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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Keeping Pace

Kyle Busch Gets Season-Record 11th Nationwide Win

Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 18 NOS Toyota, crosses the finish line to get his third win and either top-10 finish in 13 races at Dover International Speedway. (Photo courtesy Chris Trotman/Getty Images) (Chris Trotman / Getty Images North America)
Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 18 NOS Toyota, crosses the finish line to get his third win and either top-10 finish in 13 races at Dover International Speedway. (Photo courtesy Chris Trotman/Getty Images) (Chris Trotman / Getty Images North America)

Kyle Busch recorded his 11th NASCAR Nationwide Series victory of the season and set the record for single season victories on the circuit.

DOVER, Del. — The inevitable — Kyle Busch’s single-season record 11th Nationwide Series win—finally happened Saturday at Dover International Speedway.
 
Busch led 192 of 200 laps at the Monster Mile to win the Dover 200 and claim his 11th win of the season, breaking a record he shared with Sam Ard. The victory was Busch’s 41st in the series, his 30th in a Toyota since moving to Joe Gibbs Racing to start the 2008 season and his 81st in NASCAR’s top three series combined.
 
“It’s very special,” Busch said of the record. “Sam is a great individual and was a great driver in his time (early 1980s). For myself to be able to come out and compete at that level and get as many wins in a season is hard enough to do, but then to go out there and beat a record …
 
“From where Sam Ard was in his day and where we are today, I feel like a lot has changed in this sport, and, of course, it’s always challenging to go out and get a win on a given weekend. But for us to win 11 this year is very, very special to me, and that’s why I say it’s so special to (crew chief) Jason (Ratcliff) and to all these guys on the team, because they’re all part of it.”
 
Despite a vibration that gave him some nervous moments in the closing laps, Busch beat polesitter and JGR teammate Joey Logano to the finish line by .400 seconds, marking the 11th time JGR cars have finished 1-2 in the series.
 
Carl Edwards finished third and trimmed the championship lead of 17th-place finisher Brad Keselowski from 373 to 320 points. Reed Sorenson ran fourth, followed by Kevin Harvick. Trevor Bayne, Paul Menard, Jason Leffler, Justin Allgaier and Ryan Newman completed the top 10.
 
Logano came home second for the sixth time this season and felt he couldn’t compete with Busch on restarts.
 
“It took us awhile, as usual, to take off on the restart,” Logano said. “I don’t know why. The last few races we just don’t take off on restarts good. We give them a big lead and we try to make that up and that makes it impossible. I think everyone saw in the last few laps there, we were coming. We had a shot at it, just a little too late, again.”
 
Note: Danica Patrick blew a tire and crashed into the Turn 4 wall to cause the first caution of the race on Lap 70. She finished 35th in her seventh Nationwide start.


Keeping Pace

Motorsports correspondent Doug Pace keeps up with motorsports news and notes from around the region.