maybe risking a little more than I should have. Everything was about the win so I was trying as hard as possible and it seemed like we were good in points, but not very good in wins. I was just very hungry and I know this team was at the same spot, we were very hungry to win races and finally we got the first one.”
Alex Bowman led 11 laps and secured seventh place in just his third XFINITY start of the season in the JR Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet. He landed his first pole position since 2013 in Saturday’s Coors Light Pole Qualifying.
Team Penske‘s Joey Logano finished the day sixth, but had post-race problems after failing inspection for laser inspection system (LIS).
The series’ next race — the American Ethanol E15 250 Presented by Enogen — is scheduled June 19 (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Iowa Speedway.
Contributing: NASCAR Wire Service