Busch throws curve at fantasy owners with his road-course performances

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Two road courses. Two different results for Kyle Busch. After finishing 35th at Sonoma earlier this season, Busch came away with the victory Sunday at Watkins Glen. This was consistent with the No. 18’s past performances at both of the tracks, so fantasy owners who were keen to that knowledge no doubt benefited from Busch’s presence in their lineups.

Busch scored the most points in the NASCAR Fantasy Live game at 79.5, and that was a whopping 19.5 points more than what second-place Carl Edwards had. Busch led all drivers in fantasy points for fast laps and was second only to Marcos Ambrose in laps led. And although the finish was close between Busch and Brad Keselowski in real life, Busch was 23 points better than Keselowski in fantasy.



That was a big gap to overcome on a road course where fantasy points were at a premium. But if you did study those previous stats, you would have known better. In nine career Cup races at Sonoma, Busch had one win — but just two top-10 finishes. Now, in nine Cup races at Watkins Glen, he has two wins and eight top-10s. That’s a stark contrast despite the tracks being a similar genre.

It’s an interesting point to take forward when setting your lineup. Never take a previous performance at a similar genre track for granted.

Of course, Busch might not have fared as well had it not been for a Lap 59 pit stop that came fortuitously before a Lap 60 caution flag. That meant leaders like Ambrose had to come in to pit while Busch was on his way out and grabbing an advantage. 



That key moment shuffled the standings around quite a bit in fantasy leagues. And that made fantasy owners either famously fortunate, like Busch, or fittingly frustrated, like Ambrose, who was spun by Max Papis on a late restart — or road-course king Jeff Gordon, who met an even worse fantasy fate. For more on Gordon, let’s move ahead with our story …  

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Key Fantasy Moment: It came on Lap 14 when Jeff Gordon, with a series-leading nine road-course wins, got off track and out of control and slammed into an inside barrier (watch video). Gordon managed to get back in the race and finish 36th, but it was a far cry from what fantasy owners were expecting from the four-time Cup champion. In fact, Gordon did not score a single fantasy point thanks to minus-8 in place differential that wiped out the points he gained by his finishing position.

Best value: Forgive us if you’ve heard this before, but it was Casey Mears, who qualified 30th but moved up to a 12th-place finish. For that he scored 51 fantasy points and was the seventh-highest scorer this week. That was slightly better than Martin Truex Jr. and Kurt Busch but at a fraction of the cost at $11.25. Owners who saw Mears’ best average finish for his Cup career was at Watkins Glen did well to take advantage of that stat.

Biggest bust: Let’s make it plural and say it was the two Hendrick Motorsports cars that got tangled up with each other on Lap 81. Matt Kenseth and Kasey Kahne made contact, Kahne spun and got slammed into by Junior (watch video). Both Hendrick machines received significant damage and led to Junior finishing 31st in fantasy points and Kahne 38th — with just a single fantasy point. That qualifies as "ugh" for two drivers who cost $26.50 and $24.75, respectively.

Tip to take forward: There are no more road courses on the schedule this season, so it’s time to jettison Marcos Ambrose and perhaps even Juan Pablo Montoya — and any of the other road experts — from your roster. It’s unfortunate because they are value picks and allow for roster flexibility. But now that the road courses are in the rearview mirror, fantasy owners can focus the alternating intermediate tracks and short tracks in the next four races before the chase, including Michigan, Bristol, Atlanta and Richmond.

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Keselowski back in top 10; Kurt Busch lurks; Gordon must recover

1. Jimmie Johnson (No. 48)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Johnson leads the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings with 808 points.
Last week: Johnson gained 10 spots on the afternoon after a subpar qualifying effort — at least for him — and finished eighth at Watkins Glen International. It’s the 15th top-10 showing of the year for Five-Time through 22 races, and his lead over second-place Clint Bowyer is 75 points with four races to go before the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field is set.
What he said: “Man I passed a lot of cars today. 8th isn’t bad but I feel we could have been better. That caution for the 43 killed our track position.” (Via Twitter)
This week: In 23 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Johnson has four top-fives and nine top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Johnson ranks fourth out of 53 drivers with an average place of 10.2. He finished 28th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Johnson’s past two races at Michigan ended with car problems. Last year’s was more painful. The No. 48 caught leader Brad Keselowski and expertly passed him on Lap 190 (of scheduled 200) to assume the lead. He maintained the lead until Lap 195, when his engine blew up. It was a devastating conclusion to a race Johnson was poised to win; he finished 27th.

2. Clint Bowyer (No. 15)

Michael Waltrip Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Bowyer is second in the standings with 733 points.
Last week: Bowyer is still searching for that elusive first victory of the season, but at the very least he snapped a three-race streak of finishing outside the top 10 on Sunday. At home on a road course, the No. 15 Toyota finished sixth after starting second. Bowyer is close to clinching a spot for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, but a win would be nice considering the Chase field gets reseeded based on the number of wins each driver has.
What he said: “We stuck to our pit strategy and didn’t get a lot of opportunities to make adjustments, so we kind of just had to go with what we had. It was a good day — not great, but good. We gained a couple points on the 48 team and gave ourselves a little more room over 11th.”
This week: In 15 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Bowyer has seven top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Bowyer ranks 16th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 16.4. He finished seventh at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Bowyer was one of 13 drivers to lead at least one lap at Michigan, pacing the field through 19 laps to finish seventh. It was another strong day for Bowyer at Michigan. The 2-mile superspeedway isn’t considered one of the No. 15 team’s best tracks, but it’s hard to find someone more consistent since 2011. During that span of five races, Bowyer has five top-10s. He’s finished seventh for three consecutive races.

