Moments that changed the course of the race at Thunder Valley

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KENSETH HOLDS OFF KAHNE FOR THIRD TIME IN ‘13  

We’ve seen this script before, Matt Kenseth holding off Kasey Kahne in the closing laps of a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

It happened in Las Vegas in March. It happened in Kansas in April. And it happened again in Saturday’s Irwin Tools Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

On inferior tires and with a fuel tank that was bordering on empty, Kenseth won a heated battle against Kahne to claim victory in Saturday’s Irwin Tools Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway, after Kahne moved into the second position on Lap 473 of 500.

The victory was Kenseth’s fifth of the year, and it guaranteed the driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at least a wild card spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Juan Pablo Montoya ran third, followed by Brian Vickers and Joey Logano.

The victory was Kenseth’s third at Bristol and the 29th of his career.

Kenseth led the field to green for a restart after a wreck in Turn 1 involving Montoya, David Stremme and Jeff Burton caused the ninth caution of the evening. By Lap 430, Kenseth had opened a lead of more than one second over Gordon.

VICKERS, HAMLIN SPARK EIGHT-CAR WRECK

Caution for debris on the frontstretch slowed the field for the 10th time on Lap 439. Matt Kenseth and Jeff Gordon, both saving fuel, brought the field to green on Lap 447, but before the cars could complete the circuit, contact between the cars of Brian Vickers and Denny Hamlin ignited a massive wreck in Turns 3 and 4 that dealt serious blows to the Chase hopes of Martin Truex Jr. and Brad Keselowski.

LOOSE HUB COSTLY FOR KURT BUSCH

Kurt Busch started on the front row and took the lead at lap 23, holding onto the top spot until lap 76 when a problem cost him his position and a lot of time behind the wall to fix the issue.

“Yeah, I guess we had a right-rear hub fail where the studs pulled through or they weren’t tightened or assembled,” Busch said. “…we didn’t even pit yet so we had a wheel start to vibrate loose at an odd time.  I felt vibrations before, but we are leading the race walking the dog and our right-rear is falling off.” 

The team worked got Busch back on track and his 31st-place finish leaves him only six points behind 10th place and a guaranteed berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

“I guess at the end of the race we gained a bunch of points back with guys having trouble,” Busch said. “My thoughts all through the race were we just have to go to Atlanta and Richmond and win them both.”

The NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.

 

Click here for live Lap-by-Lap updates for the Irwin Tools Night Race.

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From early wrecks to car trouble to pit-road drama, Bristol lived up to its billing

In the first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of his career, Ryan Truex brought out the first caution at Bristol. Driving the No. 51 Chevrolet for Phoenix Racing, Truex — who started 18th — smacked the high wall on Lap 40 after blowing a left front tire.

 

Truex’s wreck and ensuing caution gave drivers the chance to pit for the first time. Defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski did just that. Unfortunately for the champ, he didn’t see David Reutimann. The two cars collided, and Keselowski lost 14 spots on pit road. "Dude, I didn’t even see him," Keselowski said over his radio.

 

Kurt Busch found himself off the pace after noticing a problem with his tire. A pit stop with four new Goodyears didn’t change the issue. As he attempted to maneuver his way back through the field, Josh Wise had the misfortune of being in ‘The Outlaw’s’ way. This brought out the second caution flag of the night on Lap 89.

Through 100 laps, Kyle Busch was in a great position. Busch, who won the Camping World Truck Series race on Wednesday and the Nationwide Series race on Friday, had picked his way through the field after starting 43rd. He was in the top 20, but got loose on Lap 106, tagging Joey Logano and bringing out the yellow flag.

Things settled down briefly after Logano and Busch bumped. Dale Earnhardt Jr. ticked off laps as the leader, and then Clint Bowyer passed Junior in a battle between two drivers looking for their first win of 2013. The No. 15 led 50 consecutive laps and was passing lapped traffic when he was spun out from behind by Travis Kvapil — a driver he had just lapped. Bowyer spun out and was idle in the middle of the track when Bobby Labonte smacked his Toyota on Lap 177.

