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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Audible in pits leads to Kenseth victory at Dover

Matt Kenseth (to right of trophy) hides from the spray as he and his crew celebrate in Victory Lane. (Associated Press)

Matt Kenseth’s first idea was to skip pit road, take a chance he could start first on a restart and hang on for a victory.

Then, he had another thought. Why not just take two tires on pit road instead of four?

With his No. 17 Ford on the jack, Kenseth called the audible and told crew chief Jimmy Fennig he wanted two.

His crew made the switch before they dropped the car and that was the perfect strategy Kenseth needed to win the Sprint Cup race at Dover (Del.) International Speedway on Sunday.

Kenseth led the final 32 laps to win for the second time this season. He also won at Texas and became the third driver to win twice this season.

Under NASCAR’s revamped rules for qualifying for the Chase for the championship that emphasize wins, Kenseth strengthened his bid to make the field with his second win.

“My mind is to be up there and try to lead those points going into the Chase and try to make the Chase in championship form,” Kenseth said. “We don’t want to have to slide off of wins. We want to go up there and race like this every week.”

Mark Martin was second and Marcos Ambrose third. Kyle Busch and Brian Vickers rounded out the top five. Busch was forced to start in the rear of the field because of an engine change.

The 400-mile race was dominated by long stretches of green flag racing. Jimmie Johnson and Edwards turned this into a two-car battle for first for the majority of the race. Edwards led 117 laps before falling to seventh place. Johnson led a race-high 207 laps and finished ninth.

Unlike Kenseth and crew, Edwards’ crew chief, Bob Osborne, made a four-tire call on the last restart that dropped him to ninth and spoiled his chance at the win.

“I didn’t have any choice in it, really,” Edwards said. “That’s up to the guys in the box. That is too tough of a choice to make right there and I don’t blame Bob Osborne one bit.”

Regan Smith was 34th a week after he shocked the sport with his first career win at Darlington Raceway.

Busch and Kevin Harvick had no incidents after a pit road dustup at Darlington landed them on probation. Harvick was 10th.

Martin stayed on the track on old tires to take the lead when the caution flag came out with 39 laps left. Kenseth made a quick stop and opted for two tires instead of four, the right number for him to pull pass Martin on the restart and then pull away for the victory.

“We were going to do four, we got in the stall and decided to do two. That was the key,” Kenseth said.

Kenseth overruled crew chief Jimmy Fennig and made the call for two tires.

“When I was on the jack, I asked if he was sure we didn’t want to try two and he said to put two on,” Kenseth said. “It was really Jimmy’s call and a good suggestion by me.”

Kenseth said he was having trouble during the green flag racing because the rubber that built on the track made the concrete slick – an obstacle for a loose car.

When the short runs started coming, Kenseth found a cleaner track and clean air was enough to spark his run.

Kenseth, the 2003 series champion, won his 20th career Cup race.

Martin earned his first top-five of the season.

NHRA

Antron Brown raced to his second Top Fuel victory of the year, beating teammate Tony Schumacher in the NHRA Southern Nationals at Atlanta Dragway in Commerce, Ga.

Jack Beckman (Funny Car), Jason Line (Pro Stock) and LE Tonglet (Pro Stock Motorcycle) also won their categories in the NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series event.

Brown had a 3.856-second run at 318.69 mph for his 27th of his career NHRA victory and fourth at Atlanta Dragway – two in Top Fuel and two in Pro Stock Motorcycle.