Kyle Busch Rallies for Second Straight Truck Series Win

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Not even a pit road speeding penalty could keep Kyle Busch from his appointed rounds on Saturday at Michigan International Speedway.

With drafting help from Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Erik Jones entering turn one, Busch regained the lead from Ryan Blaney on lap 97 of 100 in the Careers for Veterans 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race and held on to win by 0.157 seconds.

Blaney held the second spot, and Jones finished third, followed by Johnny Sauter and Austin Dillon. Two-time defending series champion Matt Crafton battled a buckling windshield, a penalty for pitting too soon to correct it and a late spin after contact from John Wes Townley’s Chevrolet to finish sixth.

Crafton gained three points on series leader Tyler Reddick, who ran ninth, and now trails by eight. Jones is third in the standings, nine points back.

The victory was Busch’s first at Michigan after four runner-up finishes in the series, and it was his second in two starts since returning from an injury that sidelined the driver of the No. 51 Toyota from all racing activity from February 21 through mid-May.

“First win for me, first win for KBM here,” said Busch, who won for the 44th time in the Truck Series. “I loved racing with those guys up there—Jones, Blaney and Dillon. It was pretty hectic on how all that was going to shape up and play out…

“Just cool to finally get that monkey off my back here in the Truck Series and notch another race track where I’ve won in all three divisions here at Michigan.”

Under caution on lap 27, Busch earned a speeding penalty while entering pit road and restarted at the back of the field on lap 31. By lap 51, Busch had worked his way back to fifth in the running order, and after an exchange of green-flag pit stops, he regained the lead on lap 69.

“We were trying something new with our tach settings, and it didn’t really work,” Busch said of the speeding infraction.

Drivers gauge pit road speeds with their tachometers and a series of lights on the dashboard. In essence, Busch was seeing two sets of lights at the same time, calibrated to different settings, and that led directly to the speeding penalty.

Once Busch passed Blaney with fewer than four laps left, Blaney—without a teammate to help—was resigned to a second-place finish.

“When we got the lead (after a lap 95 restart), I knew it was going to be hard to keep him behind us, because he can lay back to the 4 (Jones) and just get a big run and get by you,” Blaney said. “There’s nothing, as the leader, that you can do about it.

“You’re wide open. You can break the draft all you want, but when he’s got a partner, it’s just like speedway racing—he can go by you.”

 

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

Careers for Veterans 200

Presented by Cooper Standard and

Brad Keselowski’s Checkered Flag Foundation
Michigan International Speedway

 

1. (10) Kyle Busch(i), Toyota, 100, $43447.

               2. (12) Ryan Blaney(i), Ford, 100, $36614.

               3. (7) Erik Jones #, Toyota, 100, $26735.

               4. (9) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 100, $20254.

               5. (3) Austin Dillon(i), Chevrolet, 100, $15653.

               6. (1) Matt Crafton, Toyota, 100, $19792.

               7. (2) Daniel Hemric #, Chevrolet, 100, $16325.

               8. (5) Timothy Peters, Toyota, 100, $16241.

               9. (11) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 100, $16185.

               10. (6) Cameron Hayley #, Toyota, 100, $17107.

               11. (16) Alex Bowman(i), Chevrolet, 100, $13852.

               12. (17) John H. Nemechek #, Chevrolet, 100, $15934.

               13. (23) Jordan Anderson, Chevrolet, 100, $15850.

               14. (19) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 100, $15795.

               15. (13) Tyler Young, Chevrolet, 100, $16138.

               16. (14) Spencer Gallagher #, Chevrolet, Accident, 99, $15711.

               17. (8) John Wes Townley, Chevrolet, 99, $15799.

               18. (20) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 98, $15572.

               19. (28) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 98, $15515.

               20. (18) Cody Coughlin, Toyota, 96, $15988.

               21. (15) Chad Finley, Ford, 96, $13210.

               22. (27) Korbin Forrister #, Chevrolet, 95, $15404.

               23. (30) Wendell Chavous #, Chevrolet, 95, $15376.

               24. (22) Mason Mingus, Chevrolet, Accident, 87, $14099.

               25. (4) Ben Kennedy, Toyota, Accident, 82, $14220.

               26. (21) Ray Black Jr. #, Chevrolet, 66, $13042.

               27. (31) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, Rear Gear, 40, $12987.

               28. (25) Caleb Roark, Chevrolet, Vibration, 19, $12747.

               29. (32) Tyler Tanner, Chevrolet, Clutch, 16, $12692.

               30. (26) BJ McLeod, Chevrolet, Electrical, 15, $12192.

               31. (29) Todd Peck, Chevrolet, Rear Gear, 12, $10692.

               32. (24) Justin Jennings, Chevrolet, Handling, 6, $9692.

Average Speed of Race Winner:  128.94 mph.
Time of Race:  01 Hrs, 33 Mins, 04 Secs. Margin of Victory:  0.157 Seconds.
Caution Flags:  6 for 26 laps.
Lead Changes:  15 among 6 drivers.

Lap Leaders:    0; D. Hemric # 1-4; A. Dillon(i) 5-6; K. Busch(i) 7-26; A. Dillon(i) 27; E. Jones # 28-34; R. Blaney(i) 35; E. Jones # 36-44; J. Sauter 45-68; K. Busch(i) 69-76; R. Blaney(i) 77-81; K. Busch(i) 82-89; A. Dillon(i) 90; K. Busch(i) 91-94; R. Blaney(i) 95-96; K. Busch(i) 97-100.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  K. Busch(i) 5 times for 44 laps; J. Sauter 1 time for 24 laps; E. Jones # 2 times for 16 laps; R. Blaney(i) 3 times for 8 laps; A. Dillon(i) 3 times for 4 laps; D. Hemric # 1 time for 4 laps.

