Although he registered a poor starting position, Kyle Busch
won on Sunday the NASCAR Sprint Cup Toyota/Save Mart 350, at the Infineon
Raceway. This is 23-year-old Busch’s first win in seven road course starts and
the series-best fifth of the Sprint Cup season.
In the 112 lap race with
incidents scattered along, the present-day points leader meticulously advanced
from Row 15 to the winner’s position, thus marking his fourth NASCAR race
appearance on the hilly Sonoma
County road course. Busch
took advantage of an early pit stop on Lap 29 that helped him leap over
previous race leaders Jimmie Johnson and Carl Edwards, who pit stopped two laps
later. 1.716 seconds behind the Las
Vegas native was David Gilliland who came in second
and five-time race winner Jeff Gordon was third.
Starting 30th, Busch led 76 of
the laps on the way to his 10th career victory and extended his lead in the
standings to 103 points over Jeff Burton, who managed only a place 13. Clint
Bowyer placed fourth and Casey Mears closed the top five segment. Defending
Infineon champion Juan Pablo Montoya finished sixth.
After he overtook Jamie McMurray, it looked like Stewart was
going to challenge Busch for second place on lap 105. But soon after, Stewart
was bamboozled by a crash involving three cars in Turn 7 that was caused by
Kevin Harvick. He took a lot of speed into the turn and clipped McMurray’s
right rear bumper. McMurray hit Stewart after being pushed forward.
All three
spun in succession as Busch drove pass them untouched. Stewart managed to end
the race on the 10th position, and McMurray on the 18th.
Kyle Busch won 11 times this season including his Nationwide
and Craftsman Truck series participation and gave Joe Gibbs Racing its third
victory at Infineon, after wins by Tony Stewart in 2001 and 2005.
Standing as one of the most detested drivers in NASCAR,
Busch heard a few boos during pre-race introductions. But at the end, as he did
a few tricks such as burnouts and doughnuts, he collected nothing but cheers
from the grandstand.
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