 

A clean stretch of racing ended on Lap 358, when Brian Vickers and David Reutimann tangled, sending Reutimann’s No. 83 into the wall and down onto the track. The real impact came seconds later as Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 Chevrolet crunched into Reutimann, damaging both cars heavily. Johnson had to go behind the wall and watch his points lead take another huge hit.

 

Three drivers got into each other shortly after the restart on Lap 379. Juan Pablo Montoya, who had one of the best cars on the track, got into the back of David Stremme, who then nudged Jeff Burton, sending Burton’s No. 31 spinning out for another caution flag on Lap 375.

 

Carl Edwards led 119 laps Saturday night and was poised to challenge for his first win since the second race of the season. But something went wrong in his No. 99 Ford, and when his car didn’t take off on the restart following the ninth caution of the night, the team brought his car behind the wall. Edwards, who had also trimmed Jimmie Johnson’s points lead to single digits, would not return to the track.

 

The Big One, at Bristol? That’s what happened on Lap 447, when an eight-car wreck briefly brought out the red flag. Kevin Harvick got the worst of the incident, which also included Martin Truex Jr., Brad Keselowski and Denny Hamlin. Harvick not only parked his No. 29 in Hamlin’s pit box, but he also approached the driver in his car and leaned in for some terse words. Hamlin’s side: The 56 of Truex got into him, triggering the crash.

 

With Carl Edwards out of the picture, Matt Kenseth took control of the race. The veteran drove the No. 20 Toyota into Victory Lane for the fifth time this year, holding off Kasey Kahne in a spirited duel over the final laps. You can watch the final laps below.

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Check back often for the latest stories from this weekend’s NASCAR action

Sprint Cup Series

Irwin Tools Night Race, Bristol Motor Speedway, 7:30 p.m. ET, Saturday, ABC, on air at 7 p.m. ET. | LINEUP | WEEKEND SCHEDULE

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Great debate

Kasey Kahne caught Matt Kenseth in the final laps at Bristol, but didn’t use his bumper to knock him out of the way. Should he have been more aggressive? NASCAR Wire Service’s Reid Spencer chimes in on the biggest question from Bristol. | Read the full story

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Nationwide Series

Food City 250, Bristol Motor Speedway, 7:30 p.m. ET, Friday, ESPN, on air at 7 p.m. ET. | RESULTS | WEEKEND SCHEDULE

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Rowdy reigns at Bristol

Pulling away from runner-up Brad Keselowski over a green-flag run that consumed the final 72 laps, Kyle Busch won his sixth NNS event at the .533-mile short track. The victory was his ninth of the season and the series-record 60th of his career. | Read the full story

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Camping World Truck Series

UNOH 200, Bristol Motor Speedway, 8 p.m. ET, Wednesday, FOX Sports 1, on air at  7:30 p.m. ET. RESULTS | WEEKEND SCHEDULE

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Busch wins at Bristol

Kyle Busch and Timothy Peters battled down to the wire in the final laps, but it’s Busch who rides away with his 33rd Truck Series win. | Read the full story

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Making the most of the chaos around him, Dillon transitions his focus back to Nationwide

BRISTOL, Tenn. — For Austin Dillon, it was a return to normal — in more ways than one.

One week after a doubleheader weekend in which the Richard Childress Racing driver also wheeled the Sprint Cup Series car of injured three-time champion Tony Stewart, Dillon turned his focus back solely to his Nationwide Series duties, and he recorded a third-place finish at Bristol Motor Speedway that made up most of the points loss he withstood on the road course at Mid-Ohio.

Dillon overcame a slow pit stop to finish as the top Nationwide regular Friday behind winner Kyle Busch and runner-up Brad Keselowski. In the bigger picture, the 23-year-old took full advantage on a night when most of the top Nationwide championship contenders battled problems, jumping back up to second place in the standings.

