Kyle Busch Wins American Commercial Lines 200
03-07-2009 6:07 pm
Running without second and third gears for a restart with eight laps left in
Saturday's American Commercial Lines 200 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Kyle Busch
nevertheless found enough muscle in his No. 51 Toyota to win the race.
After dropping back on the restart, Busch needed fewer than four circuits to
catch and pass Todd Bodine for the lead on Lap 126 of 130. Kevin Harvick
recovered from a slow final pit stop to take second from Bodine in the closing
laps and dogged Busch to the finish, crossing the stripe .122 seconds behind the
winner.
Driving for team owner Billy Ballew, Busch scored his second NACAR Camping World
Truck Series victory of the season and the 11th of his career to retain his
series points lead by 25 over Bodine, who held on to third place in Saturday's
race.
Mike Skinner ran fourth and Terry Cook fifth. Chad McCumbee, Ron Hornaday Jr.,
Mike Bliss, Johnny Benson and Brian Scott completed the top 10.
With third gear already non-functional, Busch lost second gear on the Lap 123
restart.
"Second's broke, too -- we're done," he radioed to crew chief Doug George as his
Tundra fell back.
But Busch shifted immediately to fourth gear and felt it start to pull. Soon
under full power, he rocketed toward the front and overtook Bodine, whose truck
was too loose to put up a fight.
"I had to go all the way to fourth and limp around there," Busch said. "It felt
like an eternity to get this thing up to speed."
Busch, who had been saving fuel, took the lead by staying on the track on Lap
117, when Harvick and other contenders pitted for fuel. A slow pit stop cost
Harvick dearly. He had been leading the race when NASCAR called a caution for
debris in Turn 2 on Lap 114; on Lap 119, he restarted 10th.
The fifth and final caution of the race came right after that restart, when
Colin Braun's No. 6 Ford nosed hard into the inside backstretch wall, the result
of a chain reaction collision that also involved Skinner and Scott.
In the final eight laps, Harvick didn't have time to catch and pass Busch for
the win.
"The thing was fast," Harvick said, "but it doesn't matter if you can't do a pit
stop."
Notes: The victory was Busch's fourth in five truck series starts at Atlanta . .
. Though he's second in the standings, Bodine said he would not race in the
series' next event (March 28 at Martinsville) unless his Germain Racing team
finds a sponsor. Germain signed the growing restaurant chain, Tilted Kilt, to a
one-race deal for Atlanta and hopes to extend that sponsorship to Martinsville,
Bodine said.