3. Carl Edwards (No. 99)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Edwards is third in the standings with 728 points.
Last week: Edwards had his best finish since the last time the Sprint Cup Series raced on a road course — at Sonoma on June 23rd. The No. 99 finished third in California, and backed up that road effort with a fourth-place finish at Watkins Glen. Edwards held his spot on the late restarts after climbing into the top 10 with 20 laps remaining. It was a great late surge after he started 16th on the grid.
What he said: “I wish we raced here more than once a year. This is a lot of fun. It’s a great race track. I love racing here. Kyle (Busch) and Brad (Keselowski) put on a heckuva show. That was neat to watch.”
This week: In 18 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Edwards has two wins, nine top-fives, 14 top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Michigan, Edwards ranks third out of 53 drivers with an average place of 10.1. He finished eighth at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Edwards knew he had a fast race car, but he also knew that he needed a victory in his march toward a potential Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. So although he finished sixth, the No. 99 team was disappointed. Edwards mentioned his car was as fast as Biffle’s No. 16, but at the end of the race, he didn’t have the position Biffle had.

4. Kevin Harvick (No. 29)

Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Harvick is fourth in the standings with 707 points.
Last week: Harvick led eight laps Sunday but ultimately extended his streak of finishing outside the top 10 to three consecutive races. In the No. 29 Chevrolet, Harvick finished 13th at the Glen. His car was fast — leading those laps proved it –but his pit strategy faltered when a late caution was displayed just as Harvick planned a green-flag, fuel-only pit stop.
What he said: “We had a really fast Budweiser Chevrolet today. We just couldn’t get the break we needed on pit strategy.”
This week: In 25 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Harvick has one win, four top-fives and nine top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Harvick ranks 12th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 15.9. He finished second at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Michigan isn’t one of Harvick’s best tracks. The driver is coming off a runner-up finish earlier this year, but last year’s effort was more in line with his career trend. The No. 29 team started 20th and couldn’t get the car in good enough shape to make a serious run through the field. He finished 16th.

5. Kyle Busch (No. 18)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Busch is fifth in the standings with 693 points.
Last week: After two years of missed opportunities, Kyle Busch had his Watkins Glen breakthrough, winning his second career race at the road course after a heartbreaking finish (for him) in 2012. Last year, Busch was the leader on the final lap, but spun out when Brad Keselowski and Marcos Ambrose surged forward. There was no catching the No. 18 this time around as Busch held of Keselowski on the final restart to win his third race of the season. Watch video from his victory below.
What he said: “My car wasn’t turning as good as it needed to on four tires, so I was really having to muscle it and try to get it around here as best as I could. But, man … it’s awesome to be back in Victory Lane. … Not quite as good as it needed to be — I think we could make it better. I’m always a perfectionist, so I always want to be better.”
This week: In 17 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Busch has one win, four top-fives, six top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Michigan, Busch ranks eighth out of 53 drivers with an average place of 14.1. He finished fourth at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: As the defending race winner, Busch entered Michigan with a No. 18 Toyota that just wasn’t fast enough to compete for the victory. That much as evident all weekend, and after Busch finished 13th place, crew chief Dave Rogers took the blame for Busch not having enough speed.

6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Earnhardt Jr. is sixth in the standings with 670 points.
Last week: Junior put himself in position to have one of his better finishes at Watkins Glen, but all of that careful work was undone late. When Matt Kenseth and Kasey Kahne bumped, Earnhardt Jr. was in the unfortunate position of gunning it through the esses. He had no chance of avoiding Kahne’s spun car on the track, and he drilled it head-on, crumpling the hood of the No. 88 and essentially ending his day. He finished 30th. Watch video of the incident below.
What he said: “I’m fine. The (No. 20) was going after the No. 9 and tried to wreck the No. 9 and ended up hitting the No. 5 (Kasey Kahne). The No. 20 was going after the No. 9 and missed him or got him a little bit. I don’t know if the No. 9 ended up wrecking or not, but ended up knocking the No. 5 out of the race and knocked ourselves out of the race and a couple of other guys.”
This week: In 28 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Earnhardt Jr. has two wins, six top-fives, 10 top-10s and two poles. In the past eight years at Michigan, Earnhardt Jr. ranks fifth out of 53 drivers with an average place of 12.6. He finished 37th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Following his win at Michigan earlier in the season, Earnhardt Jr. finished fourth after starting 22nd. All in all, a great year at the track for Junior.

7. Matt Kenseth (No. 20)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Kenseth is seventh in the standings with 659 points.
Last week: A boom-or-bust season continued for Kenseth. The No. 20 team has four wins, but also three DNFs and four additional finishes outside the top 20. One of those four finishes came at The Glen, where Kenseth finished 23rd Sunday. He was involved in a Lap 83 incident that involved six cars, and the No. 20 Toyota actually started it by bumping Kasey Kahne in the esses.
What he said: “I honestly don’t really know what happened after we got up the esses. I guess I must’ve hit Kasey (Kahne). I went into Turn 1 sort of too wide and came off … I was three-wide on top, which was fine. We shoved up the middle and then I went to get back on the track and there’s no room to get back on the track. I didn’t know where I was supposed to go. So, I’m trying to get back on the track — me and Marcos (Ambrose) hit a little bit and then by the time we got we got to the esses I wasn’t trying to get Marcos back. It probably looked like that. I was trying to carry my momentum so I didn’t have four more cars pass me and I just lost control of my car and went across and I guess somebody was outside of me. I guess it was Kasey. That part is my fault.”
This week: In 28 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Kenseth has two wins, 12 top-fives and 18 top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Kenseth ranks second out of 53 drivers with an average place of 10.0. He finished sixth at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Nothing went right for Kenseth at a track where Fords usually do pretty well (Kenseth drove the No. 17 for Roush Fenway Racing last year). Although Kenseth started fourth, he fell back in the field for good with about 60 laps to go. After running in the top five most of the day, Kenseth was 16th on Lap 140 and then 25th on Lap 150. His fuel strategy was off, his pit times were slow and to cap it all off, he had a flat tire that needed service and forced an extra pit stop out of him.