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“It was big,” Dillon said. “Car was unbelievable. This car was just a rocket ship. … We had bad pit stops. We really got behind early and we fought our way back up through there. I’m happy with our team. As far as getting our car faster from practice, we really worked on it to turn the center, and man it could. I had a blast out there tonight. We could really pass, so it was fun.”

Dillon entered the night fourth in points, and taking some criticism for a substitute effort in Stewart’s vehicle that forced him to forgo Nationwide qualifying at Mid-Ohio and start in the back. The ensuing 21st-place finish tied his second-worst of the season and dropped Dillon from two points in the series lead to 15 behind new leader Sam Hornish Jr.

Friday, troubles on behalf of other title contenders allowed Dillon to regain much of what he had lost. Hornish had an issue with a spark plug wire and finished 12th. Elliott Sadler struggled with his car all day, fell a lap down early, and finished 10th. Regan Smith had a loose wheel on a pit stop and wound up 21st, four laps down. And Brian Vickers was in the top 10 when his car snapped lose and slammed into the vehicle of Parker Kligerman, dropping Vickers to 34th place.

“Unbelievable luck lately,” tweeted Smith, the points leader as recently as last month, after the race. “Fast car again. I will promise two things: there’s zero quit in this team and this championship is far from over.”

Dillon made the most of the chaos surrounding him, and the standings after the race reflected it. The RCR driver left Bristol in second place, and six points behind Hornish. Sadler is 11 back in third, Smith 24 back in fourth, Justin Allgaier 39 behind in fourth, and Vickers now 40 back in fifth heading to Atlanta next weekend.

“I could see that they were having a little bit of trouble,” Dillon said on pit road, his helmet traded for his trademark cowboy hat. “I hope we do this the rest of the year. Our oval stuff is very competitive. We’ve got to get Kyle Busch out of Victory Lane, and it will be a fun championship.”

Crew chief Danny Stockman Jr. was also well aware of what was going on around his No. 3 team, and opted for a conservative strategy late in the race.

“I didn’t want to have a late caution and have a misfire with the fuel not getting picked up,” he said. “I knew we had a good enough car to at least get back up to where we were running. I kind of wish we had a late-race caution there. I think we could have made it interesting. But it was definitely a good night, a good points night, and we’ve just got to keep knocking these finishes out like this.”

Mid-Ohio was a rare bobble for a driver who had moved into the points lead by virtue of a consistent stretch that included six poles and seven top-10 finishes over the course of the summer. Stockman said the team needed a rebound like Friday night.

“Most definitely,” he said. “We knew that 10 percent of the races were road courses, and we put a humongous effort as a team into our road course program after Road America. We built a brand new car and dug in deep and tried to find some speed, from the engine shop to the chassis shop to the body shop, everywhere. And we had a really good car last week. Obviously had to start in the back, and not very much fun, obviously. But we still drove up to the top 10 and just had a little incident there on the last restart. Otherwise I think we would have had an OK day. But otherwise, we’re looking forward to the ovals here.”

Which is what they’ll get from here on out. There’s something else certain, too — no regrets on Dillon’s part for taking on the extra workload last weekend.

“We’ve got a great team,” Dillon said. “We had a full test day (at Mid-Ohio), and felt like we could figure out a pit strategy to get us up there, and we did. We had an unfortunate pit stop there, too. We’ve got to work on our pit stops. I’m going to help these guys during the week go practice and just really work on them. I’ll help them as much as I can.”

Stockman refused to blame last week’s shortcoming on Dillon piloting Stewart’s car, which he’ll also do later this year at Talladega. Dillon managed a 14th-place finish in the Sprint Cup event at Michigan.

“We work together as a team,” Stockman said. “We talked about it. It’s just what we thought he needed to do.  At the end of the day, we’re not going to think about that anymore. We’re moving forward, that’s behind us. We’re six points out of the lead now, and I think everybody better hold onto their hats here, because we’re coming.”

