Tuesday suits Busch
BROOKLYN, Mich. – Kurt Busch is staying out of trouble these days, no longer making waves as a NASCAR bad boy.
After Busch won for the second time in three races, prevailing in a rare Tuesday NASCAR event after two days of rain postponements at Michigan International Speedway, he gave most of the credit for the change of attitude to team owner Roger Penske.
“Working under Roger, finding his ways and how to deal with people, whether it’s internally or with our sponsors, it really gave me a better perspective what this racing thing is all about,” said Busch, who joined Penske Racing in 2005, replacing longtime star Rusty Wallace in the team’s No. 2 Dodge.
“Maybe before I pushed too hard thinking that maybe I could predict or control the outcome of races and not use the team atmosphere,” Busch said. “I’m happy flying under the radar and I’m happy delivering wins for our sponsors and, right now, the most important thing is getting into the Chase (for the Nextel Cup championship).”
Winning the 3M Performance 400, Busch took a big step toward that goal.
The 2004 Cup champion solidified his berth in the 12-man lineup for the upcoming Chase, holding off Martin Truex Jr. in the closing laps for the 17th win of his career.
NASCAR’s top circuit had never run on a Tuesday after a weather postponement during the modern era, which began in 1973.
The race was originally scheduled to be run Sunday, but two days of rain kept the cars off the track. Other than a 32-minute fog delay after the first 10 laps, the race was run without any more weather problems.
A spin by Greg Biffle with just two laps remaining sent the race into overtime. But Busch easily pulled away from Truex’s DEI Chevrolet when the green flag waved for a two-lap sprint on lap 202.
Busch, who didn’t take his first lead until lap 101 and wound up leading four times for 92 laps, beat Truex to the finish by 0.495 seconds – about eight car lengths on the high-banked, 2-mile oval.
There were two cautions in the last 13 laps and Busch stayed on track with worn tires while some of the cars chasing him pitted for fresh rubber. But he made two perfect restarts.
“It was tough,” Busch said. “You know, I’ve got to thank the fans who stuck it out on a Tuesday to see a green-white-checker (finish). We put it on for them here at the end, all the restarts, all of the guys on different strategy. It really was a tough, hard-fought win.”
Reigning Cup champion Jimmie Johnson finished third, followed by Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, Dave Blaney and Carl Edwards, who won here in June.
With three races remaining until the start of the 10-race stock car playoff, Busch remains 12th in the standings, 33 points behind Truex. Dale Earnhardt Jr. jumped past Ryan Newman into 13th, but a slow pit stop late in the race cost him and he finished 12th.
“This was a great win,” said Busch, who broke a 51-race winless string two weeks ago at Pocono. “It just backs up what we did at Pocono.”
His late-season charge into the Chase has coincided with the arrival of crew chief Pat Tryson, who took over the job in June after being fired as Greg Biffle’s crew chief by Busch’s former employer, Jack Roush.
At that point, Busch was 15th in the standings and didn’t look like a likely candidate to make the Chase.
“When we started eight races or so ago (the plan) was to get 20 points on everybody around us each week, behind us, in front of us,” Tryson said. “I think that’s how we’ve still got to look at it because it’s easy to lose 90 points in a single day.”
Series leader Jeff Gordon, who started from the pole, was in the top five most of the day before some late problems relegated him to a 27th-place finish.
Gordon’s crew had to make a quick repair on a loose flap along the edge of the No. 24’s rear window during a late pit stop, costing the four-time Cup champion several positions. He then had a near-collision with Matt Kenseth and spun into the infield, falling out of the lead lap after getting stuck in the grass left soft and muddy by the heavy rains of the past two days.