8. Brad Keselowski (No. 2)

Penske Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Keselowski is eighth in the standings with 634 points.
Last week: What is it about Keselowski and Watkins Glen. One year after finishing second in perhaps the most dramatic final lap of the season, Keselowski finished second again in 2013. This time, Keselowski finished behind Kyle Busch one year after he spun the No. 18 driver on the last lap. It was a finish the No. 2 team sorely needed. The defending Sprint Cup Series champion rose four spots in the rankings to No. 8, but is still searching for that all-important first victory.
What he said: “We were strong, but we just weren’t quite strong enough. We were definitely really close and we’ve been close over the last three years, but just came up a little bit short on the last lap on all three of them. That stinks, but that’s racing. We had a shot at it. I was gonna have to wreck (Kyle Busch) to really get it and I didn’t want to do that. I thought I could cross him over here on the last corner and the car just slid the back end a little too much and I just couldn’t quite pull off the move.”
This week:
In eight career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Keselowski has two top-fives and two top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Keselowski ranks 18th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 17.1. He finished 12th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: In one of Keselowski’s best races of the season, he gained 17 spots on the day and finished second after starting 19th. He benefited from Jimmie Johnson’s late trouble and led 17 laps before ceding the lead to Greg Biffle, but Keselowski held strong on a green-white-checkered restart for his third runner-up finish in the past four races.

9. Greg Biffle (No. 16)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Biffle is ninth in the standings with 627 points.
Last week: Biffle finished 16th at Watkins Glen, yet gained a spot in the standings. That’s because Kasey Kahne wrecked and finished 34th, allowing Biffle to gain a spot. The Biff, who has one win on the season, will take it with one of his best tracks coming up. See video below of Biffle’s win at Michigan earlier this year. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
What he said: Biffle was unavailable for comment.
This week: In 21 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Biffle has four wins, 10 top-fives, 13 top-10s and one pole. He is the defending race winner. In the past eight years at Michigan, Biffle ranks first out of 53 drivers with an average place of 8.2. He won the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Biffle won the 2012 Pure Michigan 400, leading 26 of 201 laps and held off the field from the front position on a green-white-checkered restart. Coupled with his win earlier this season at the superspeedway, Biffle is the first driver to win consecutive races at Michigan since, well, Greg Biffle. The veteran accomplished back-to-back wins at the track in 2004-05 as well. Now he’s trying to become the first person to win three consecutive at the track since Bill Elliott, who won four in a row from 1985-86.

10. Martin Truex Jr. (No. 56)

Michael Waltrip Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Truex Jr. is 10th in the standings with 625 points.
Last week: With the Wild Card standings getting tighter every week, Truex Jr. moved himself into the top 10 in the standings — and, if it holds, an automatic berth in to the Chase — with his third-place showing at Watkins Glen. It marked a wildly successful year for the No. 56 team at road courses. Truex Jr. won at Sonoma Raceway earlier this year, giving him an average finish of 2.0 for the year on the road.
What he said: “All in all it was a good weekend. After we put that last set of tires on we almost got the lead and after that just couldn’t quite run with (Kyle Busch) after all of those restarts, all of those heat cycles in the tires. Both the 2 (Brad Keselowski) and the 18 (Kyle Busch) were just a tick better than we were on the longer runs and on the older, built-up air pressure. A couple more to go — just have to keep chipping away at it.”
This week: In 15 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Truex Jr. has three top-fives and five top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Truex Jr. ranks 14th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 16.1. He finished third at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Truex Jr. earned the fifth top-10 of his career at Michigan, finishing 10th after starting seventh.

12. Kasey Kahne (No. 5)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Kahne is 12th in the standings with 622 points.
Last week: Kahne’s postseason hopes are in wonderful shape, thanks to his two victories. Still, the No. 5 team of Hendrick Motorsports would like to finish the year strong and leave no doubt. That didn’t happen Sunday as Kahne wrecked late after a bump from Matt Kenseth, relegating the Chevrolet team to a finish of 34th. The 10-point day dropped Kahne four places in the standings. He currently holds the first of two Wild Card spots.
What he said: “I was trying to just get through there. There were some openings. I’m not sure what happened. I know I got hit in the left-rear. I don’t know how it all happened because I haven’t seen it. I felt like I was kind of over on my side of the road, but I would have to see it to know for sure.”
This week: In 19 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Kahne has one win, seven top-fives, eight top-10s and two poles. In the past eight years at Michigan, Kahne ranks 11th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 15.6. He finished 38th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Kahne’s been somewhat of an enigma at Michigan, but he was on the right side of it in last year’s second race at the 2-mile track. A third-place finish was the cap to a stellar weekend in which Kahne qualified fifth and further solidified his march to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. In the past four races at Michigan, though, Kahne has finished seventh, 33rd, third and 38th.