Given his driver, an appropriate metaphor indeed.
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While former champ mulls his 2014 options, his sights are set on this year’s Chase

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Before a race at a track like Bristol Motor Speedway, Kurt Busch has a mental checklist of items he goes though. Protect the car. Don’t force the issue on restarts. Work the high groove. Watch out for other vehicles checking up in front of him.

And these days, there’s something else — block out the outside world.

Busch and his Furniture Row Racing team got another Sprint Cup Series weekend off to another good start, posting the second-fastest speed in final practice and qualifying second for Saturday night’s event. And it’s happening amid constant questions of where Busch will compete in 2014, queries that gained a large degree of traction Friday when Stewart-Haas Racing competition director Greg Zipadelli confirmed his team is actively pursuing Busch to drive a fourth car for Tony Stewart’s organization next year.

Busch, the 2004 champion of NASCAR’s top series, has also spoken with Earnhardt Ganassi Racing about the No. 42 car that will open up following Juan Pablo Montoya’s departure after this season. He’s been in ongoing negotiations with Furniture Row Racing, which has made no secret of its desire to keep him. And yet only one of those organizations can offer a championship pedigree and potential high-powered teammates like Stewart and Kevin Harvick, who will join SHR next year.

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Even so, Busch on Friday offered no indication of where he might end up.

“It’s nice when when the phone’s ringing, and people are wondering what my future plans are, and people are wanting me to be a part of a program with them,” Busch said. “It’s been a journey to say the least since things turned at the end of 2011. It’s just nice to have the ability to find good rides, and be in one. To build with these guys into the future is a possibility. And then to have the outside guys knocking on the door saying, hey, we want you to drive — it’s a good confidence-booster to say the least.”

The end of 2011 is when Busch split with Penske Racing, a breakup that sent him into a career wilderness. He began his rebound driving for a Phoenix Racing team that had limited sponsorship. Then he moved to Furniture Row, which Busch has carried to new heights — ninth in the standings with three races remaining in the regular season, the closest the No. 78 team has ever been to the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

Although Busch is still looking for his first race win since 2011 — and for the No. 78 team just its second ever — that hasn’t detracted what he’s done with the Denver-based outfit.

“We’re three weeks away from the Chase, and that’s what our focus is now,” Busch said. “We don’t have to win to make this Chase. Even if we had a win right now, we would be not guaranteed a spot in the Chase. Consistency is what gets you in, and consistency wins the championship; you just have to ramp it up a notch once you’re in the Chase. Right now, blinders are on, and we’re full-focused on making sure we get nice, consistency finishes.”

In the meantime, though, there’s the question of next season. Busch has provided no clues as to his eventual destination, but goes out of his way to compliment the members of his current team. Friday he scraped the wall with 30 minutes left in final practice hard enough to contemplate a backup car. But his crew fixed the damage and got him out for a qualifying effort that netted Busch’s seventh front-row starting position of the season.

It all makes a choice for next season that much more complicated.

“The guys know that this is the time now,” Busch said. “They are all shaking my hand saying thanks, and they’re also saying, ‘Let’s do this again next year,’ and I’m like, ‘Heck yeah, I’m right there with you.’ We have to stay focused on the present as well as balance the future, and it’s a tough thing to do. You hope you can do it behind the scenes where it’s not out in the public. But today was a great reminder of how hard you have to work in this sport. When things go wrong, you have to have talented guys to pick you up.”

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Returning to the Nationwide series, Bayne discusses his future plans with his new sponsor

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Trevor Bayne is OK with the idea of competing full-time in the Nationwide Series once again next season.

At least, he is now.

“At first when I started thinking about it, I didn’t know if I wanted to be a Nationwide guy again,” the former Daytona 500 champion said Friday at Bristol Motor Speedway. “But you get a sponsor like that, you have to take that opportunity.”
Roush Fenway Racing announced Wednesday that Bayne would return to the Nationwide tour in 2014 in a No. 6 car backed by AdvoCare — which currently sponsors the vehicle of Austin Dillon, a Richard Childress Racing driver bound for full-time competition in the Sprint Cup Series. Ultimately that’s where Bayne wants to be as well, but sponsorship dictates a return to the Nationwide ranks with occasional Sprint Cup starts as he’s done the past three years.