Top-Ten in Points: T. Reddick – 514; M. Crafton – 506; E. Jones # – 505; J. Sauter – 461; C. Hayley # – 425; D. Hemric # – 420; T. Peters – 416; J. Townley – 414; S. Gallagher # – 394; B. Kennedy – 381.

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

XFINITY Series, Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200 at Mid-Ohio Preview

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NASCAR XFINITY Series

Next Race: Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200

The Place: Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

The Date: Saturday, Aug. 15

The Time: 3:30 p.m. (ET)

TV: NBCSN, 3 p.m. (ET)

Radio: MRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90

Distance: 169.35 miles (75 laps)

Roush Fenway Racing’s Chris Buescher Returns to Defend Win at Mid-Ohio

Chris Buescher’s win last season at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course was the first of his NASCAR XFINITY Series career. This weekend the 2015 series points leader returns to defend his win at the 13-Turn course and further extend his standings lead over second-place Chase Elliott (-24) and third-place Ty Dillon (-24).

Roush Fenway Racing’s hottest driver, Chris Buescher posted his series leading ninth top-five finish this past weekend at Watkins Glen, finishing third. Continue reading

Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 at Michigan Preview

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NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

Next Race: Careers for Veterans 200

presented by Cooper Standard and

Brad Keselowski’s Checkered Flag Foundation

The Place: Michigan International Speedway

The Date: Saturday, Aug. 15

The Time: 1 p.m. (ET)

TV: FOX Sports 1, 12:30 p.m. (ET)

Radio: MRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90

Distance: 200 miles (100 laps)

Big Weekend For Brad Keselowski Racing

It’s a big weekend for Brad Keselowski Racing as its team sponsor hosts Saturday’s Careers for Veterans 200 presented by Cooper Standard and Brad Keselowski’s Checkered Flag Foundation. Series points leader Tyler Reddick and NASCAR Next alum Ryan Blaney will represent the team in the No. 19 and No. 29 Fords. Reddick claims two wins this season and leads second-place Matt Crafton in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series points standings by 11. Blaney has made two Camping World Truck Series starts this year, finishing seventh at Dover and third at Kentucky. Continue reading

Ryan Blaney Holds on to Win in Overtime At Iowa

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As the cautions — and wreckage — piled up, Ryan Blaney didn’t blink.

Trouble reigned for most in the late tension-filled stages of the U.S. Cellular 250 NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Iowa Speedway, but the driver of the No. 22 Discount Tire Ford remained calm and poised.

Seemed so, anyway. Continue reading

Kyle Busch Continues Streak of Excellence with Brickyard Win

Kyle Busch, driver of the #54 Monster Energy Toyota, stands on the grid during qualifying for the NASCAR XFINITY Series Lilly Diabetes 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 25, 2015 Photo - Andy Lyons/Getty Images

Kyle Busch, driver of the #54 Monster Energy Toyota, stands on the grid during qualifying for the NASCAR XFINITY Series Lilly Diabetes 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 25, 2015 Photo – Andy Lyons/Getty Images

Kyle Busch, continued his streak of excellence in the sport of NASCAR by winning the Lilly Diabetes 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday afternoon. With a last lap pass on Team Penske driver Ryan Blaney, the win gave Busch his second win at Indianapolis in three years.

This victory came after overcoming multiple problems throughout the day. First issue was a communication problem resulting in not pitting at the beginning of the race. Busch was noticeably upset over the radio, forcing his team to use  a different strategy which actually ended up playing in his favor.

“The caution flew about Lap 23, and pit road wasn’t open till about Lap 26,” noted crew chief Chris Gayle. “That then put us on a one stop strategy to where we could make it to the end even with the misunderstanding communication wise.”

Busch went on to lead 53 laps the rest of the day, collecting his second win and fourth top-ten of 2015.

Busch also battled the heat all day, noting that he…

‘melted inside the car, the whole race.’

Busch also mentioned that the car had no openings for air, which obviously did not help the heat situation. When asked, Busch talked about having NASCAR make a change that would make the air openings fair for everybody.

One of the ideas Busch suggested was for NASCAR to mandate an eight inch opening on the right side window that every team could use.

Battling through the obstacles, Busch was still able to overcome the odds of a pit road misunderstanding and excessive heat all day by ensuing a last lap pass for the lead.

“I just got close enough to make him (Blaney) mess up and he got tight off (turn) two and then I was able to capitalize underneath him losing his momentum off of two and being able to get under him,” said Busch. “Can’t say enough about Chris Gayle and all these guys on this Monster Energy Camry. It was the class of the field, we should have won this thing going away, but I guess we had to make it exciting.”

That pass came at the expense of 21-year-old Ryan Blaney.

“It’s my fault, obviously. You saw it. I screwed up,” Blaney said. “This team doesn’t deserve that. I dropped the ball for them today and I take full responsibility. It’s my fault.”

Blaney was able to beat Busch on the final restart of the race on lap 76 and maintain a lead through the next 24 laps with limited pressure from Busch.

“There was no pressure for 24 laps and the last one I just made a mistake,” said Blaney post race.

Being the competitor that he is, Blaney was tremendously hard on himself after race as he kept highlighting on his mistake time and time again. Many fans and drivers offered their support to Blaney after the race.

Although there were problems for Busch and his team, they overcame their issues to continue their amazing streak of excellence.