14. Ryan Newman (No. 39)

Stewart-Haas Racing, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Newman is 14th in the standings with 605 points.
Last week: What a turn of events for Ryan Newman. From being told he wouldn’t have a job at Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014 to being in the Chase field in just a month’s time. Newman, who finished 14th at Watkins Glen, is the biggest beneficiary — if you want to call it that — of Tony Stewart’s broken leg. Newman passed his friend a current boss in the standings and holds the final Wild Card spot with four races remaining. That’s a reason to feel great after leaving The Glen, although Newman didn’t sound too pleased with his showing. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
What he said: “We lacked the track position that we needed all day. We couldn’t really make any forward progress; we just maintained our position throughout the first two-thirds of the race.”
This week:
In 24 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Newman has two wins, five top-fives, seven top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Michigan, Newman ranks 22nd out of 53 drivers with an average place of 19.1. He finished 18th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.
Last year: Newman finished eighth in the Pure Michigan 400 to carry the torch for Stewart-Haas Racing — co-owner Tony Stewart finished 32nd.

Five in the rearview mirror …

Kurt Busch (No. 78)

Furniture Row Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Busch is 11th in the standings with 623 points.
Last week: Busch said he wasn’t on his “A game” following the race, but even a less-than-stellar Kurt Busch is better than a lot of drivers in the field. That much was obvious when the No. 78 car of Furniture Row Racing finished ninth place, a 35-point effort that vaulted Busch to 11th in the points standings. He’s just two points behind 10th-place Martin Truex Jr.
This week: In 25 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Busch has two wins, three top-fives, eight top-10s and two poles. In the past eight years at Michigan, Busch ranks 15th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 16.1. He finished 35th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.

Jeff Gordon (No. 24)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Gordon is 13th in the standings with 610 points.
Last week: A driver error sent Jeff Gordon spinning into the barrier early at Watkins Glen, resulting in a 36th-place finish. The wreck also gave his Chase hopes a hard jolt. The winless Gordon fell from ninth in the standings — an automatic berth — to outside the top 10. He’s 15 points behind 10th-place Martin Truex Jr. with four races to go before the postseason field is set. Watch video of the wreck below.
This week: In 41 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Gordon has two wins, 18 top-fives, 25 top-10s and five poles. In the past eight years at Michigan, Gordon ranks ninth out of 53 drivers with an average place of 14.2. He finished 39th at the first 2013 race at Michigan.

Jamie McMurray (No. 1)

Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: McMurray is 15th in the standings with 600 points.
Last week: McMurray finished 11th at Watkins Glen, giving him a solid 34-point day (he earned a bonus point for leading a lap). The driver of the No. 1 Chevrolet remains on the fringe of the Chase picture. He’s 25 points out of 10th place, but almost certainly needs a victory to have a serious shot at the postseason. Kasey Kahne (two wins) and Ryan Newman (one win) are still above him in the standings.
This week: In 21 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, McMurray has one top-five and four top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, McMurray ranks 25th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 20.2. He finished 33rd at the first 2013 race at Michigan.

Joey Logano (No. 22)

Penske Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Logano is 16th in the standings with 598 points.
Last week: With four races remaining, Logano remains in the hunt for a spot in the postseason. In the No. 22 Ford, Logano finished seventh at Watkins Glen to continue his late-season surge. Afterward, Logano said he has “a really good shot” at the postseason, if he gets a win. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
This week: In nine career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Logano has four top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Logano ranks 20th out of 53 drivers with an average place of 17.6. He finished ninth at the first 2013 race at Michigan.

Tony Stewart (No. 14)

Stewart-Haas Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Stewart is 17th in the standings with 594 points.
Last week: Stewart’s season is essentially up in smoke. The driver broke his right leg in a sprint car crash and missed the race at Watkins Glen, dropping him six places in the standings. He won’t race again any time soon. Even if he returns for a race in 2012, it won’t be as a member of the Chase field. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
This week: In 29 career starts at Michigan International Speedway, Stewart has one win, 12 top-fives and 20 top-10s. In the past eight years at Michigan, Stewart ranks sixth out of 53 drivers with an average place of 12.7. He finished fifth at the first 2013 race at Michigan.

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Sprint car crash injury has profound NASCAR impact

Tony Stewart broke both bones in his right leg in a sprint car crash in August in Iowa and underwent immediate surgery.

He is out for the season but is expecting to return in 2014.

Check back as this page is updated with the latest coverage from NASCAR.com.

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Stewart says no schism with co-owner Haas

Tony Stewart says there is no friction between him and Stewart-Haas Racing co-owner Gene Haas, following Haas’ decision to add Kurt Busch to the team’s 2014 lineup. | Read the full story

Stewart trying to stay busy

Tony Stewart tells reports at a press conference that he is trying to stay busy and will be making some sponsor appearances over the next few days and weeks. | Read the full story

Stewart eyes 2014 return

Tony Stewart is planning on return to NASCAR Sprint Cup Series action at the Daytona 500 in 2014. | Read the full story

Martin replaces Stewart for most of season

Mark Martin will be filling in for Tony Stewart for all but one race for the rest of the Sprint Cup season | Read the full story

Stewart released from hospital

Smoke ‘resting as comfortably as he can at home,’ says team | Read the full story

Papis solid as fill-in

Max Papis filled in admirably, but questions remain as to who will step in for Tony Stewart next | Read the full story

Who’s next?