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Bayne said the plan is to continue to run a limited slate of Sprint Cup starts next season for Wood Brothers Racing, the team with which he won the Daytona 500 in 2011. He’s also after team co-owner Jack Roush to let him make some Sprint Cup starts in the organization’s No. 6 car, which was shuttered as a full-time program due to a lack of sponsorship following the 2011 campaign. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. made four starts in the No. 6 last year before moving full-time into the team’s No. 17 car for this season.

“That’s not from Jack Roush or anybody,” Bayne said, “that’s just my hopes and what I see happening. Hopefully, we can get something going there.”

If Bayne sounds a tick impatient to accelerate his Sprint Cup career, it’s with good reason. The season after winning the Daytona 500, he had to run part-time Sprint Cup and Nationwide schedules because of sponsorship concerns. This year is his first full-time stint on the Nationwide tour since 2010, and next year will be his first without a sponsorship shortage.

For a 22-year-old driver with a victory in the Great American Race already on his resume, progressing via such baby steps has been a painfully slow process. Patience has been a difficult lesson.

“Tough. Very tough,” Bayne said. “It’s been the hardest thing for me to learn. It’s just been trying for the last few years. But I’m still here, I still have an opportunity with Jack Roush. He’s been committed to me, and I’ve been committed to them to work this thing out. He’s developed great race car drivers, and he knows what he’s doing, and we’re going to work together to make it to the next level.”

Even so, he can see the benefits of taking it slowly. Although Bayne won early this season at Iowa, his No. 6 team is only just emerging as a Nationwide contender thanks to top-10s in six of his past seven starts. Bayne entered Friday night’s race at Bristol eighth in the standings, 73 points behind leader Sam Hornish Jr.

“I think Joey Logano would tell you he felt like he moved too soon,” Bayne said, referring to last week’s Sprint Cup winner, who broke into NASCAR’s top series as an 18-year-old. “I’m not throwing him under the bus, I think he’s done a great job. He’s developed really quick. One side of me says, I just want to get in a Cup car and get experience. And the other side of me says, this is a great place to be, in the Nationwide Series.”

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Crew chief expected to join SHR for 2014; Kurt Busch could add fourth car

BRISTOL, Tenn. — The expansion of Stewart-Haas Racing continues with the impending addition of crew chief Rodney Childers and potential addition of driver Kurt Busch, two players who could help make the organization a four-car powerhouse for 2014.

Michael Waltrip Racing confirmed Friday that Childers — winner of three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races with the team, most recently last month with Brian Vickers — would depart the organization, likely to become Kevin Harvick’s crew chief at Stewart-Haas next season. And SHR Competition Director Greg Zipadelli said the team is moving forward with plans to accommodate a fourth car that could be driven by the 2004 series champion Busch.

They are ambitious moves for a team that will also feature Tony Stewart and Danica Patrick, and is bidding to become one of the elite organizations at NASCAR’s premier level.

“We are looking to expand,” Zipadelli said at Bristol Motor Speedway. “We are looking to do whatever we can to make Stewart-Haas a better place to race, to give our drivers better resources. … Our goal is to give our teams a better product to race every week going into Daytona. With four good drivers next year, I think it gives us that opportunity. Our owners are aggressive. It’s kind of exciting, it’s fun. At a time when everybody’s kind of going the other way, we’ve got owners who are committed to stepping up and making Stewart-Haas a bigger, better place in the future.”

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The latest move involves Childers, who for the past two seasons has overseen a No. 55 team at MWR in which three different drivers — Vickers, Waltrip and Mark Martin — have split the car. Vickers will move into that ride full-time next season. Childers is headed elsewhere, although Zipadelli said the deal for Harvick’s next crew chief is not yet completed.

“We love Rodney. We think a lot of him,” Zipadelli said. “He’s been a friend of mine for a while. We have talked to many people. He is on our radar, but we have no commitment, nothing signed. … We would love to make him a part of Stewart-Haas, but we are not there yet.”