Tony Stewart and SHR competition director Greg Zipadelli hope to have a replacement driver decided by Monday. | Read the full story

Zipadelli’s outlook

Greg Zipadelli, competition director at Stewart-Haas Racing, talks to media at Watkins Glen about Tony Stewart’s spirits and outlook following his broken leg. | Watch the video

Stewart breaks leg

In a sprint car race on a dirt track in Iowa, Tony Stewart was in a scary wreck that broke both bones in his right leg. Read about how the accident happened, and how Stewart-Haas Racing responded. | Read the full story

Second surgery for Stewart

The three-time Sprint Cup champion underwent a successful second operation three days after the crash as doctors placed a metal rod to help the broken tibia heal correctly. | Read the full story

‘Smoke’ will do it his own way

Tony Stewart is a breed of his own, David Caraviello writes. Yes, it is easy to say, "I told you so" after Stewart called two earlier sprint car crashes "not a big deal." But with no boss telling him what to do, Stewart is free to race as he wishes. | Read the full story

Stewart could miss 4-6 weeks

Sprint car crash will likely force the Stewart-Haas Racing driver to miss the rest of the races leading up to the Chase. | Read the full story

Social media reaction

Most drivers didn’t know Tony Stewart had been in a sprint car crash until waking up Tuesday morning. The Twitter messages were uniformly positive, thoughtful and even hilarious as one driver lobbied to be Stewart’s replacement driver at Watkins Glen. | Read the full story

Replacement named

Tony Stewart is officially out of this weekend’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen. In his place is a veteran racer with plenty of experience on road courses, and even has a top-10 at the Glen. | Read the full story

Chase chances

With Tony Stewart out for at least one race — and possibly more — the pressure turns to Ryan Newman as Stewart-Haas Racing’s best chance to send a driver to the Chase. And Newman isn’t even returning to SHR next year. David Caraviello explains. | Read the full story

Helton, Jarrett on Stewart

NASCAR president Mike Helton and former NASCAR Cup champion Dale Jarrett made note of Tony Stewart’s injury during their opening remarks of the Motorsports 2.0 program Tuesday at the Ritz-Carlton. | Read the full story

Owners react

J.D. Gibbs, Michael Waltrip touch on sprint car crash, how they feel about their drivers running in non-NASCAR events. | Read the full story

Papis relishes opportunity

Stewart’s replacement, Max Papis and SHR competition director Greg Zipadelli touch on Smoke’s injury. | Read the full story

Second thoughts?

Stewart’s injury begs the question: How far will other drivers go to return to their roots to race on their off-days. | Read the full story

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Results | Lap-by-Lap breakdown | Race highlights | Full coverage

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — The third time may have been the charm for Kyle Busch, but it was a jinx for pole-winner Marcos Ambrose.
 
Having surrendered the lead late in the last two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Watkins Glen International, Busch reversed the trend Sunday in winning the Cheez-It 355 at the 2.45-mile road course by .486 seconds over runner-up Brad Keselowski.
 
Ambrose had the race in hand, having led 51 of the first 61 laps, until an inopportune caution in the middle of a pit stop cycle dropped him back to 12th for a restart on Lap 64 of 90. Busch grabbed the lead when Ambrose came to pit road under yellow on Lap 62 and held it the rest of the way.
 
A wreck on Lap 85 ended Ambrose’s bid for a third straight win at the Glen.

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Martin Truex Jr. ran third, followed by Carl Edwards and Juan Pablo Montoya. Clint Bowyer, Joey Logano, Jimmie Johnson, Kurt Busch and AJ Allmendinger completed the top 10.
 
Busch, who was already on pit road when the fifth caution changed the race on Lap 60, nevertheless had to survive a succession of restarts in the final 15 laps before edging Keselowski for the victory in a two-lap shootout. Busch collected his third win of the season, his second at the Glen and the 27th of his career — but nothing about it was easy.
 
And he can thank Keselowski for resisting the temptation to move him out of the way in the final two corners.
 
"It was just run as hard as you can, drive your car, try not to worry about what’s behind, whatever happens, happens–we’ll deal with it," Busch said. "I commend Brad for doing a better job this year at bringing home a cleaner race.

"I felt we ran really hard there those last couple laps. I couldn’t get away from him. My car wouldn’t turn through the corners as well a s I needed it to. I just couldn’t get the front tires to bite, and so he could catch me through the corners. But in the braking zones and exiting the corners, I felt like I was really strong and could get away from him."
 
Last year, Keselowski spun Busch in Turn 3 with fewer than two laps left, as the cars slid on a glaze of oil. This race was a completely different matter, Keselowski said.
 
"I could have dumped Kyle and won the race," said the defending Cup champion, who climbed to eighth in the series standings on the strength of the runner-up finish. "That stuff goes back and forth, and I’m sure someone in the tabloid side of the media will make a big deal about that, but it won’t be me, because I know I did the right thing …
 
"It doesn’t mean there isn’t temptation, but there’s a level of respect and a code of honor that you have to have as a man."
 
The race turned on a dime when Aric Almirola’s Ford nosed into a tire barrier after a blowing a tire on Lap 60 to cause a caution that interrupted a cycle of pit stops and knocked Ambrose out of the lead. Kyle Busch, Keselowski, Truex Jr., Bowyer and Kurt Busch had already made their final stops, and that quintet led the field to green on Lap 64.
 
In fact, Dave Rogers, Kyle Busch’s crew chief, credited his race engineers with the call to bring the driver of the No. 18 Toyota to pit road on Lap 59 before NASCAR threw the yellow for Almirola’s incident.
 
"We weren’t sure exactly where we were fuel-mileage-wise, so we were going to push to Lap 60, and I’ve actually got to give credit to my two engineers," Rogers said. "They got talking, and they saw some people sliding around. Steve Hoegler, one of the engineers, said ‘There’s fluid on the track; you’d better get him in.’
 
"So it was a last-minute call to get Kyle on pit road, and the next thing you know, there was a caution, so it worked out great."
 
Absent a threat from Ambrose, Busch pulled away to a lead of more than two seconds before caution for debris slowed the field for the sixth time on Lap 77. The race restarted on Lap 81, with Busch, Keselowski, Truex and Bowyer in the top four spots.
 
Busch’s work, however, was far from over. After the restart, a wild wreck involving Matt Kenseth, Kasey Kahne and Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought out the seventh caution and required another restart on Lap 85.
 
Contact between Max Papis’ Chevrolet and Ambrose’s Ford ignited an accident on the restart lap, with Brian Vickers’ No. 55 Toyota also collected in the melee. Forced to lead the field to green for the third time in 15 laps, Busch got away on the restart and held off Keselowski in a battle that intensified on the final circuit.
 
The wildly fluctuating fortunes of Jeff Gordon hit another low point at the Glen. Gordon pulled up behind Denny Hamlin’s Toyota as the cars climbed through the esses on Lap 14. Gordon’s Chevy twitched left into the Turn 4 guard rail, slid across the track and nosed into the barrier on the opposite side.
 
The four-time Cup champion lost 23 laps in the garage as his team repaired the car. Though Gordon returned to the track on Lap 37, he finished 36th and fell out of the top 10 in the series standings.
 
Notes: Not that there was any suspense surrounding Jimmie Johnson’s quest to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup for the 10th straight season, but the series leader clinched at least a Wild Card spot in the Chase with his eighth-place finish … Papis ran 15th subbing for injured Tony Stewart, keeping the No. 14 Chevrolet in the second provisional Wild Card spot for the owners’ Chase.

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Smoke ‘resting as comfortably as he can at home,’ says team

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WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Tony Stewart was released from a North Carolina hospital Sunday night after a six-day stay in two hospitals for two surgeries to repair a broken right leg.

His Stewart-Haas Racing team announced the owner/driver’s release via Twitter hours after Sunday’s race at Watkins Glen International, saying Stewart was “resting as comfortably as he can at home. Thx (sic) for the thoughts and prayers. #SmokeWillRise”

Stewart was injured while competing in a sprint car race in Iowa on Monday night. He broke both his right fibula and tibia bones in his leg and is sidelined indefinitely while healing. Ending the 10th longest consecutive race streak in Sprint Cup Series history at 521, Stewart fell out of the Wild Card into 17th place in the driver standings.

Sports car veteran Max Papis finished 15th Sunday driving Stewart’s famous No. 14 Chevrolet in the Cheez-It 355 at the Glen. The result found the team in 11th place in the owner standings, holding the first Wild Card in the owner championship.

On Monday, the team named Austin Dillon as the interim driver for next Sunday’s race at Michigan International Speedway.

Team officials had hoped to make an announcement on Monday about a full-time replacement, but did not.

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The defending champ is back in the thick of the Chase run after a mid-season swoon

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Let there be no doubt. NASCAR’s reigning Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski is determined to get a shot at defending his title. He’s just as determined to get that shot by winning his way into the Chase playoff field.

While manhandling his No. 2 Miller Lite Ford inches off the bumper of race leader Kyle Busch’s Toyota in the final laps of Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Keselowski could have cruised his way comfortably under the checkered flag behind Busch and simply celebrated a huge points day that landed him well inside the Chase top-10.

But that idea never occurred to him. That’s not his style.

“Hell no I wasn’t thinking that, I wanted to win the race and that’s where my heart’s at,’’ Keselowski said. “Wins are a priority to me without a doubt. When it comes to making the Chase, I’d rather be a team that has five or six wins and be a Wild Card… than be a team that made the Chase with zero wins.

“In my mind, points are great when you’re in the Chase. Before that, to me, it’s about wins, even if you don’t end up in the top-20.

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“I wasn’t racing or running today thinking, ‘boy, I need a great points day,’ even though I definitely was cognizant of the 5 (Kasey Kahne) and the 24 (Jeff Gordon) and obviously the troubles with Tony (Stewart). But I didn’t enter this race thinking, let’s run second or third, that would be great, that would be a lot better than taking a risk and winning.’’

Ultimately Keselowski ended up with his third consecutive runner-up finish at the historic Watkins Glen International Raceway, a blink of an eye half-second away from his first victory of the year.

And yet, he stilled rocketed up the championship standings to eighth, his four-position gain tying Martin Truex Jr. for the best of the week. With four races remaining before the Chase field is set, Keselowski is safely among the guaranteed top-10 and in good position for one of the two Wild Card berths should he get that victory he so passionately pursues.

He could have spun out Busch and gotten it on Sunday. But…

“There’s racing and wrecking,’’ Keselowski said. “Those are two different things. Everybody defines them a little differently and I guess that’s the code you live your life by. If I was gonna’ take out Kyle today, it would have been wrecking in my mind and there’s a distinct difference.

“I could have definitely dumped Kyle and won the race,’’ Keselowski explained. “That stuff goes back and forth and I’m sure someone in the tabloid side of the media will make a big deal about that, but it won’t be me because I know I did the right thing.’’

Good karma can’t hurt, but being well-prepared is even better.

Sunday marked the Penske Racing driver’s third top-six finish in the last four races and he’s moved up from 13th place two weeks ago at Indianapolis — looking in at the Chase from the outside — to a more secure-feeling eighth place ranking as of this week.

And with the exception of next week’s stop at Michigan International Speedway — ironically a track the Michigan-native Keselowski considers a weak spot — he is encouraged about his chances at the remaining three stops on the schedule before the Chase field is set.

“We ran very strongly at Bristol (Tenn.) in the spring and have a great track record there,’’ Keselowski said. “Atlanta we just came off a tire test and that went very, very well and we have a team-specific Richmond test coming up in a week and a half, so three out of the four I expect us to have great speed and a potential shot at winning.

“I really see no reason why we can’t sustain our position in the points if not improve it before the Chase starts.

“But more importantly, I would rather have a win or two and be a Wild Card than finish seventh or eighth and squeak my way in without any wins because the momentum of a win and the confidence builder it instills in both yourself and the fear that it puts in your competition is more than worth it.’’