Childers, though, gave a pretty good idea of where he’s headed. “As far as next year, it’s actually not 100 percent done. But I think everybody has a good idea what it is,” he said.

“There was no one thing that stood out at all. Everybody at MWR’s been great for five years, and really (I’ve) had no issues at all. It’s really just a personal decision. I’ve thought about it for a long time. I just woke up one day, and that’s what my heart told me I should do. Hopefully it works out.”

Meanwhile, the effort to bring Busch — who currently has single-car Furniture Row Racing in position to make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup — into the fold continues. Zipadelli said SHR held talks earlier this week about expanding its North Carolina shop to accommodate a fourth car. “As far as that part of it goes, we’re pretty much committed,” he said. “We’re working on that, and if we can get it all worked out, we’re going to head that way.”

This from the same organization that last month at New Hampshire said it would not retain current driver Ryan Newman, citing the impending acquisition of Harvick and no room at the team for a potential fourth car. Zipadelli said the change in thinking was sparked by team co-owner Gene Haas, who founded the organization before Stewart was brought aboard as a driver and co-owner.

“Obviously, something’s changed. Gene is obviously a partner who started this many years ago. He’s always liked Kurt. We talked about Kurt last year, putting him in the 39 (car), and things just didn’t work out. It’s really nothing that Ryan did wrong. He’s done a great job, he’s a good guy, heck of a driver. This just kind of got sprung on us 14 days ago or less, this kind of all came down,” Zipadelli said.

“Gene just showed some interest in having the ability to put something together. Without getting into a ton more details, that’s really all it is. It’s something we’re working on. I don’t know that it will all come together, it’s going to take an awful lot. It is kind of late. We didn’t think we’d have all the pieces to put together at Loudon, and felt like it was best for Ryan to give him a fair shot at securing something for himself, which is the most important thing.”

Childers said he wasn’t sure how the end of 2013 would play out, and whether he’d remain with MWR for the rest of the season. Stepping away from the chance to work full-time with Vickers, a close friend since their go-kart days together, was the hardest part of the decision. But Martin, wheeling SHR’s No. 14 for most of the remainder of this year as Stewart recovers from a broken leg suffered in a sprint car crash, knows why his former crew chief was in such demand.

“Rodney Childers is an amazing person, and I’ll say that first and foremost. Amazing. He’s very, very smart, and very dedicated, and an incredible crew chief. It’s funny how things work out. My mission in February was to help him secure a championship-caliber sponsor and driver for 2014, so that he could race for a championship in the 55. My, how things chance over time,” Martin said.

“I would assume the whole garage would be after Rodney Childers. Last year he did a one-year contract instead of a long-term deal, because he wanted to wait to see what transpired after our year together. He wanted to work with me and Brian and Michael in 2013, and see what 2014 brought. He’s in that position now to look at all options.”

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Gibbs driver nets 15th career win at Tennessee track

RESULTS | STANDINGS

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Friday night’s Food City 250 wasn’t exactly a battle royal, as far as the outcome was concerned.
 
Heck, it wasn’t even a food fight.
 
In fact, when Kyle Busch wins the Coors Light Pole for a NASCAR Nationwide Series race, as he did Friday afternoon at Bristol Motor Speedway, the rest of the field might as well start writing concession speeches.

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Pulling away from runner-up Brad Keselowski over a green-flag run that consumed the final 72 laps, Busch won his sixth NNS event at the .533-mile short track. The victory was his ninth of the season and the series-record 60th of his career.
 
In winning for the 15th time at Bristol across NASCAR’s top three series, Busch led 228 of 250 laps. The pole he won earlier in the day was his sixth of the season. Each time, Busch has gone on to win the race.
 
The victory set up a try for a second weekend sweep at Bristol for Busch, who started with a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win on Wednesday night. To win Saturday’s Irwin Tools Night Race in the Sprint Cup Series, however, Busch will have to come from the back of the field, having spun during his Cup qualifying attempt Friday afternoon.
 