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Max Papis filled in admirably, but questions remain as to who will step in for Stewart next
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WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Max Papis gave himself an A-plus grade for his 15th-place effort filling in for injured three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champ Tony Stewart in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen.

It was perhaps the hardest-earned 15th place the Italian sports car veteran has ever had. It was certainly the highest profile one.

With Stewart watching the race from a North Carolina hospital bed while recovering from multiple surgeries to repair a severely broken right leg, all eyes were on Papis — expectations high, the spotlight bright.

And there was plenty to see.

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Papis, who qualified Stewart’s No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Mobil 1 Chevy 29th, was spun out by Greg Biffle early in the race and then collided with pole winner Marcos Ambrose late in the race, but he still climbed up through the field in the waning laps — persevering in the same gritty spirit that has endeared Stewart to fans for decades.

“I drove the wheels off this and am super proud of keeping the seat of ‘Smoke’ as warm as I could,’’ Papis said. “I felt I did a pretty good job and I’m proud of myself.’’

Then, he added with a smile, “Now it’s time for people that know how to turn left only.’’

After selecting Papis to fill in on the circuit’s last road course of the season, the Stewart-Haas Racing team said this weekend it hopes to name a more permanent replacement or replacements by Monday for the oval-only finish to the season.

The team has indicated it would prefer a Nationwide driver to fill-in. It’s likely they will name one driver for next week’s race at Michigan — when there is a scheduling conflict with the Nationwide Series — and then someone to take the seat on a more consistent basis thereafter.

“We would love to put somebody in the car until Tony comes back,’’ SHR Competition Director Greg Zipadelli said Friday. “The problem we are faced with next week is if you look at the schedules and you lay out the Nationwide schedule at Mid-Ohio and us in Michigan they don’t match up very well.

“Somebody would do two half-assed jobs or we can try and find somebody that is out of the norm and put them in the car and try to go to Michigan and do the best we can. Then hopefully maybe Bristol we could pick up with one person that may be able to do the rest of it and obviously it would be a Nationwide driver. “

There is still no timetable for Stewart’s return, or if he will return this season. He suffered a broken tibia and fibula in his right leg in a crash while leading a sprint car feature race in Iowa late Monday night.

He has had two surgeries already and may yet need another. The team tweeted Sunday night that Stewart had been released from the hospital and was "resting as comfortably as he can at home."

It’s doubtful Stewart would be back in time to maintain his position in the driver standings. Although he has a victory and held one of the two Chase Wild Card positions entering the weekend, his absence from the field Sunday dropped him six spots in the standings to 17th.

Certainly Papis’ showing gave Stewart a little something to smile about. Biffle apologized to Papis after the race for spinning him out and Ambrose conceded afterward that something was wrong with his car as he raced Papis late in the afternoon.

And Papis’ performance Sunday was good enough to keep the No. 14 car ranked 11th in the owners’ points, the first Wild Card position.

“I’m really proud of everything we have done together here at Stewart-Haas Racing,’’ Papis said. “It was a tough call to come here at the last minute like this. But I’m really proud of the job I did. We almost had a top-10.

“We proved, never give up and I think that’s the spirit Tony wanted me to have. I pushed, I went from last to the middle of the field, fought really hard and brought it home the best I could.’’

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Gordon, Kahne fall out of the top 10; Johnson clinches Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup berth

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WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — For a driver with lots of fond memories of the Watkins Glen, N.Y. road course, four-time Glen race winner Jeff Gordon might rather forget his trip to Western New York this weekend.

So might his teammate Kasey Kahne and his other teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr., who finished 34th and 30th respectively. It was a rough drive through the scenic hillside for NASCAR’s premier Hendrick Motorsports team, which left with three pretty banged up Chevy SS Gen-6 race cars. And bruised egos.

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Gordon and Kahne free-fell four positions in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings as a result. Four races remain to set the 12-driver Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff field. Gordon, who is winless, is now 13th and unless he scored a victory in the next month, must climb back into the guaranteed top 10 in the standings.

Kahne, who won last week at Pocono, Pa., dropped to 12th place, his pair of victories put him in the top Wild Card position.

The lone bright spot for the team in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen was Jimmie Johnson, who finished eighth, clinched at least a Wild Card in the 2013 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and took a whopping 75-point lead over Clint Bowyer atop the Sprint Cup Series standings.

He summed up the range of emotions.

“Sux (sic) all my teammates were unlucky,’’ the five-time NASCAR champ Johnson posted on Twitter following the race.

The start of the weekend may have been a harbinger of things to come. None of the four drivers — normally contenders for a win here — had particularly good qualifying showings. Johnson and Kahne’s 18th and 19th place starts were the best of the group.

Gordon, had a disappointing 28th-place qualifying effort, spun and crashed his No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet hard into the guardrail on lap 14 while racing Denny Hamlin back in the field.

The team frantically made repairs to the car and after returning to the race Gordon improved six positions to finish 36th and he was clearly still miffed after the race.

“Fight hard,’’ Gordon said of recovering from this uncharacteristically poor road course showing. “Just keep working to go to the next race and qualify better, execute better and not make mistakes. That was my mistake. That was on me today. We can’t have stuff like that happen.’’

Kahne and Earnhardt’s fates intertwined with only eight laps remaining. After getting spun out in a chain-reaction accident triggered by Matt Kenseth and Marcos Ambrose, Kahne’s No. 5 Farmer’s Chevy ended up across the track and was hit by Earnhardt who was trying to avoid the smoking, spinning melee.

“I probably could have lifted and waited on the 5 (Kahne) and see where he was going to go, but I went where there wasn’t a car and he was in the throttle real hard and just kind of John Force’d it (like a drag racer) across the racetrack in front of us,” Earnhardt said.