"You’ve gotta win two to go for three, and this is two," Busch exulted in Victory Lane.
 
Austin Dillon ran third behind Busch and Keselowski. Justin Allgaier was fourth followed by rookie Kyle Larson.
 
When Busch wrecked during Cup qualifying, many in the crowd cheered loudly. But Busch found perhaps the best revenge — winning, and winning emphatically, scoring his 19th Nationwide Series perfect driver rating of 150.0.
 
"It comes from preparation, it comes from the shop, it comes from practice here," Busch said in explaining his dominance. "(Crew chief) Adam (Stevens) and I – we work real well together. Those guys work hard. Today, just a great car and great job by these guys putting together such a great Monster Energy Camry.
 
"It was a lot of fun tonight. It’s cool when you can start up front, lead laps like that, but yet you have some battles with holding off the 22 (Keselowski) and having to pass the 32 (Larson, who led briefly after a restart on Lap 110) — just a fun day. Whether you’re cheering of booing, don’t matter. We’re here to win races, take trophies home and that’s what we’re going to try to do (Saturday) night, too."
 
Busch frustrated Keselowski’s bid to win his fifth NNS race in his fifth straight start.
 
"We were close, just not quite good enough," Keselowski said ruefully. "We just came up a little bit short. Obviously, on the track, I didn’t have quite enough speed to get by Kyle."
 
Brian Vickers‘ wreck out of Turn 4 on Lap 167 continued a succession of trouble for series championship contenders. By the time Vickers nosed into the inside wall on the frontstretch, Regan Smith already had lost two laps pitting under green because of a loose wheel.
 
Sam Hornish Jr., the points leader entering the race, also struggled, losing a lap to Busch on the track. Shortly after a restart on Lap 179, Hornish’s Ford slapped the outside wall in Turn 4 and fell back to 13th, one lap down.
 
Elliott Sadler also went a lap down with an ill-handling car but got it back with a free pass as the highest-scored lapped car after the caution for Vickers’ accident. Sadler finished 10th, two positions ahead of Hornish. Smith was 21st and Vickers 24th.
 
Notes: Hornish retained the series lead by six points over Dillon… In the battle for the owners’ championship, Busch’s No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Camry cut the lead of Keselowski’s No. 22 Ford from 22 points to 16.

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Sprint Cup regular edges Scott, keeps sights on Bristol sweep

Starting lineup | Weekend schedule

Kyle Busch, in search of the second leg of a Bristol Motor Speedway tripleheader sweep, landed on top of the charts in Friday afternoon’s Coors Light Pole Qualifying for the NASCAR Nationwide Series, snagging the pole position for tonight’s Food City 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) with a lap of 124.971 mph.

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Busch’s pole was his sixth of the year, third on the .533-mile concrete track and 32nd in his Nationwide career. He’ll start first in the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in tonight’s 250-lap race, the 23rd of 33 events this season, in search of his sixth Nationwide triumph at Bristol.

Brian Scott, who was fastest in the series’ lone practice in the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, will start second after a lap of 124.873 mph. He brushed the wall on his second qualifying lap.

Ty Dillon, Justin Allgaier and Kyle Larson, runner-up to Busch in the track’s most recent Nationwide race, completed the top five. Points leader Sam Hornish Jr., in the No. 12 Penske Racing Ford, will start 13th.

Seven drivers had made their qualifying attempts before a light drizzle forced a delay of about 20 minutes. The seventh driver, Carl Long, looped his No. 15 Chevrolet in Turns 1 and 2 during his second lap.

David Starr, the 15th driver out, caused another delay when his car spewed smoke as he crossed under the checkered flag during his qualifying run. Josh Wise scraped the Turn 3 wall as he drifted high on his second qualifying lap, but held on to make the race.

Eight drivers, including Long and Starr, failed to make the 40-car field. The others heading home were Joey Gase, Kevin Lepage, Michael McDowell, Mike Harmon, Martin Roy and Morgan Shepherd.

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