“I knew (when we) get a late caution like that, man, you’re just drawing a pill in the lottery to make it through the rest of the race at that point.

“So I’m not too upset … because it was going to happen to somebody.”

“We had a good car,” he said. “I was surprised we were running as good as we did. We did not run any better position-wise, but normally we’re in the damn way.

“And today we were kind of making moves, passing guys and working hard around everybody.”

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Drivers position themselves for stretch run to postseason; inactive Stewart drops

Updated standings | Lap-by-Lap breakdown | Race highlights | Full coverage

Three up

Three down

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STANDINGS *Wild Card

Pos. Driver Pts back +/-
1. Jimmie Johnson
2. Clint Bowyer -75
3. Carl Edwards -80
4. Kevin Harvick -101
5. Kyle Busch -115 +1
6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. -138 -1
7. Matt Kenseth -149
8. Brad Keselowski -174 +4
9. Greg Biffle -181 +1
10. Martin Truex Jr. -183 +4
Pos. Driver Pts back of 10th Wins
11. Kurt Busch -2 0
12. Kasey Kahne* -3 2
13. Jeff Gordon -15 0
14. Ryan Newman* -20 1
15. Jamie McMurray -25 0

 In the green

Kyle Busch (Change: Sixth to fifth)
It’s only one spot in the standings, but it puts Busch — one of just three drivers with three wins this season — back into the top-five. Jimmie Johnson’s top spot may be out of reach, but there’s certainly room to move up some more, as the other three drivers above him (Clint Bowyer, Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick) have combined for as many wins as Busch.

Brad Keselowski (Change: 12th to eighth)
Perhaps there never was much of a need to worry about Keselowski; after all he IS the defending champion. The Penske Racing driver is on a mini hot streak and has positioned himself back in the Chase.

Martin Truex Jr. (Change: 14th to 10th)
Because of his Sonoma victory, Truex was already holding onto a Wild Card Chase spot in 14th, but now that he’s in the top-10 after another exceptional road course finish, he can enjoy a little more stability.

In the red

Tony Stewart (Change: 11th to 17th)
Talk about insult to injury. This one’s obvious, but Stewart took the biggest hit of the day as he watched the race from his hospital bed. Max Papis filled in admirably in the No. 14, which is good for owner’s points, but Stewart’s title chances have been all but put to rest with the fallout from his broken leg.

Jeff Gordon (Change: Ninth to 13th)
Gordon, fresh off five top-10 finishes in his last six races and a runner-up at Pocono last week, never had much of a chance at Watkins Glen. In need of his first win of 2013, Gordon met the wall with a hard, head-on collision on Lap 14 which put him dozens of laps down as his team made repairs.

Kasey Kahne (Change: Eighth to 12th)
Kahne was involved in a late, nasty wreck with teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. that ended his day. Despite his win last week at Pocono, he holds onto an unstable Wild Card spot with a winless Kurt Busch technically above him in the standings, ready to pounce.

Missed chances

Marcos Ambrose (Change: 22nd to 23rd)
Ambrose was the most dominant of this race, leading an event-best 51 laps, but his late-race wreck that knocked him out put a damper on what may have been his only chance at getting back in the Chase.

Aric Almirola (Remains 18th)
Aric Almirola blew a tire coming around Turn 5 on Lap 59 and hit the tire barriers head-on, ending his day, and likely his Chase chances. There was a glimmer of hope after the Stewart injury, but this all but seals the deal.

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Moments that changed the course of the race at the second Michigan race of the season

UPS


JOHNSON BLOWS ENGINE, LOSES NEARLY HALF HIS POINTS LEAD   

Jimmie Johnson’s Michigan futility continued Sunday, as the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion exited the Pure Michigan 400 early with engine issues.
 
Johnson has never won at Michigan in what is now 24 career Cup starts. It’s one of only five tracks where the Hendrick Motorsports driver has yet to visit Victory Lane.
 
"Coming down the back straightway I felt it dropped a couple of cylinders and I knew we were in trouble," Johnson, the series points leader and a four-time winner this season, said. "So I brought it to pit road. Unfortunately, it finally broke all the way and locked up."
 
Johnson started at the rear of the field Sunday, his No. 3 qualifying effort wiped out by a Saturday spin that necessitated the use of a backup car for the race. The early end to his day wiped out his 75-point advantage over Clint Bowyer, leaving him 41 ahead of second place leaving Michigan.

He had climbed as high as 22nd by Lap 18, taking advantage of early cautions to get fresh tires and fuel. He also led three laps during an early round of green-flag pit stops because of the differing pit cycle.
 
Once the green-flag stops had been completed, Johnson was seventh in the running order — until he made the hard left turn into the garage, his day done with a 40th-place finish.

EARNHARDT JR. BLOWS A TIRE WHILE RUNNING UP FRONT  

Dale Earnhardt Jr. smacked the Turn 2 wall on Lap 135 — after leading 20 circuits earlier in the race — and took his crippled car to the garage for repairs.

Earnhardt finished 36th and dropped from sixth to seventh in the standings, 20 points ahead of 11th-place Kasey Kahne with three races left before the Chase field is set at Richmond.

LOGANO SAVES FUEL TO MAKE IT TO THE FINISH

Add another name to the Chase conversation.

Joey Logano started Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race from the pole, and after a convoluted mix of strategy and racing incidents, it was Logano who claimed the victory and established himself as a contender for a berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

The victory was Logano’s first of the season, his first at Michigan, his first for Penske Racing and the third of his career. Kevin Harvick ran second, followed by Kurt Busch, Paul Menard and Clint Bowyer.

NASCAR.com’s Kenny Bruce and the NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.